Discussion of diabetes management in day to day life

Archive for January, 2011

Iron stores / meat eating / heme iron

<<snip>>
The strongest dietary association with serum ferritin concentration was
a positive association with heme iron
<<snip>>

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 82, No. 4, 813-820,
October 2005
© 2005 American Society for Clinical Nutrition

——————————————————————————–

ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION

Diet and genetic factors associated with iron status in middle-aged
women1,2,3
Janet E Cade, Jennifer A Moreton, Beverley O’Hara, Darren C
Greenwood, Juliette Moor, Victoria J Burley, Kairen Kukalizch, D Tim
Bishop and Mark Worwood
1 From the Nutritional Epidemiology Group (JEC, JAM, BO, and VJB) and
the Biostatistics Group (DCG), Centre for Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom; the Genetic
Epidemiology Division, Cancer Research UK Clinical Centre, St James’s
University Hospital, Leeds, United Kingdom (JM, KK, and DTB); and the
University of Wales College of Medicine, Cardiff, United Kingdom (MW)

Background: Gene mutations associated with iron overload have been
identified. How food and nutrient intakes affect iron status in persons
who may be at risk of iron overload because their genetic status is
unknown.

Objective: The objective was to determine the relation between food and
nutrient intakes, HFE genotype, and iron status. Foods and nutrients
associated with iron stores, with adjustment for gene mutations
associated with hemochromatosis, were explored.

Design: A prospective cohort of women aged 35-69 y (the UK Women’s
Cohort Study) provided information on diet through a questionnaire and
food diary; 6779 women in the cohort provided cheek cell samples, blood
samples, or both, which were genotyped for C282Y and H63D mutations,
and 2489 women also had their iron status assessed. Relations between
serum ferritin and iron intake were investigated by using multiple
linear regression, with adjustment for potential confounders.

Results: The strongest dietary association with serum ferritin
concentration was a positive association with heme iron and not with
nonheme or total iron. Weaker positive associations were seen with red
and white meat, and negative associations were seen with total energy
and white and brown whole-meal bread, independent of genotype and other
potential confounders. The effect of genotype on ferritin
concentrations primarily occurred after menopause, at which time a
strong interaction between genotype and heme iron intake was observed.
Other factors associated with serum ferritin concentrations were age,
body mass index, blood donation, menopausal status, and HFE genotype.

Conclusions: Postmenopausal women eating a diet rich in heme iron and
who were C282Y homozygotes had the highest serum ferritin
concentrations.

Key Words: Iron · genotype · ferritin · UK Women’s Cohort Study
· heme · diet

——————————————————————————–

Copyright © 2005 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc.

Who loves ya.
Tom

Jesus Was A Vegetarian!
http://jesuswasavegetarian.7h.com

Man Is A Herbivore!
http://pages.ivillage.com/ironjustice/manisaherbivore

DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://pages.ivillage.com/ironjustice/deadpeoplewalking

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curious about autoimmune drugs

Just curious about the neccesity to take auto-immune drugs forever
after any transplant…
 with most any transplant – even the most recent "partial face",
wouldn’t in time – the transplanted flesh – eventually through cell
replacement,  would’nt the cells eventually be replaced by the
recipients own cells and dna?  or ~  isn’t that the way it works? does
the implanted part – remain forever dna-unique from the rest of the
body?   is there any research being done to somehow replace the
implanted organs dna – and ~ ha~ as I’m writing thinking.. realising
maybe this IS impossible.
 Pity the donor organ couldnt be rendered "dna-generic"!

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Yippee! Obese women to be denied In-Vitro Fertization treatment

FERTILITY experts have called for obese women to be denied access to
free IVF treatment in Scotland.

An expert group of leading medics will tell the Scottish Executive that
clinics should refuse to treat women who are clinically obese.

If the recommendation is accepted, it would be the first time the
health service in Scotland has agreed a blanket policy of refusing
treatment to patients because of their weight. Glasgow Royal Infirmary
is currently the only one of Scotland’s four publicly-funded fertility
clinics that refuses to treat obese women.

An advisory group will present its report to a cross-party
parliamentary group on fertility treatment this week.

Dr Mark Hamilton, chairman of the advisory group, said IVF treatment
for overweight women was too big a risk. He added: "The heavier a woman
is, the less likely IVF is to be successful and there are also safety
issues for the baby and mother."

Obese women may be denied IVF by  STUART MACDONALD
http://news.scotsman.com/scitech.cfm?id=2351382005

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studies show "bad" food may not be bad. :)

http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/diet.fitness/12/05/intuitive.eating.ap…

http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/12/05/coffee.liver.damage.reut/index.html

here is to health! (LOL!)

is it any wonder that i have serious doubts about the
"goodness" of these weird new analog insulins?  too bad
we don’t have the same level of competition on insulin
that we get on blood glucose meters!  for that matter,
cats/dogs/horses get better attention to insulin choice
than we (USA/Canada) humans do

bill, t1 since ’57, ex 8-yr pumper, pork/beef-L 2x, simple MDI

p.s. if you don’t like cross posting and want a response
      from me, then don’t post to alt.support.diabetes

p.p.s. afaik, avoid dumb stuff like Crisco (trans fats)
      and snack foods (which are typically loaded w/t.fats)
      and sugar and overly processed foods.  to the best
      of my knowledge, there is nothing wrong with
      saturated fat.  odds are we’ll have studies
      showing this in roughly another 20 years

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Statins – Can I refuse ?

