Category Archives: diabetes

African American Women at Increased Risk for Type 2 Diabetes

Type 2 diabetes is increasing as a health problem among African American women. in a follow up of a study began in 1995 59,000 African American women reported on their consumption of sugar sweetened beverages and the study shows that the beverages are a huge risk factor.

The incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus was higher with higher intake of both sugar-sweetened soft drinks and fruit drinks.

Conclusions Regular consumption of sugar-sweetened soft drinks and fruit drinks is associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus in African American women. While there has been increasing public awareness of the adverse health effects of soft drinks, little attention has been given to fruit drinks, which are often marketed as a healthier alternative to soft drinks.

(article)

Preventing Diabetes

Research has demonstrated that diet/nutrition can lead to results where individuals who were diabetic were able to come off of medication. Healthy eating along with other factors such as good sound sleep and daily movement also go a long way to prevent the onset of many chronic conditions.

Here are some steps that you can take to build your overall health.

  • Make sure there is plenty of chlorophyll in your diet. This can come from a diet rich in plant matter or by taking chlorophyll supplements.
  • Add bran to your diet. Eat whole oats (oat groats) or steel cut oats or if you are not allergic to wheat add wheat bran to your diet or flax seed.
  • Eat less.
  • Chew your food thoroughly.
  • Eliminate greasy foods.
  • Reduce meat, eggs and cheese.
  • Eliminate white sugar, white flour products, substitute whole grain products.
  • Eat simple meals.
  • Move your body daily.
  • Learn how to relax, accumulated tension contributions.
  • Eliminate artificial sweeteners
  • Eliminate soda.

Taking steps to eat a balanced diet of whole foods, primarily plant based will go a long way to promote your health and well-being.

A Lot of People Are Taking Lots of Prescribed Drugs

According to a recent study more than half of insured Americans regularly take prescription drugs for chronic health problems. In some cases an individual may take 18 or more drugs daily (here) Yes, some would call this progress. If people are not being healed, which means to make whole, what is happening here. Until the public demands the choice of qualified health practitioners this is not going to get better. Are you aware that all of these drugs are seeping into the drinking water? Every living creature needs clean water. How will this cycle back onto the public. Our food supply also comes from this tainted water.

The first step to improving your health is to know that it can happen. No one is meant to live captive of pill after pill. Why is it important to know you can improve your health? You must have the awareness that it is a choice. The actions you take lead to a result. It takes motivation and daily choices that lead to the goal. All of the information that is available will not help unless you begin to use the information.

Second, stop looking for a quick fix. Seek to heal the cause of the problem. If you are stressed out, learn how to relax and practice. If you are addicted to salt, learn how to season your food. If you are angry, bitter or sad learn how to find joy and peace.

Explore. Seek out sound information. Is it easy? You decide. If it is worth it to you start now. Find a buddy. Pray. Work with a qualified practitioner. And know that it is possible. Start now, begin the process of healing your life.

“Miracle Berry” Suppressed

I first read about this berry in the WSJ over a year ago. It is amazing the fear out there to just let people “be”. The FDA it appears wants to safeguard you. In this case is that what it is? It seems that there are always those who are there for your protection, but are they really? What happened to this berry, which God put here on earth for all to use, is similar to stevia. Naturally sweet substances are sequestered away and artificial kidney damaging chemically manufactured items are put in the marketplace. Could this fruit help to heal diabetic sufferers?

The Miracle Berry

Imagine an extract from a berry that would make sour things taste sweet and help you lose weight. Then imagine not being allowed to take it.

The world is getting fatter. One billion people are overweight, and 300 million of those are clinically obese. The search is always on for replacements for those things that, eaten in excess, make us obese – fatty and sugary foods. (more)

Chocolate, Every Day, What is Wrong with That; Would You Volunteer for a Chocolate Study?

The requirements, eat a bar of chocolate daily for a year and a half. The alleged goal is to determine if flavonoids found in chocolate will reduce the risk of heart disease in menopausal women with type 2 diabetes. Oh, for those of you who want to peruse the article read it here .

However, you may not want to rush to sign up. Eating anything every day for a year and a half will tend to unbalance your health. This is because all food has energetic properties. Part of the premise for the study is to see how to isolate “healthy” components of chocolate so that those in the business of selling chocolate can promote it as a health food and charge more for it’s…benefits.

If you want to learn more about chocolate read the homeopathic literature, the materia medica of chocolate. It is fascinating. Chocolate also contains complex alkaloids, sugar and fat. Theobromine is also being ingested daily, a component of chocolate. Taken in excess symptoms such as nervousness, insomnia, poor sleep, certain types of heart disease, intestinal problems and moodiness may result. Chocolate can also inhibit calcium absorption. And the participants are to be women with type 2 diabetes. What is going on here?

Chocolate has a high magnesium content. Research suggests that a chocolate craving may result from a deficiency of this essential nutrient. However, chocolate is often not available in a healthy form to use it as a nutritional source (e.g. refined sugar and milk). If what your body is really craving is magnesium, eat unprocessed fruits, vegetables and whole grains.

The bottom line. If you have a sweet tooth and want chocolate, eat it with pure gusto, eat it in moderation. Eating it everyday for a year and half a half, my vote is, Thumbs down.

