البنكرياس تلقائي الضخ :
http://www.alriyadh.com/1521409
المضخة اللاصقة :
http://www.alriyadh.com/1103314
http://www.alriyadh.com/1521409
المضخة اللاصقة :
http://www.alriyadh.com/1103314
As I recall, these studies were done in people who already had cardiac disease. And what did they do to try to get their A1C's down? They did three things. Number one, they put people on ADA-type, high carb diets. Number two, they gave them maximum doses of sulfonylureas, which in my book, we absolutely recommend against. And number three, if sulfonylureas didn't work, they gave them large doses of insulin.It has been known for many years that sulfonylureas increase cardiac risk. It has actually been known since the 1970s, but they still manage to stay on the market. If you search on the internet sulfonylureas and heart disease, you'll see that they increase the instances of heart disease. You'll also search for sulfonylureas and hypoglycemia, and you'll see that they increase the instances of hypoglycemia. And here, you're giving large doses of insulin, you're going to give these cardiac patients hypoglycemia. How well are they going to survive severe hypoglycemia? Probably not very well. You're interfering with the longevity of these people. On top of that, large doses of either insulin or sulfonylureas cause obesity. So, you're making these people fatter. You're just stacking the cards up against them.The ADA has always been against normal blood sugars, except back in '75 when one president of the ADA favored normal blood sugars for diabetics. This kind of study supports what they advocate. Now, why do they advocate elevated blood sugars where the A1C is 6.5 or 7? I've asked a number of the ADA presidents over the years. Not recently, because I haven't been in touch with them recently. But back in the old days before I became a physician, I knew a lot of them, including my own physician. And he gave the same answers that the other presidents gave.If a diabetic goes blind, dies of congestive heart failure, dies of kidney disease, that's to be expected. That goes with the disease. If a patient of mine dies of hypoglycemia, it's my fault and I get sued. So, I'm going to keep my patients as far from hypoglycemia as I can. Now, if you have them on high carbohydrate diets, where the blood sugars can vary by plus or the minus 150 in a day, you want to keep their blood sugars certainly above 250. And 200 is an A1C of 7
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20-03-2009 الكاتب:happy المهندس ريتشارد K بيرنستاين (الطبيب فيما بعد) قرأت كتابا عن السكر، وقررت أن اشير إليه كلما سنحت الفرصة أو كلما شعر...