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Posts with tag TreatingDiabetes

Type 2 + GM Insulin Antibodies = Insulin Dependent Diabetes

If you read a warning label on your insulin that said - may decrease the amount of insulin you produce - would you think twice about injecting?

Any foreign matter that enters the body can stimulate antibody production. Foreign insulin, especially genetically modified human insulin (GM insulin), is no exception to the rule. More importantly, in relation to its increasingly exclusive dominance in the USA [since 1983], are the types of antibodies created by GM insulin. They could be similar to the types of antibodies that cause type 1 diabetes - also known as insulin-dependent diabetes.

Insulin auto-antibodies (IA-A) and c-peptide measurements can help you tell if your injected GM insulin is stimulating 'anti-your-own-body' cells. This response is often referred to as an auto-immune or inflammatory disease. This is because IA-A can trigger inflammation and an attack by specific immune system cells. For example IA-A can attract a targeted attack on your beta bells (the cells naturally producing your own insulin and c-peptide) by exciting your seek and destroy cells (aka the the IA-A militia).

Research has found that GM insulin can stimulate approximately 60% more IA-A than porcine (pig) insulin. Also because GM insulin is more identical to human insulin, than porcine insulin, GM IA-A are probably more efficient than porcine IA-A, at duplicating the effects of natural human I-IA. Type 1 or type 2 diabetes can be considered an inflammatory disease when the beta cells become an inflamed 'war zone' resulting from IA-A helping to target natural insulin at its production site.

If you are a type 2 diabetic injecting GM insulin - please strongly encourage your doctor to continue measuring your c-peptide level regularly (and make sure you find out what your c-peptide is before you start injecting!). Once your c-peptide level begins dropping to normal or low - suggest pumping the brakes on your GM insulin regimen. Research suggests that prevalence of IA-A is related to duration of insulin therapy, so BEWARE, you could be headed toward GM insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes

Hotlines are Open -- Call NOW!

"Cure. Care. Commitment. These are the words we live by at the American Diabetes Association."

Blah, blah, blah......Those are the words you will hear when you call the ADA hotline and tell them their indifference and apathetic resolve to push for C-peptide trials is atrocious. (If you choose to do so, of course -- details to follow.)

After I blogged yesterday about the ADA colossal let-down -- I neglected to tell you how we can lend guidance to the ADA mission. It is apparent they do not know how to make good use of their 501(c)3 for the sake of cure, care and commitment to diabetes. No worries, ADA - millions of diabetics are here to help you understand our needs.

Contact the American Diabetes Association at 1-800-DIABETES and tell them:

ALLIE BEATTY of The Diabetes Blog told us that you were NOT going to encourage your big pharmaceutical sponsors to start clinical trials for C-peptide. We need this to prevent and reverse complications from the disease...

From there the floor is yours to proceed. Their hours of operation are Monday - Friday, 8:30 AM - 8 PM Eastern Standard Time.

Please call and tell them you want C-peptide. When labs began making insulin they didn't make it with C-peptide. You want it! You deserve it! But most importantly -- you need it!

C-Peptide - Missing in Action

When treating diabetes, today's doctors focus on establishing blood glucose control, but often overlook the need to protect against common diabetic complications such as blindness, kidney damage, and nerve damage. The DCCT, even with a comprehensive treatment program, had a complication rate of approximately 40% of participants.

People who do not have diabetes make insulin with C-peptide. Those of us diabetics who inject synthetic insulin do not get the C-peptide. When scientists began developing insulin - they weeded out the pieces of the amino acid chain they felt were insignificant in lowering blood glucose. Synthetic insulin was designed to reduce the dangerous buildup of excess sugar in the bloodstream. Uh oh - hindsight is surprisingly clear! The long-term complications were initially thought to be caused by lack of insulin - not lack of something that should've been in it. It would make sense if insulin came equipped with this critically important element, wouldn't it?

Tada! C-peptide is the connecting peptide found on the amino acid chain of naturally produced insulin, but left on the cutting room floor in the lab. Studies have shown that C-peptide prevents the development and progression of many diabetic complications and was shown to improve glucose metabolism up to 66%.

Regardless of the potential profit decay C-peptide might cause the production of insulin - the bottom line is the salvation it will provide every man, woman, and child injecting insulin. If you're taking insulin injections, chances are you won't stop taking insulin because you're adding C-peptide to your daily lineup. Chances are - you'll be around a lot longer, and a lot healthier because you do not have the complications most often associated with long-term diabetes.

Wouldn't that be reason enough for you to celebrate the company that brings C-peptide to the drugstore nearest you? Consumer loyalty goes a long way. For those companies who knew a long time ago how beneficial C-peptide would be but didn't do a thing about it - is it really the 33% loss in insulin sales you didn't want to encounter? C'mon. We can handle the truth.

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