Discussion of diabetes management in day to day life

{{{{{ Proanthocyanidin (PYCNOGENOL) }}}}}

CAT’S CLAW: A SOURCE OF PROANTHO CYANI D I N (PYCN O G EN O L)
The wealth of phytochemicals inherent to the Uncaria tomatosa plant
include proanthocyanidins, which have strongly established themselves
as potent antioxidants. Four dimeric procyanidins have been shown to
constitute a p
ortio of the plant extract.35

Proanthocyanidins are found in Pycnogenol, and are commonly extracted
from grape seeds or pine bark. Proanthocyanidins have accrued an
impressive list of antioxidant bioactivity and promise to attract a
great deal more at
tention in the near future.

Because proanthocyanidins scavenge free radicals so effectively, they
have shown some remarkable curative effects. Extensive research has
demonstrated that proanthocyanidins are such potent antioxidants that
they can find
 and neutralize free radicals with great rapidity, allowing cells to
regenerate rather than deteriorate. They have extremely high
bioavailability. Specific actions associated with proanthocyanidins
include:

· capillary protection which helps prevent varicose veins, phlebitis
and excess bruising
 significant anti-inflammatory action in cases of joint pain and
injuries
· anti-edemic, in that it helps control swelling and reduce water
retention
· antihistamine, in that it decreases the production of histamine
commonly seen in allergic reactions     · reduces the risk of diabetic
complications such as retinopathy

It’s interesting to note that proanthocyanidins target many of the same
disorders that Cat’s Claw is also used for. The addition of important
alkaloids to the proanthocyanidins in Cat’s Claw make it an herbal
panacea for
cellular protection against a number of diseases and environmental
toxins.

SUMMARY

Cat’s Claw is nothing less than a wonder herb. Scientific studies have
proven its medicinal worth. It should be used not only to treat a
variety of modern-day diseases but as a preventative supplement as
well. What Peruvi
an Indians have known for generations should be shared with the rest of
the world in our struggle to conquer disease and maintain health.

Home page @ http://www.csz.com/alliance.html

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (5)

5 Responses to “{{{{{ Proanthocyanidin (PYCNOGENOL) }}}}}”

  1. admin says:

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  2. admin says:

    Please look at our new 200+ page website for your interest.

    Dr. George I. Traitses B.Sc.(hon.), D.C., M.Sc., C.H.N., C.C.R.D.
    Doctor of Chiropractic, Human Nutrition, Chiropractic Rehabilitation
     Infinite Health Canada-Live Cell Evaluation-Enzyme Nutrition
    4394 Steeles Ave. E., Suite 212, Box 70, Markham, Ont. Canada, L3R 9V9
    +1 (905) 940-8778 Fax: +1 (905) 940-9617   trait…@terraport.net
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  3. admin says:

    Dr. George I. Traitses wrote:

    > Please look at our new 200+ page website for your interest.
    > Dr. George I. Traitses B.Sc.(hon.), D.C., M.Sc., C.H.N., C.C.R.D.
    > Doctor of Chiropractic, Human Nutrition, Chiropractic Rehabilitation
    >  Infinite Health Canada-Live Cell Evaluation-Enzyme Nutrition

    Dr. Traitses:

    When calling yourself a "doctor," you should make it clear that you
    are a CHIROPRACTOR so we can weigh your comments and the merits of
    your commercial website in light of that fact.

    Thanks,

    Henry

  4. admin says:

    Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part2
    Posting-Frequency: biweekly
    Last-modified: 23 September 1995

    Changes: minor edits (23 Sept)

    Subject: READ THIS FIRST
    ========================

    Copyright 1993-1995 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
    of copyright law and convention requires the author’s permission.

    Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
    Never substitute advice from the net for a physician’s care. Diabetes is a
    critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
    personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
    based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