Can I refuse to take statins prescibed by my doctor ?
I have shown my reports to other doctors and they say
it is unnecessary .

Kam


Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server – http://www.Mailgate.ORG

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Fat acceptor profiles- M. Washington, 574lb crack dealer argues he's too fat for jail

Man Argues He’s Too Overweight for Jail

Iowa Man Who Stored Crack Cocaine in His Home Argues He’s Too
Overweight for Jail

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa Dec 5, 2005 – A man who allowed his home to be
used to store crack cocaine that was shipped by mail was sentenced to
14 years in prison, federal officials said.

Michael Washington, 32, pleaded guilty last January to making his home
available for the storage of crack cocaine, according to a news release
from the U.S. attorney’s office.

Washington, who weighs 574 pounds, argued during sentencing that he was
too obese and in too poor of health to be adequately cared for in
prison, and requested home confinement. However, the court said the
agency was capable of addressing his medical needs.

Prosecutors said he admitted that in October 2001 he and his wife tried
to obtain a package of crack sent from a source in California through
the U.S. mail.

Officers seized the package and found more than 100 grams of cocaine
inside. They resealed the package and had it delivered to Washington’s
residence. When officers entered the home, they found the opened
package and Washington in the basement, the news release said.

The U.S. attorney’s office said that during the sentencing hearing on
Thursday, Washington admitted that he had been involved in the sale of
crack cocaine since 1996.

Information from: KOEL-AM, http://www.koel.com

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Feedback on GlucoWatch

I would am interested in feedback on the convenience and accuracy of
GlucoWatch?

Does anybody use it?   How does it test the blood without a pinprick?  How
accurate is it?

ANY feedback would be helpful because I am tired of pricking my finger all
the time.

thank you.

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Developing Diabetes

I’m going to have a fasting sugar test done today, but until then, I’m
curious what people have found could cause diabetes in an otherwise
healthy person? I run regularly(my last 8k was run in 42 minutes), am
27, no major health problems. What prompted me to go get tested was a
multitude of symptoms, slight erectile problems, tiredness, feeling
blah when I shouldn’t, and most recently a funny taste in my mouth
coupled with a huge desire to drink water and pissing all the time. For
those diagnosed, has the doctor ever mentioned what may have caused you
to "get" diabetes? Or is it just something that can occur spotaneously?
It’ll sort of suck to find out I have it, but I’ll keep on keeping on
either way.

On a separate note, any military members out there with it? I’m
wondering how it will change my military status? Thanks in advance guys.

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Ramazzini findings implicate the aspartic acid in cancers from aspartame: Samuels: Murray 2005.11.29

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1260
Ramazzini findings implicate the aspartic acid in cancers from aspartame:
Samuels: Murray 2005.11.29

November 29, 2005   Hi Jack,  Yes, also, the Ramazzini Foundation
found evidence that the aspartic acid may the cause of cancers in
"…the renal pelvis and ureter, peripheral nerves and
proliferative changes of the olfactory epithelium…"
in rats fed aspartame, and that females were more vulnerable.

In mutual service,  Rich

Rich Murray, MA Room For All rmfor…@comcast.net
505-501-2298 1943 Otowi Road Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/messages
group with 148 members, 1,260 posts in a public, searchable
archive http://RoomForAll.blogspot.com
http://AspartameNM.blogspot.com
**********************************************************

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1250
aspartame causes cancer in rats at levels approved for humans, Morando
Soffritti et al, Ramazzini Foundation, Italy & National Toxicology Program
of National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2005.11.17
Env. Health Pers. 35 pages: Murray

page 20:

" Moreover, carcinogenic effects for the renal pelvis and ureter,
peripheral nerves and proliferative changes of the olfactory epithelium
were not observed in the long-term bioassays performed
in the same conditions at the CMCRC
on methanol, MTBE or formaldehyde.

To investigate if the other two metabolites of APM are responsible in
inducing these lesions,
it is of paramount importance to perform adequate life-span
carcinogenicity studies on aspartic acid or phenylalanine.

It is worthy of note that,
in a long-term carcinogenicity study on monosodium aspartate (MSA)
administered with drinking water
to groups of 50 male and 50 female Fischer-344 rats
(beginning at 6 weeks of age for 100 weeks and then sacrificed),
a dose-related

- 20 –

hyperplasia of the renal pelvis was observed
in males and in females (Kitahori et al. 1996).

The same effect was found, by the same group of investigators,
 in another study in which MSA was administered in drinking water
to groups of male and female Fischer-344 rats
to evaluate its promoting activity of carcinogenesis
of the transitional epithelium of the renal pelvis (Kitamura et al. 1996).

In both studies, clear evidence was provided of a relationship
between MSA treatment and transitional cell hyperplasia.
The authors indicated that calcification could have an important role
in inducing simple and papillary hyperplasia of
the renal pelvis transitional cell epithelium and,
consequently, in the induction of transitional cell tumors.

