Archive for August, 2007

Acidic Foods Control Blood Glucose

Monday, August 27th, 2007

Another Way to Control Blood Glucose
By David Mendosa

Most of us know that when we eat protein, fat, or fiber our blood
glucose levels won’t go up. Yet few of us are aware of other foods
that will actually reduce these levels.

All you need is a little acid. But it matters a lot what type of
acid.

Slowing your stomach.
Acetic acid seems to be the most effective. You don’t eat or drink
acid? Actually, acetic acid is the chief acid of vinegar.

The best types to use are red or white wine vinegars. The most common
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Charting, logging etc.

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

How do all of you keep track of your numbers, if you do?
I’m driving myself crazy here with all these paper and logs. I know I
had the right intentions in mind, but it’s a bit overwhelming. We go to
the doctor tomorrow for Maddie’s 1 year check up, and I’m not as
organized as I might have thought.
Now that Maddie is on the pump, the little booklet with the 4 boxes
doesn’t seem feasible as she’s getting checked about 10 times a day.
Any hints?
Stephanie

transplant

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007

Last night I spoke to a girl who went to dialysis with me. She got a kidney/pancreas transplant recently. I know there was talk about what you would do if you were not a diabetic for one day. Well she’s not a diabetic anymore. One thing that she told me that she did was take her daughter to Carvel. She had ice cream and didn’t worry about her sugar. This is a dream come true. She was on the list for 4 months. I’ve been on the list for 4 years. I think one of the reasons is my blood type is type o. Which is a very common blood type. Which means a longer wait. And also I’m on the list in New York, and that also means a longer wait. She gave me hope. She is doing wonderful. I was afraid of the surgery and the pills afterwards. But after talking to her I’m not that afraid anymore. I hope her new organs will last a long time.

Methphors & A1C’s… the diabetic tales?

Saturday, August 18th, 2007

Hello Again:

Had this buried in my drafts file wanted to repost this again, see what/if anything folks thought (given my other posting today anyway).
================

There is an apt (I think) story out of Chinese philosophy which describes the perils of a man on a cliff who for all intents and purposes could easily be ~one of us~, a diabetic.
A villager on his way to collect water is being hunted by a pair of tigers. He is chased to the edge of a local cliff running for his life, seconds ahead of his hunters. The man climbs down a small vine in the cliff’s face dangerously rapidly… a hairbreadth ahead of the enraged tiger now above him. Only realizing half-way down that its mate awaited him below. The rough cliff face giving no handhold, and his meager weight climbing down begins sawing the vine against the rocks, begins to shred.
At precisely that moment he notices tigress below, he sees a wild strawberry buried in the cliff face. What does he do ??? <Playful Smile
========

What’s a diabetic supposed to do???? <wg
Jeff

100 points, 50 points, you pick the number???

Friday, August 17th, 2007

Good Morning:

Long busy weekend, as usual very short on this this morning <arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh

Question for the members:

You’ve gotten your 30 day average, your 60 day, your 90 day average.. A1C reading (whatever the case might be). You know what you do pretty well daily, and for the MOST part are doing what should work, very very well overall. Now that the numbers have been crunched by either yourself, your doctor, your meter… whatever the source you find yourself, 50, 100 points above where you’d like to be, in terms of those numbers!!!!!!!!

If you’re doing what you believe you should be…. are doing what you were told SHOULD work, but you still end up higher that you want to be, by a decent number of points… how do YOU bring down your numbers cleanly, easily?

Exercise good, food healthy and small portions… Insulin testing lots, injecting….

Now what?

[There are folks who dwarf me in terms of years-in with this “sneaky dragon”, what have you done to teach this beast “OBEDIENCE” to your will <s
(more…)

9/11

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

On the anniversary of that terrorist attack on America I would like to
send my rememberances to all those that suffered and died.
Howard