    Subject: Table of Contents
    ==========================

    INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
      READ THIS FIRST
      Table of Contents
    GENERAL (found in part 1)
      Where’s the FAQ?
      What’s this newsgroup like?
      Abuse of the newsgroup
      The newsgroup charter
      Newsgroup posting guidelines
      What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
      What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
      What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
      What’s type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
      Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
      How about discussing hypoglycemia?
    BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
      How accurate is my meter?
      Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
      What do meters cost?
      Comparing blood glucose meters
      How can I download data from my One Touch II?
      How can I download data from my Glucometer ™?
      Other recordkeeping software
      I’ve heard of a non-invasive bG meter — the Dream Beam?
      What’s HbA1c and what’s it mean?
    TREATMENT (found in part 3)
      My diabetic father isn’t taking care of himself. What can I do?
      Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
      So-and-so eats sugar! Isn’t that poison for diabetics?
      Insulin nomenclature
      Travelling with insulin
      Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
      Injectors: Pens
      Injectors: Jets
      Insulin pumps
      Type 1 cures — beta cell implants
      Type 1 cures — pancreas transplants
      Type 2 cures — not even a dream
      What’s a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
      Should I take a chromium supplement?
      I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
      Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
      Alcohol and diabetes
      Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
      Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
      What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
      What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
      What’s the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
      How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
      What’s the bottom line on pycnogenol?
      Pycnogenol references
    SOURCES (found in part 4)
      Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
      Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
      Online resources: commercial services
      Online resources: FTP
      Online resources: World Wide Web
      Online resources: other
      Where can I mail order XYZ?
      How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
      How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
      How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
      How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
      How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
      Could you recommend some good reading?
    RESEARCH (found in part 5)
      What is the DCCT? What are the results?
      More details about the DCCT
      DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
    IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
      Who did this?

    Subject: How accurate is my meter?
    ==================================

    bG (blood glucose) meters are not as accurate as the readings you get from
    them imply. For example, you might think that 108 means 108 mg/dl, not 107 or
    109. But in fact all meters made for home use have at least a 10-15% error
    under ideal conditions. Thus you should interpret "108" as "probably between
    100 and 120". (See above for conversion to mmol/L.) This is a random error
    and will not be consistent from one determination to the next. You cannot
    expect to get exactly the same reading from two checks done one after the
    other, nor from two meters using the same blood sample.

    This is generally considered acceptable because variations in this range will
    not make a major difference in treatment decisions. For example, the
    difference between 100 and 120 may make no difference in how you treat
    yourself, or at most might make a difference of one unit of insulin. With
    present technology, more accurate meters would be much more expensive. This
    expense is only justified in research work, where such accuracy might detect
    small trends which could go undetected with less accurate measurements.

    This discussion applies to ideal conditions. The error may be increased by
    poor or missing calibration, temperatures outside the intended range,
    outdated strips, improper technique, poor timing, insufficient sample size,
    contamination, and probably other factors. Contamination is especially
    serious since it can happen so easily and is likely to result in an overdose
    of insulin. Glucose is found in fruits, juices, sodas, and many other foods.
    Even a smidgen can seriously alter a reading.

    When comparing meter readings with lab results, also note that plasma readings
    are 15% higher than whole blood, and that capillary blood gives different
    readings from venous blood.

    Visually read strips are slightly less accurate than meters, with an error
    rate around 20-25%.

    For some meters, strips are available from manufacturers other than the meter
    manufacturer. Some m.h.d. readers have compared the strips side-by-side and
    found those from one manufacturer to read consistently lower than the strips
    from another. The differences are not likely to make a significant difference
    in your treatment, but are large enough to be noticeable and possibly
    confusing. For this reason it is not a good idea to change strip
    manufacturers without comparing the readings from one with the readings from
    the other.

    I’ve seen no such direct comparison of meters, but the possibility exists that
    some meters might read consistently lower than others. Be careful when
    changing meters.

    By "error rate" I mean twice the standard deviation from the mean. An error
    rate of 15% says that about 97% of the readings will be within 15% of the
    actual value.

    Subject: Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
    =======================================================

    The cost of blood glucose measurement strips is a complex interaction of R&D
    costs, manufacturing costs, marketing strategy, insurance practices, and
    undoubtedly other factors. You can ask on the net if you want; you’ll get
    lots of comments but no answers.

    There are a couple of ways of reducing the cost of blood glucose monitoring.
    One is to seek out the best price for the strips; large stores such as FEDCO
    often have good prices, as do some mail order suppliers (see mail order
    section).

    A second way is to use visually read strips (Chemstrip bG and a couple of
    lesser known brands) and cut them in half or even in thirds. Do the cutting
    carefully with a pair of strong, *clean* scissors, and get the strips back
    into the vial as quickly as possible. There have been reports that some
    manufacturers claim this procedure will cause problems, but those who have
    used the technique report that it works well. Visually read strips are
    slightly less accurate than meters.

    Do *not* cut strips when using them in meters. The results will be totally
    incorrect.

    Most discussion on m.h.d of the cost of blood glucose measurement strips has
    centered on the US. I’m not sure why, though a good guess is that differences
    in health care systems and national policies make this issue more critical to
    the individual patient in the US. There is no dearth of non-US participants
    on m.h.d.

