Excess high blood glucose seems to be related directly to - TopicsExpress



          

Excess high blood glucose seems to be related directly to destruction of beta cells in the pancreas, which produce insulin. This of course creates a diabetic situation. Beta cells are quite sensitive to slight increases in blood sugar and now there is evidence that these cells move into dysfunction when glucose levels stay over 100 mg per deciliter for more than few hours. Research suggests that even incremental increases of glucose over the course of two hours can result in detectable beta cell failure. More beta cells will fail when a person’s blood sugar rises above 86. One study showed that beta cells start to die off when FBS is over 110. Frankly this means that eating too many carbohydrates at one time will begin to kill off pancreatic beta cells and break down the pancreas and over time with age; this is why 26.9% of people 65 and older have IDDM. The good news is that studies in the lab have found that when the beta cells are removed from solutions that have high sugar, they can recover if this is done before a certain amount of time passes. Gabriel Cousens, MD There Is a Cure for Diabetes Do you or someone you love suffer from Chronic Diabetes Degenerative Syndrome (a.k.a. NIDDM, IDDM, hypoglycemia, etc...)? Click here: ow.ly/v3Zqm
Posted on: Tue, 08 Apr 2014 00:55:15 +0000

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