Action of Nitroglycerin For Chest Pain May Place Some Patients at Ri

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

Action of Nitroglycerin For Chest Pain May Place Some Patients at Risk
August 2005 - Definitive evidence to explain how the drug nitroglycerin relieves chest pain has resulted from a new study by Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigators at Duke University Medical Center. Nitroglycerin relaxes blood vessels to boost blood flow, yet the mechanism by which the drug works has remained a matter of scientific controversy.
The findings bolster earlier indications that the drug may be ineffective for certain patients, and may place others at risk, the researchers said. The results also suggest that certain other drugs should be avoided by heart patient’s taking the blood vessel dilator, as those drugs’ activity might counteract nitroglycerin’s effects. Such drugs include sulfonylureas used by diabetics, chloral hydrates used for sleep disorders and acetaminophen (e.g. Tylenol). Alcohol may also block the effect of nitroglycerin, said the researchers.
The researchers found through studies in mice that the cellular powerhouses — known as mitochondria — break down nitroglycerin to release nitric oxide, thereby opening blood vessels and lowering blood pressure. Nitric oxide normally present in the bloodstream plays a critical role in controlling blood vessel relaxation.
Nitroglycerin loses its effects on blood flow in animals lacking a particular mitochondrial enzyme called aldehyde dehydrogenase (mtALDH), the Duke team reported in the August 23, 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“Doctors have prescribed nitroglycerin for the relief of chest pain for some 150 years, yet the mechanism by which the drug works has remained a matter of debate,” said study author Jonathan Stamler, M.D., at Duke. “The findings confirm that mtALDH is critical for nitroglycerin action.”
“The results should bring closure to long-standing scientific controversy, and will likely change the way physicians deliver nitroglycerin therapy to patients,” he added. “These findings should certainly motivate a reassessment of this class of drugs.”
First discovered in 1847 and brought to public prominence by the famed Alfred Nobel, who manufactured it first as an explosive, nitroglycerin is a common treatment for chest pain and heart failure. While the drug can effectively relieve chest pain, it tends to lose it effectiveness over time, Stamler said. More recent evidence has raised additional concerns about the drug’s potential to cause long-term injury to the heart, and perhaps even death.
As a result of the drug’s long history of use, its benefits for patient outcomes have never been demonstrated through the rigorous clinical trials that are now standard in cardiovascular care, Stamler explained.
In normal mice, treatment with nitroglycerin led to a drop in blood pressure, which increased with drug dose, the researchers showed.
Mutant mice lacking mtALDH lose the ability to process nitroglycerin, the team reported. As a result, the drug failed to lower blood pressure in the mutant mice at doses comparable to those prescribed to patients.
“The current study finds that mtALDH is both necessary and sufficient for generating vasodilation from clinically relevant levels of nitroglycerin,” Stamler said.
Animals unable to process nitroglycerin continued to respond to alternative nitrate drugs that dilate blood vessels, suggesting that those drugs work through an independent mechanism.
“We thought that all of these drugs worked in the same way through the release of nitric oxide,” Stamler said. “The current findings require us to revisit the implications of the use of these drugs.”
Chronic use of the drug could lead to mitochondrial damage, which may ultimately increase patients’ cardiovascular risk, Stamler said. Therefore, the drug should be prescribed judiciously, he added.
(more…)

From the penthouse to the outhouse

Monday, August 13th, 2007

So, two weeks ago I find out my A1C is down to 6.3. I’m happy as a
lark, and other similar phrases. Darn proud of myself even.
Well, guess I get to pay for that now. Darn near every day since
I’ve been high noon and night. I’ve even adjusted my carb ratio from
1:15 to 1:10. Still high… like 140-180 2 hours after meals.
Haven’t changed my eating habits at all, though I have been under
more stress than usual. Changed Novolog pens to make sure that that
wasn’t it. Changed test strips.
My Lantus is working just fine. My wake-up numbers are perfect.
Gonna go one more day before calling the endo. Figured I’d post and
see what others thought. Change injection sites? How often do those
with One Touch Ultras (or other meters) baseline their meters?
Thanks as always from the eternal newbie…
Mike

free supplies…

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Hi all,

I was cleaning this weekend and found some stuff I don’t want/need. I have a brand new still in the box Accu Check meter, the one with the drums of strips (and some strips to go along with it). I also found a brand new pack of pump batteries for the MiniMed 508. If anyone is interested in either of these, let me know, the first ones to email me can have them.

Jenny

“Do not be afraid to use the
talents you posess. The woods
would be very quiet if the only
birds that sang were the ones that
sang the best.” Unknown

Ketones with Normal sugars

Friday, August 10th, 2007

Hello Stephanie,

If she truly cannot, or will not eat… consider sneaky methods… did the doctor tell you anything about WHAT to eat, or merely eat???

If raising sugar is the issue, pop some table sugar in the beverage possibly? Nothing huge… <shrug

Jeff