| Dr Jacob Teitelbaum MD | 
      The following is one in an ongoing series of columns entitled From Fatigued to Fantastic by Dr Jacob  Teitelbaum MD.View all columns in series  
Diabetes  is when the level of sugar in your blood is too high. Your body makes  insulin to carry sugar from the blood into your cells where it can be  burned as fuel.  In Type 1 diabetes (most often in younger people), there is too little  insulin. This occurs because the cells making insulin were destroyed by  your body when it confused parts of those cells with an outside  infection and attacked them. Taking insulin is usually necessary, but we  will talk about how to prevent complications of the diabetes. Avoiding  both sugar and dehydration (drink water) are critical here. The good  news is that there will likely be alternatives to insulin shots and we  are even creating the ability to put new insulin creating cells back  into your body in the future. For now though, frustrating and annoying  as it is, please stay with your medical program of insulin and  monitoring your blood sugar. Instead of sugars, use Stevia and use sugar  free candies, ice cream, chocolate, etc. Enjoy your pleasure, but since  the Atkins diet came through, there are sugar free ways to do it.  In Type 2 diabetes (usually in overweight adults) there is plenty of  insulin, but the insulin does not work (called "insulin resistance").  This is triggered by being overweight and genetics. In men, if  associated with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, it is called  "metabolic syndrome" and is often caused by testosterone deficiency (a  blood level under ~ 450 should be treated). In women, paradoxically, an  elevated testosterone can cause diabetes. 
 When blood sugar goes too high, it spills into the urine, pulling water  with it. This causes increased urination and thirst. When this happens  in Type 1 diabetes, dehydration can cause your blood sugar to skyrocket  and put you in the hospital. Stay hydrated! 
 Complications of diabetes (heart, vessel and nerve) can often be prevented naturally. 
 Treatments:
1. Lose weight if you are overweight. This restores your own insulin's effectiveness and is often enough to make the diabetes go away—especially if you add regular exercise to your regimen.
1. Lose weight if you are overweight. This restores your own insulin's effectiveness and is often enough to make the diabetes go away—especially if you add regular exercise to your regimen.
   2.  Avoid sweets (Stevia, artificial sweeteners, and sugar free  chocolate with maltitol like the "Russell Stover" sugar free brand are  OK).  
    3.  Increase fiber intake.  
    4.  In men, if the blood testosterone level is under 450, consider bioidentical testosterone hormone by prescription.  
    5.  For Type 2 diabetes, I prefer the above recommendations, and the  medication metformin to insulin. Though you may need insulin, it simply  causes more weight gain and more insulin resistance in the long term.  Because of these, use these other treatments so your doctor can get you  off your insulin.  
    6.  Take the Energy Revitalization System vitamin powder. The vitamins  B12, B6 and Inositol can help prevent (or heal) diabetic nerve injury.  Treating the magnesium deficiency routinely caused by the diabetes helps  decrease the risk of heart disease (do not take if you have kidney  failure without your doctor's OK though). The antioxidants may decrease  the damage from the high sugar, and other components may help increase  insulin sensitivity. Vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased  diabetes risk as well.  
    7.  Take the supplement lipoic acid 300 mg 2x day to prevent and treat diabetic nerve pain.  
    8.  If you have diabetic nerve injury, add Acetyl-L-Carnitine 2,000 mg a  day. Early research suggests that Coenzyme Q10 200 mg a day may help.   
   9.  If you develop heart problems, see "Treating Heart Disease Naturally." 
source:
http://www.healthy.net/Health/Essay/Treating_Diabetes_Naturally/1031
 
No comments:
Post a Comment