    Subject: What do meters cost?
    =============================

    The flip side of expensive blood glucose measurement strips is that the
    manufacturers virtually (and sometimes literally) give away the meters to
    hook you on their strips. Don’t pay full price for a meter; look for
    discounts, rebates, and giveaways. For example, as of this writing I’m
    looking at a catalog that shows a Glucometer 3 for US$45, with a US$30
    manufacturer’s rebate *and* a US$30 trade-in allowance if you already have a
    competing meter — which means you make US$15. There are similar deals on
    other meters.

    But make sure you consider the cost of strips as well as the cost of meters,
    and find out which your insurance will pay for. The most fully featured
    meters, such as the One Touch II, don’t have such widely advertised deals,
    though you can probably find ways of getting them at discount.

    If you have insurance that pays for strips but not for the meter, it may be
    worth calling the meter manufacturer and trying to persuade them to give you
    a meter. If anybody has actually tried this, let us know whether or not it
    worked.

    As with strips, this discussion of costs applies to the US, and there has
    been little discussion of meter costs outside the US on m.h.d., probably
    because fewer tradeoffs are available in most countries. An Australian
    correspondent notes a much narrower choice and higher cost of meters there,
    but subsidized (pardon, subsidised) measurement strips. In Britain, strips
    are covered by the National Health Service, but meters may be expensive.
    Elsewhere? Please post.

    Subject: Comparing blood glucose meters
    =======================================

    This section is courtesy of Lyle Hodgson <l…@world.std.com>, who found the
    chart published by Hospital Center Pharmacy, got permission to reproduce it,
    and entered and formatted the data. Take it, Lyle.

    The following Blood Glucose Monitor Comparison Chart is published by the
    Hospital Center Pharmacy (433 Brookline Ave. Boston MA 02215; reprinted here
    with permission). After I mentioned it a couple weeks ago, Ed

    read more »

  5. admin says:

    Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part3
    Posting-Frequency: biweekly
    Last-modified: 9 Oct 1995

    Changes: add a comment on lancet reuse (9 Sept)
             add section on adhesive capsulitis (9 Oct) (thanks, Lyle and Lee)

    Subject: READ THIS FIRST
    ========================

    Copyright 1993-1995 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
    of copyright law and convention requires the author’s permission.

    Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
    Never substitute advice from the net for a physician’s care. Diabetes is a
    critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
    personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
    based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

    Subject: Table of Contents
    ==========================

    INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
      READ THIS FIRST
      Table of Contents
    GENERAL (found in part 1)
      Where’s the FAQ?
      What’s this newsgroup like?
      Abuse of the newsgroup
      The newsgroup charter
      Newsgroup posting guidelines
      What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
      What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
      What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
      What’s type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
      Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
      How about discussing hypoglycemia?
    BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
      How accurate is my meter?
      Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
      What do meters cost?
      Comparing blood glucose meters
      How can I download data from my One Touch II?
      How can I download data from my Glucometer ™?
      Other recordkeeping software
      I’ve heard of a non-invasive bG meter — the Dream Beam?
      What’s HbA1c and what’s it mean?
    TREATMENT (found in part 3)
      My diabetic father isn’t taking care of himself. What can I do?
      Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
      So-and-so eats sugar! Isn’t that poison for diabetics?
      Insulin nomenclature
      Travelling with insulin
      Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
      Injectors: Pens
      Injectors: Jets
      Insulin pumps
      Type 1 cures — beta cell implants
      Type 1 cures — pancreas transplants
      Type 2 cures — not even a dream
      What’s a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
      Should I take a chromium supplement?
      I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
      Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
      Alcohol and diabetes
      Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
      Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
      What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
      What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
      What’s the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
      How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
      What’s the bottom line on pycnogenol?
      Pycnogenol references
    SOURCES (found in part 4)
      Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
      Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
      Online resources: commercial services
      Online resources: FTP
      Online resources: World Wide Web
      Online resources: other
      Where can I mail order XYZ?
      How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
      How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
      How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
      How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
      How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
      Could you recommend some good reading?
    RESEARCH (found in part 5)
      What is the DCCT? What are the results?
      More details about the DCCT
      DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
    IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
      Who did this?

    Subject: My diabetic father isn’t taking care of himself. What can I do?
    ========================================================================

    We’ll assume your father has type 2 diabetes. See separate section for
    definition of types.

    Type 2 diabetics, and those who care for them, are in a difficult situation.
    Type 2 strikes late in life, so personal habits and patterns are already
    formed and solidly engrained. Yet in most cases those habits and patterns are
    exactly what must be changed if a newly-diagnosed diabetic is to care
    properly for his or her health. This is a difficult psychological problem.

