Click the video to pause play. This video is 2:10 minutes in duration and took 16 seconds to load over a DSL connection. You will need the latest version of the Free QuickTime Player to view it. Additional help for Mac users.
Diabetes Care October 2007, page 2708-2715 reported that new technologies are now picking up the retinal changes in the back of the eye that diagnose prediabetes and pre-hypertension.
We know that these two problems begin long before symptoms or signs of the disease. In the past we would consider this a victory for “strategic health” but little treatment to reverse this was suggested.
Now we confirm these advancing diseases with the wave form analysis with the CardioVascular Profiler and begin treatment with ProArgi 9 plus immediately. The ProArgi9 plus reverses all the vascular problems of both diseases actually reversing both disorders as far as the vascular component is concerned.
This is not a cure, but a reversal. Diabetes is a multi-metabolic problem and with time different treatments will be needed. At least you will not be in the bad patch the group in Seattle was in when the diagnosis of their diabetes was first made when they had their heart attack.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Bariatric Surgery - A Cure for Diabetes?
Click the video to pause play. This video is 1:10 minutes in duration and took 10 seconds to load over a DSL connection. You will need the latest version of the Free QuickTime Player to view it. Additional help for Mac users.
The September 18, 2008 medical newspaper Endocrine Today had on their front page, Bariatric Surgery – a cure for diabetes?
I have been involved with people needing to consider this type of surgery for their diabetes and other severe problems relating to their metabolism since 1965. The initial success in the first year has again given many people a reason to consider that new technology and understanding of the pathogenesis of diabetes might get better success that in the past.
I get to see people in their second year after surgery. Many have new metabolic problems in the area of vitamins (especially vitamin D) and most dreaded of all, the return of diabetes and weight gain.
The Chief Medical Editor of this publication, Alan Garber, MD included his perspective at the end of the article noting the durability of the antidiabetic effect remains uncertain. He noted the observation that when diabetes is diagnosed there is a progressive loss of beta cells, the cells that produce insulin. Thus in my experience as well as Alan’s, we have only delayed diabetes, not denied its presence.
The September 18, 2008 medical newspaper Endocrine Today had on their front page, Bariatric Surgery – a cure for diabetes?
I have been involved with people needing to consider this type of surgery for their diabetes and other severe problems relating to their metabolism since 1965. The initial success in the first year has again given many people a reason to consider that new technology and understanding of the pathogenesis of diabetes might get better success that in the past.
I get to see people in their second year after surgery. Many have new metabolic problems in the area of vitamins (especially vitamin D) and most dreaded of all, the return of diabetes and weight gain.
The Chief Medical Editor of this publication, Alan Garber, MD included his perspective at the end of the article noting the durability of the antidiabetic effect remains uncertain. He noted the observation that when diabetes is diagnosed there is a progressive loss of beta cells, the cells that produce insulin. Thus in my experience as well as Alan’s, we have only delayed diabetes, not denied its presence.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Water Bottles and Diabetes 2
Click the video to pause play. This video is 2:10 minutes in duration and took 15 seconds to load over a DSL connection. You will need the latest version of the Free QuickTime Player to view it. Additional help for Mac users.
Plastic water bottles, food containers, baby bottles and water containers contain bisphenol A, a chemical that suppresses a hormone that protects humans from heart attacks and diabetes 2.
Hundreds of studies have shown bisphenol A’s toxicity in developing tissue and tissue function. Reproductive problems, certain cancers and asthma have been shown to cause problems in lab animals.
Bisphenol A leeches from food and beverage containers and has been found in 93% of the urine samples in test patients. In the body it mimics estrogen and prevents natural estrogens from attaching to the estrogen site. When this happens in mice they become obese and insulin resistant.
Testing of fat tissue from bisphenol A affected humans reports suppression of the protective hormone adiponectin. Adiponectin protects against heart attacks and type 2 diabetes. Similar studies in mice indicate effects on the beta cells that create insulin resistance. This may well be a reason for children and adolescents’ obesity and early diabetes.
Environmental Health Perspective August 14, 2008.
Science News 9.29.2007
Science News 9.13.2008
Plastic water bottles, food containers, baby bottles and water containers contain bisphenol A, a chemical that suppresses a hormone that protects humans from heart attacks and diabetes 2.
Hundreds of studies have shown bisphenol A’s toxicity in developing tissue and tissue function. Reproductive problems, certain cancers and asthma have been shown to cause problems in lab animals.
Bisphenol A leeches from food and beverage containers and has been found in 93% of the urine samples in test patients. In the body it mimics estrogen and prevents natural estrogens from attaching to the estrogen site. When this happens in mice they become obese and insulin resistant.
Testing of fat tissue from bisphenol A affected humans reports suppression of the protective hormone adiponectin. Adiponectin protects against heart attacks and type 2 diabetes. Similar studies in mice indicate effects on the beta cells that create insulin resistance. This may well be a reason for children and adolescents’ obesity and early diabetes.
Environmental Health Perspective August 14, 2008.
Science News 9.29.2007
Science News 9.13.2008
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