Being Your Own Doctor

Hi,

4 Responses to “Being Your Own Doctor”

  1. Dave Black Says:

    The carbs…..

    I am a type 2 and for the past 15 years….

    For the past year I have eliminated all grains (wheat
    rye barley etc) along with corn and rice which are
    grains and potato family items…..(all high in carbs)

    And what a dramatic change which has taken place…

    BSL from 180 to 120-140 (that is fasting) hba1c from
    10.00 to 12.000 to 6.4/7.50….

    I have found that when I cheat and especially the
    grains a dramatic incease in the BSL along with a

    longer period of time to get the BSL under control….

    My information came from various books on carbs
    especialy book called "Neander-Thin" ….

    all the best

  2. Endy Smith Says:

    Excuse the big snips, nothing meaningful to add at those
    places.
    — Windwarrior and Jim wrote:

    —my daughter uses those natural honey powdered sugar
    stick things that we used to get (only not from the health
    food store, in my case…) that are in straws.
    >

    Sincerely,
    Charles Morrow

    =====
    The plural of anecdote is not data

  3. Endy Smith Says:

    Most of my clinical exp w/ diabetics has been children type
    I’s and in my opinion it most certainly does not take bs
    over 300 to exp. sx’s. There is a wide body of research
    suggesting that major proteins glycosylate at lower levels
    than you seem to accept.

    <snip>

    We agree, when pedi endos first started putting
    Glucowatches on kids (to facilitate continuous monitoring),
    they were immediately surprised to find that the
    ranges/swings in bs readings are much broader than
    previously anticipated….. We don’t monitor
    post-prandials very often because finger pokes aren’t fun,
    boils on finger tips, etc…..that is why the nl (for

    diabetics, at least) swings were not observed.
    >

    > The eating habit-approach w/ NO spikes to me seems
    > clinical insanity.

    Only if you want to test endlessly. My daughter has target
    range of 70-150mg/dL….So, if "I blow her guess," inject
    too much humalog, she suffers tremendously………….
    >

    > Defacto "natural/healthy" ~pixie stix~ ???,

    yes, I believe, we used to get them as filled with
    cool-aid.

    Before you disagree with tight range, and the low end, I
    must tell you that never been a severe hypoglycemic
    episode….I buy glucagon, 6 months later it expires, then
    I buy more glucagon……knock on wood!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Sincerely,
    Charles
    >

    =====
    Anecdotes are useless precisely because they may point to idiosyncratic
    responses.

    Pediatric Allergy/Immunology
    a peer-reviewed journal
    1999 Nov;10(4) 226-234

  4. Endy Smith Says:

    yes, if you recall you asked my credentials when I referred
    to glycosylating major proteins, like renal tbm etc.

    it is not really preventing spikes, it is preventing the
    measurement of spikes. Fairly low cho, low gi, may lead to
    greatly elevated bs although my daughter (for instance) is
    still having a pretty strong "honeymoon" period.
    >
    > Insulin is good, but is clearly potentially dangerous…

    certainly exogenous administered insulin is potentially
    dangerous.

    —no SH episode


    check the research and Diabetes Self-Mgmt….gel tubes work
    at a higher bld sugar level. Gel works when the diabetic
    has just passed out….Therefore, I !!!! do not believe
    that having gel tubes, alleviates the need for glucagon.
    Certainly, I realize the the iv glucagon bolus is quite
    unpleasant to say the least…
    >
    sincerely,

    charles

    ps, may I please inquire of your backgound, how long you
    have been diabetic, and if you take any herbs in
    conjunctionw with your treatment

    =====
    Anecdotes are useless precisely because they may point to idiosyncratic
    responses.

    Pediatric Allergy/Immunology
    a peer-reviewed journal
    1999 Nov;10(4) 226-234

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