Posted on 12/07/2008 12:20:00 AM PST by neverdem
Most diabetics have difficult lives, with an unending cycle of ill health, weakness and obesity as the pancreas produce little or no insulin, the hormone that converts glucose to energy.
Insulin doesn't convert glucose to energy. Most diabetics are type II diabetics who are best described as insulin resistant. They may eventually "produce little or no insulin," but that doesn't characterize the majority of type IIs, IIRC.There are several forms of diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is often called juvenile or insulin-dependent diabetes. In this type of diabetes, cells of the pancreas produce little or no insulin, the hormone that allows sugar (glucose) to enter body cells.
Plus, diabetic drugs usually make the patient obese, which adds to the risk of high BP, heart problems and strokes.
IMHO, he has the cart before the horse, i.e. obesity was the risk factor for type II diabetes. Type I diabetics are rarely obese. They usuallty look like Mary Tyler Moore. Why would the FDA approve those drugs then? Besides drugs like Actos and Avandia, which have a tendency for fluid retention with concomitant weight gain, what antidiabetic drugs cause obesity? Have at it.
I wish I knew. I've never been on these drugs, but from everything I've read, they seem like the last thing you'd give to a diabetic. I don't know why all docs don't use metformin, which doesn't have these affects.
I've been taking Byetta (lizard spit) for a few years now and it seems to be working well for me.
Since diagnosis, I've been able to go to the diabetes centers at the universities where I was working or going to school. I have benefited from some cutting edge care and wonder if a lot of GPs just don't know/don't care about ways of caring for diabetics without killing them.
Avoiding Confusion After Surgery
I was reading about general anesthesia when I found something new for me about metformin. See comment# 1 and the drugs that include metformin. It rarely causes lactic acidosis, but that can have a 50 percent mortality.
ping
Glucovance has been working great for me for several years without side effects.
Yes, Dennis Nedry no longer suffers from diabetes.
Dilophosaurus was prominently featured both in the 1993 movie Jurassic Park and in the original novel by Michael Crichton. In the film version, Dilophosaurus has a retractable neck frill around its neck (much like a frill-necked lizard), and spits blinding poison, aiming for the eyes to blind and paralyze its prey. There is no evidence to support either the frill or the venom spitting,[12] which was acknowledged by Crichton as creative license.[13]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dilophosaurus#In_popular_culture
I thought of this scene too when I saw the post.
bttt
I often wonder what prompted that first person to lick a lizard.....
The "metabolic factor disorder" model was just a model. To a great degree effective treatment could be designed around it, and a diabetic could exercise, restrict carbohydrates in the diet, control weight, use a minimal level of drugs and get along pretty well.
Unfortunately it was observed that many (apparently "most") continued to deteriorat just as if they were losing beta cells.
The approach has changed over the last year to the viewpoint you see in this article. Notice that your pet gila monster produces a substance that mimics a hormone normally produced by your body that controls all sorts of things ranging from production of glucogen to production of insulin.
What I'm going to do is get one of those large glass cages for my living room where the animals will be happy. We'll start raising gila monsters for fun, profit and the beneficial characteristics of their saliva. I have an old friend who has a cage full of these guys in his living room, and as they sit there on the designer rocks in the bottom, looking out at some invisible point on the wall, I can pretend they are not only healthy to have, but highly entertaining!
You mean swell up like a baloon
You’d better be careful milking your (gila) monster!
Later
ping
I feel like punching the next person who says, "He's a diabetic because he ate too much sugar."
I am starting my second week of Metformin. Getting used to this stuff is quite an adventure.
The rupee is about $0.02 so the Rs7,500 cost makes it about $150.00/month at the current exchange rate.
ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.