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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

NO NEED OF INSULIN INJECTIONS


A new diabetes discovery may one day help people with this disease avoid frequent insulin shots. Scientists have identified a hormone, dubbed "betatrophin," that can sharply boost the number of cells that make insulin in mice. The discovery may someday lead to a treatment for Type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease. People have their own version of this hormone, and the new work suggests that giving diabetics more of it might remove the need to be treated with insulin injections.

Insulin Resistance:

 http://www.emord.com/ This law firm handles the constitutional rights of parents and children with issues concerning vaccines.
Vaccination Controversies/ Nature People
http://shermsorganicnews.blogspot.com/2015/03/how-do-you-take-your-poisons.html
                                                     
Good book on fighting the system. Is it constructional to demand all children
 to be vaccinated without parents permission
Injections cause weight gain, and robs the body of Vitamins, +D and mineral. Try the ascorbic acid form of Vitamin C (1000 mg 3 x a day with a glass of water with meals. Can't hurt, is works on certain types of diabetes. Also in childhood diabetes I read an article that I'm still pondering, because my son-in-law has this. He's allergic to eggs (salmonella) The root cause would be parasites. Eating eggs too  running could do, in some cases, the damage and vaccines that uses eggs. Read the book called THE FUNGUS LINK by Doug Kaufman (It's a good book, but Doug  has no experience of being a diabetic to suggest any diet for us, in my opinion.)





"If this could be used in people," said study author Dr. Douglas Melton, in a press release, "it could eventually mean that instead of taking insulin injections three times a day, you might take an injection of this hormone once a week or once a month, or in the best case maybe even once a year."
That would give them better control of their blood sugar levels, said Melton, a professor at Harvard University's department of molecular and cellular biology.


His study was published April 25 in the journal Cell.

An estimated 371 million people worldwide have diabetes, in which insulin fails to control blood sugar levels. In the United States, an estimated 25.8 million people have the disease -- about 8.3 percent of the country, according to the American Diabetes Association.

Obese children showing symptoms of adult illnesses

High blood sugar can lead to other medical problems, including heart disease, stroke and damage to kidneys, eyes and the nervous system. At least 90 percent of diabetes is "Type 2," and some of these patients have to inject insulin.

Insulin is produced by beta cells in the pancreas. The researchers found when they made the liver in mice secrete more of the betatrophin hormone by inserting extra copies of a gene, the size of the beta cell population tripled in comparison to untreated mice. Tests indicated the new cells worked normally.

Melton said it's not known how the hormone works. Now the researchers want to create an inject able form that they can test on diabetic mice, he said. If all goes well, tests in people could follow fairly quickly.
 http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-204_162-57581469/diabetes-hormone-discovery-may-one-day-eliminate-need-for-insulin-injections/  No, just back to basic's no sugars and meats. (it takes too much hormones to digest meat and hormone's too)

Melton hopes the newly identified hormone might someday also help patients with the other form of diabetes -- Type 1 -- avoid insulin. He called that a "long shot" because of differences in the biology of that disease. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease, but Melton said the hormone might boost the number of beta cells when a patient is first diagnosed, slowing disease progression.

 

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18958647 research type 1

new research is showing the brain is involved http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=kenny-high-sugar-plus-low-dopamine-could-hasten-diabetes-obesity

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11529910 research for cure of diabetes type 1( They're cures for aides and diabetics that are not published because they would ruin the drug co.http://cureresearch4type1diabetes.blogspot.comhttp://www.dangerous-drugs.com/lipitor.html Too many drugs are leading back to the beginnings of diabetes. Lipitor is one but many mental disorders drugs also.

Someone will stop this research. http://roosterpolitics.blogspot.com/2013/06/eliminate-need-for-insulin- .html too much money involve to stop this disease.

Today the herb I use to keep my very high bs 's down is Turmeric and/or cur cumin a derivative of Turmeric 500 mg i.e adjust to what works for you and take with meals.

 All insulin has it hormones and everyone has their own individual set of hormones. Hormones can make you fat but maybe, also, can the lack of them.
No one has the answers to cure diabetes because if they did diabetes would not be on the increase.
http://www.emord.com/

Law firm who handle vaccine problems and your constitional rights.
Paul Stamets: Diabetes
Many fungal isolates act as DPP-4 inhibitors, alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, and alpha amylase inhibitors in vitro. Ternatin is a fungal isolate that suppresses hyperglycemia.[18] Aspergillusol A is an alpha-glucosidase inhibitor made by Aspergillus. Sclerotiorin is an aldose reductase inhibitor made by Penicillium.




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