In our study, performed on 1,800 Sprague-Dawley rats,
which are less susceptible to the spontaneous development
of nephropathies than Fischer rats,
we observed a dose-related, statistically significant increase
in the incidence of dysplastic hyperplasia and carcinoma
of the renal pelvis in females, but none in males,
when compared to the controls.

The fact that we observed an increased incidence of kidney
calcification in females and not in males,
when compared to the controls, gives added weight
to the hypothesis that aspartic acid
may cause preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions of the renal pelvis,
and that calcification may be the mechanism responsible for this effect. "

Kitahori Y, Kitamura M, Konoshi N, Matsuda H,
Tao M, Matsui E et al. 1996.
Carcinogenicity study of monosodium aspartate in Fisher 344 rats:
100 weeks treatment.
J Toxicol Pathol 9: 161-168.

Kitamura M, Konishi N, Kitahori Y, Fukushima Y,
Yoshioka N, Hiasa Y. 1996.
Promoting effect of monosodium aspartate, but not glycine,
on renal pelvis and urinary bladder carcinogenesis in rat
induced by N-Butyl-N-(4-Hydroxybutyl)nitrosamine.
Toxicol Pathol 24: 573-579.
**********************************************************

- — -

—– Original Message —–
From: ADandJ…@aol.com
To: rmfor…@comcast.net
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005 11:22 PM
Subject: Re: my mild reactions to MSG and aspartame:

Jack Samuels: Rich Murray 2005.11…

Rich:

Thanks.  I would guess that if you took more aspartame
than you have in the past, the reaction would be the same
as the one you experience from MSG.
 It is my belief that most of the reported reactions to aspartame
are from the aspartic acid content.

Jack
*********************************************************

http://www.truthinlabeling.org/    Truth in Labeling Campaign [MSG]
Adrienne Samuels, PhD   The toxicity/safety of processed
free glutamic acid (MSG): a study in suppression of information.
Accountability in Research 1999;  6:  259-310.  52-page review
P.O. Box 2532 Darien, Illinois 60561
858-481-9333   adandj…@aol.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/858
Samuels: Strong: Roberts: Gold:  flaws in double-blind studies re
aspartame and MSG toxicity: Murray 2002.08.01 rmforall
**********************************************************

From: "Rich Murray" <rmfor…@comcast.net>
To: <ADandJ…@aol.com>
Subject: my mild reactions to MSG and aspartame:
Jack Samuels: Rich Murray 2005.11.28
Date: Monday, November 28, 2005 11:09 PM

my mild reactions to MSG and aspartame:
Jack Samuels: Rich Murray 2005.11.28

November 28 2005   Hello Jack,

I was knocked out about 10 or 20 minutes, running the top of my head into
a pickup truck door edge as I was bicycling to school in the morning —
woke up slowly in the ambulance — hearing the siren was the first
awareness,
then slowly my body. Threw up at a cafeteria in a small city about noon.  In
the hospital two weeks, and had a spinal tap to enhance contrast for a brain
X-ray, recovered at home for about 6 weeks.  For years until about age 14,
reading always gave me a headache — I loved to read.

I get a mild dull headache and fatigue from MSG, and found this spring that
3 packets of Equal, about the same as 6 oz of diet soda, merely caused a
slight tinnitus and mental activation for an hour, similar to black or green
tea, while the conversion to formaldehyde, I think, within ten minutes was
wiping out the rod-shaped bacteria that gave me mild sinusitis
for about 6 weeks — I could view them in my greenish, bloody snot
at 300X with my microscope — so that by an hour my sinuses
were clear, only to be fully infected again 12-14 hours later.
The same process happened with an ounce of blackberry brandy,
which provides roughly the same amount of methanol, about 100 mg,
while 3 ounces produced a mild inebriation,
with no symptoms the next morning.

Coffee invariably is addictive, increasing my irritability and energy
swings, and causing my handwriting to be poor.

In mutual service,  Rich

—– Original Message —–
From: ADandJ…@aol.com
To: rmfor…@comcast.net
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005 7:24 PM
Subject: Re: ANM: only nine negative reports in last 3 years on Usenet
groups on Sple…

Rich:

I found your E-mail to be of great interest.  You mentioned that you
experienced a severe head injury when you were 10 years of age.

In an informal survey, we have noted that people with severe sensitivity to
MSG, and I assume, aspartame, have experienced head injuries.
For example, in my own case, I have lost consciousness
from such things as a head on auto collision and a severe boat explosion.

Is it possible that we have a permanent injury to our blood brain barrier?
I don’t know, and for the present, I am unwilling to have an autopsy.

Jack Samuels
**********************************************************

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Cinnamon ??

Dear Friends,

    This morning in the Arizona Republic newspaper, Dr. Andrew Weil wrote
about the study of the use of cinnamon in the treatment of Type II diabetes.

    He was fairly non-commital in his article — stating that ‘more study’
is needed.

    Has anyone here been following latest developments in cinnamon use ??

TIA,

-Mel Smith

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