Research: Soy Protein Beneficial In Type 2 diabetic patients with kidney disease

A diet rich in soy protein appears to have a lasting beneficial effect on the heart, blood vessels and kidneys of people with type 2 diabetes and kidney disease, Iranian researchers report in the journal Diabetes Care.
Researchers found that soy protein consumption had a significant positive impact on cardiovascular risk factors and kidney-related biomarkers among type 2 diabetic patients with kidney disease.

Dr. Leila Azadbakht, of Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, and colleagues followed 41 patients with type 2 diabetes for 4 years. Twenty patients consumed a diet that was 35 percent animal protein, 35 percent textured soy protein and 30 percent vegetable protein.

The remaining 21 patients, who acted as controls, ate a diet that consisted of 70 percent animal protein and 30 percent vegetable protein. These patients received the same medical treatment as the soy group; the only difference was the absence of soy protein.

Compared with controls, patients who ate soy protein showed significantly lower levels of fasting blood sugar, total cholesterol, “bad” LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides.

In addition, circulating C-reactive protein levels, which signal inflammation in the body, were reduced as were levels of well known urinary markers of kidney disease.

Short-term studies have indicated such benefits with soy protein, but the researchers point out that this appears to be the first study that has demonstrated that these effects remain “stable with long-term consumption.”

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, April 2008

Diabetes Continues to Rise

(HealthDay News) — News from the diabetes front seems to grow more discouraging by the day.

Rates of the disease, fueled by obesity and sedentary lifestyles, have risen unchecked in the United States, with diabetes now affecting about 7 percent of the population. That’s an estimated 20.8 million adults and children, according to the American Diabetes Association.

Federal projections estimate that by 2050, some 48 million Americans will have type 2 diabetes. And the disease will bring with it complications such as blindness, hearing loss, kidney disease, nervous system disorders and amputations of extremities.

“Studies have suggested that for the first time in history, the generation of people born in 2000 is probably going to have shorter life expectancy than their parents,” said Dr. Sue Kirkman, vice president of clinical affairs for the American Diabetes Association. “That’s attributable to obesity, diabetes and heart disease. Is that what we want for our children?”

What’s worse, one of the most promising medicines for treating type 2 diabetes — Avandia — now appears to increase a person’s risk of heart attack and heart failure, according to recent studies.

Still, medical experts say the fight against diabetes can be won — if everyone decides to do what’s best for themselves and their families.

That fight will get its yearly boost on Tuesday when the American Diabetes Association will “sound the alert” about diabetes on the 20th annual American Diabetes Alert Day. It’s a one-day “call to action” to encourage those at risk for developing type 2 diabetes or those with loved ones at risk to take the Diabetes Risk Test and, if they score high, to schedule an appointment to see their health-care provider. The Diabetes Risk Test is available in English and Spanish by calling the association at 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383) or online at www.diabetes.org/alert.

But the finding on Avandia calls into question the safety of the entire class of drugs known as thiazolidinediones. For now, Avandia — and other thiazolidinediones such as Actos — remains on the market. But last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration mandated stricter labeling, including “black box” warnings, for the medications.

Medical experts recommend that each person discuss with their physician the risks and rewards of using Avandia.

“Every patient is different,” said Kirkman. “Every patient has different risk factors. Every patient has reasons why one medicine might be better for them than another.”

But medicines are only part of the solution. A better response would be drastic changes to American lifestyles, starting with improved diets and more exercise, to avoid type 2 diabetes in the first place.

“The statistics are pretty gloomy, but we also know people who are at risk for diabetes can do a lot to prevent it from coming on,” Kirkman said. “There’s a lot people can do to try and control their fate.”

Diabetes comes in two types.

The most common form, type 2, or what used to be called adult-onset diabetes, occurs when either the body does not produce enough of the hormone insulin or the cells ignore the insulin. The body needs insulin to transport sugar in the blood to cells for energy. Being overweight, an unhealthy diet, and lack of exercise are common contributors to this form of the disease.

Type 1 diabetes, usually diagnosed in children and young adults, occurs when the body isn’t capable of producing insulin.

Researchers reviewing data from the National Health Interview Survey found that from 1990 to 2005, cases of diabetes increased 4.6 percent each year. They rose from 26.4 cases per 1,000 people to 54.5 per 1,000 people in the most recent year available.

The diabetes epidemic has grave implications for America, said Martha Funnell, a clinical nurse specialist for the University of Michigan and a past president of the American Diabetes Association. Health care costs are expected to soar as more people with diabetes complications fill doctors’ offices and emergency rooms.

Even the U.S. economy will be affected as potentially healthy people find themselves unable to work. “You’re losing folks in the prime of their years, and that has an impact on society and our economy,” Funnell said.

Fortunately, there are steps that can be taken, both large and small, to help fight diabetes.

On the large-scale side, Kirkman said, governments should spend more money on physical education in schools and on public transportation, instead of new road construction.

“We know people who take public transportation are more physically active,” she said. “Do we choose to encourage that?”

On a more personal level, people can make healthy lifestyle choices and help pass those choices along to their children, Funnell said.

But is anyone listening and willing to try?

“The messages are those same old ‘eat healthy and exercise,’ and we hear those to the point where we think, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, everybody knows we need to do these things,’ ” Funnell said.

However, even small measures — standing more often during the day or walking during a lunch break or eating an apple instead of ice cream — can help make a difference.

“Maybe it would seem to outsiders as a small step, but it’s just taking that one step and the next step and the next,” Funnell said. “Like global warming, it’s saying, ‘What can I do for myself and my family this week, this month, this year, that will make a difference?’ “