Many
of these conditions can be fatal.
So
taking drugs to manage your diabetes would seem like a smart thing to do.
Not
so... for several very good reasons.
Survival
rates using diabetes medications
According
to a research paper Benefits of Diabetes Drugs Dubious, published in the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in December 2014, no doctor-prescribed
diabetes drug has been shown to save the life of a diabetic. There is no proof
that they prevent heart attacks, strokes, kidney disease, nerve damage,
blindness or other diabetes complications such as the need for amputations.
High
blood glucose levels are not the same as diabetes. They are signs of diabetes
but they are not the disease itself. The problem is: diabetes drugs target
blood sugar levels... they do not treat diabetes. But very few people die of
high levels of glucose in their blood.
However
they do die of the damage caused by diabetes: heart disease, strokes, kidney
disease and raging infections... and diabetes drugs do nothing for them.
A
peer-reviewed meta-study Comparison of Clinical Outcomes and Adverse Events
Associated with Glucose-lowering Drugs in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes,
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2016,
showed that there was no increase in survival rates among type 2 diabetics who
took diabetes medications.
The
drugs failed to prevent heart attacks and strokes. They also failed to reduce
all-cause mortality for these patients.
The
study examined nine classes of diabetes drugs, including insulin, comparing the
drugs to a placebo. The researchers reviewed more than 300 randomized clinical
trials covering nearly 120,000 patients before reaching their conclusions.
Dangers
of diabetes drugs
Drugs
for diabetes are dangerous.
Their
side effects include cardiovascular reactions, flu-like symptoms and dizziness.
They have been linked to muscle and stomach pain, diarrhoea and anaemia. In
addition, if diabetics are not careful, these drugs can cause dangerously low
blood glucose levels.
The
sad thing is that many patients take two or even three of these drugs at the
same time, all prescribed by their local doctor or diabetes clinic.
But,
instead of reducing deaths, this multi-drug regime increases death rates.
A
research paper Effects of Intensive Glucose Lowering in Type 2 Diabetes,
published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2008, concluded that
intense efforts to lower blood glucose with drugs resulted in a 22% higher rate
of death from all causes. The same study showed that deaths from heart disease
went up by 35%.
So
what to do?
Reversing
diabetes
The
fact is that there is no need, unless your diabetes is far advanced, to use
these drugs at all. You can reverse your diabetes using diet alone, perhaps
with a little extra exercise thrown in.
There
is no cure for diabetes, ie once you have it you will always have it. So when I
say you can reverse your diabetes, I mean you can beat the nasty consequences
the disease brings such as the cardiovascular problems, strokes, kidney disease
and so on.
The
beating-diabetes diet is simple. It requires but a little discipline.
You
can reverse type 2 diabetes by eating foods that are (1) low in sugar, (2) low
in fat, (3) low in salt, (4) high in fibre and that (5) are digested slowly.
The easiest way to do this is by concentrating on natural, unprocessed foods
that are mostly plants. You also need to avoid all dairy products and eggs, and
to drink plenty of water.
The
fundamental cause of type 2 diabetes is fat blocking the receptors in your
muscle cells, leaving glucose (produced by the digestive process) and insulin
(produced by the pancreas) swirling around in your bloodstream. This condition
is called insulin resistance.
The
diet works because it minimises your intake of fat so that, after a month or
so, the fat blocking the receptors in your muscle cells will have disappeared.
Unblocking
the receptors ensures that the insulin can do its job of opening those
receptors to get the glucose out of your bloodstream and into cells, thus
'reversing' your diabetes.
As
well as following the beating-diabetes diet, you should also take up some mild
exercise, such as walking, gardening, swimming, dancing and so on. This will
help stimulate your muscle cells to use the energy (glucose) floating around in
your blood stream.
In
addition, you can give the beating-diabetes diet a boost in several ways:
Vitamin
D
Low
levels of vitamin D3 have been linked to both pre-diabetes and full-blown
diabetes. Sadly, most people have a vitamin D deficiency.
A
research paper entitled Lipoprotein lipase links vitamin D, insulin
resistance, and type 2 diabetes: a cross-sectional epidemiological study,
undertaken by Chinese researchers and published in January 2013 in Cardiovascular
Diabetology, showed that even a minor deficiency in vitamin D3 can increase
the risk of diabetes by more than 90%.
So
how do you up your intake of vitamin D3?
You
can get sufficient vitamin D3 by standing around for just 10 minutes or so a
day in the midday sun... provided you only wear bathing togs (even in winter)
and the sun is actually shining (a rarity where I live).
You
could also get plenty of vitamin D by eating oily fish (tuna, sardines,
mackerel and salmon), free-range eggs, grass-fed beef, liver and dairy
products. But these foods contain copious amounts of fats which you need to
avoid if you are to reverse your diabetes.
For
diabetics, therefore, the best way to get sufficient vitamin D3 is to take a
supplement. The recommended dosage is 8,000IUs (international units) a day.
Guava
The
leaves, stems and flesh (but not the skins) of the tropical guava fruit block
the digestion of carbohydrates which reduces spikes in blood glucose. Consuming
pealed guava also makes the development of insulin resistance less likely and
helps improve the blood sugar levels of diabetics.
If
fresh guava is available in your locality you should eat it daily. If not, you
can get guava tea made from dried leaves at your local health food store or
online. A cup a day (or more) is highly recommended.
Vanadium
Vanadium
reduces spikes in blood glucose and insulin levels by helping to move blood
glucose into muscle cells and by inhibiting the absorption of glucose from the
gut.
In
a study described in Rare Earths: Forbidden Cures, a book published in
1994, diabetics took daily supplements of vanadium... their average blood
glucose levels dropped by 10% in only three weeks.
You
can use vanadium by taking it as a supplement... 500mcg three times a day...
but:
Caution:
do not exceed 10mg a day.
Berberine
Berberine
is a plant nutrient found in the roots, rhizomes, stems and bark of medicinal
herbs such as barberry, tree turmeric, Oregon grape, goldenseal, yellowroot,
Chinese goldthread, prickly poppy, and Californian poppy.
In
the 1980s, Chinese doctors discovered that berberine can normalize blood
glucose levels. It does so by decreasing insulin resistance, by decreasing the
production of sugar in the liver, and by increasing the ability to breakdown
glucose inside cells.
To
lower the levels of sugar in your blood, you should take a supplement... one
500mg capsule with meals two or three times a day.
Caveat:
the writer of this article is not a medical doctor and his strong advice is
that you consult your doctor or a staff member of the diabetes clinic you
attend before you stop taking your prescribed diabetes medications.
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