    The cornerstones for treating type 2 diabetes are exercise, weight control,
    and diet. A high percentage of type 2 patients who apply these therapies
    assiduously can control the disease with these therapies alone, without
    insulin or oral hypoglycemic drugs. Naturally these are also some of the most
    difficult aspects of life to change. There can be no single or simple answer
    of how to help or encourage a particular individual find a combination of
    therapies which not only controls the disease but also is psychologically
    acceptable and which can be incorporated as a lifetime pattern. Helping
    depends on knowing the individual’s habits, patterns, motivations, desires,
    likes and dislikes, and working with all the existing conditions and
    everything brought forward from past life.

    Doctors and other health care professionals tend to treat type 2 diabetics
    with drugs (oral hypoglycemics) and insulin rather than taking the time to
    try to get their patients to make the difficult lifestyle changes described
    above. This isn’t true of all practitioners, but of many. They have good
    reason for this tendency: they know all too well (often from painful personal
    experience) that most type 2 patients aren’t going to make many changes
    anyway, and the doctors and other practitioners don’t like wasting their time
    and breath. So it’s likely to fall to friends and relatives who care deeply
    to educate themselves about type 2 diabetes and do what they can to encourage
    their loved one to make changes. In particular, if the doctor has left the
    impression that drugs and insulin are the only treatments, make sure to
    counter that impression with information about the value of exercise, diet,
    and weight control.

    At the same time, it’s important to remember that needing oral hypoglycemics
    and/or insulin injections as additional tools isn’t failure. On the contrary,
    a patient who’s been actively involved in self treatment already has an
    excellent chance of using these additional tools successfully. Those who have
    learned to use the exercise – weight control – diet triumvirate will also be
    able to utilize insulin and oral drugs as additional treatments when needed.
    Choose the appropriate tools and use them effectively.

    These treatment choices can interact in positive ways as well. Bringing blood
    glucose under control often increases the body’s sensitivity to insulin. So
    ironically, using insulin may decrease the need for insulin. This is a
    positive change which can then be reinforced by the other, interacting
    treatments.

    You will need far more information than is appropriate for a Usenet FAQ
    panel. As a start, call the ADA (see ADA section), get a subscription to
    _Diabetes Forecast_ (see journals), and visit a university library and browse
    in the diabetes section in the stacks.

    Beyond the generalizations above, a few specifics are usually of value:

       Set a good example in your own life. Exercise and eat a good diet.
       The recommendations for diabetics are healthy choices for anyone.

       Share your example. Serve a tasty, low-fat diet to family and friends
       when they are your guests.

       Suggest joint activities. Suggest a walk instead of watching a
       ball game.

       Make sure your diet and activities are visibly enjoyable so your
       guests will accept your invitiation to join you.

    Subject: Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
    ========================================================

    Adolescents have special problems in managing diabetes. These include a
    variety of physiological problems related to puberty and rapid growth, social
    problems related to growing up and the general social pressures of adolescent
    life, and the psychological turmoil caused by the expectations of others. I’m
    here today to talk about (hey, hold the eggs and tomatoes) expectations.

    Actually, this all applies to adults as well, though the subtle points may
    differ.

    The most important thing to remember, for the adolescent, the parent, and the
    health care provider, is

                  All Blood Glucose Measurements Are Good.

                  There Are No Bad Blood Glucose Readings.

    If that doesn’t sound right, then please take two steps. First, learn why it
    is true. Then chant it like a mantra until you internalize it, so that you
    never give off the slightest vibes to the contrary.

    Why is it true?

    There are two kinds of adolescents (to simplify life enormously): those who
    rebel and those who want to please. Ironically, the rebellious are probably
    easier to deal with in treating diabetes. "So my blood sugar is 350, so
    what?" Bad? No, that’s good: you know what’s going on, and so does your
    child. The point of blood glucose measurement is to respond — not to be good
    or bad — and only with an accurate report can you and the patient respond.

      [Compulsory digression: 350 mg/dl = 20.0 mmol/L.]

    Look what can happen to the eager-to-please child:

       Child: My blood sugar is 350.
       Adult: Oh, that’s awful! You must try to be better!
          [next time]
       Child: My blood sugar is … um [to self: I must be good] 140 …
       Adult: Oh, that’s great!

    In short order, the log book looks great but the HbA1c doesn’t jibe.

    This all happens with the best of intentions from all parties. The child is
    trying to please, and is behaving in exactly the ways that elicit approval.
    The adult is trying to care for the child’s health in the most natural ways.
    And the result is one that neither desires.

    Thus the positive mantra to replace the half-negative one above:

                  All Blood Glucose Measurements Are Good.

               Responding To Blood Glucose Readings Is Good.

    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

    An excellent

    read more »

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