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Diabetes, “Insulin inhibits release of (fatty acids) from adipose tissue, thus lowering plasma (fatty acid) levels and therefore removing (fatty acid) mediated inhibition of (using glucose for energy.) Fatty acids undoubtedly impair insulin-mediated glucose disposal. High-fat feeding has repeatedly and consistently been shown to result in impaired glucose tolerance and decreased muscle insulin sensitivity.” So for the medical community to continue delaying the prescriptions of insulin until the patient’s glucose hits well over 600 seems ludicrous. I personally experienced this phenomenon, and once provided insulin my kidney function returned to near normal. Of course, I am blamed for inaction. But few doctors will acknowledge one simple fact. The diabetic with high glucose suffers from impaired cognitive function, which has been well documented in brain studies by researchers. On the journal of Clinical Investigation, the authors M M Hertz, O B Paulson, D I Barry, J S Christiansen, and P A Svendsen M M Hertz, O B Paulson, D I Barry, J S Christiansen, and P A Svendsen of the article “Insulin increases glucose transfer across the blood-brain barrier in man” made some important conclusion. Insulin increases the glucose activity, which is brain fuel, which means that insulin is brain fuel. “It follows that the backflux of glucose from the brain was increased during insulin application. The effect of insulin might be a speeding up of the glucose carrier in analogy to heart muscle. During insulin infusion, unidirectional flux of glucose across the Blood Brain Barrier increases significantly without any change in net uptake of glucose by the brain. The increased flux is not accompanied by an increase in the net uptake of glucose into the brain…. So the in and out (during insulin influence) outflux were accelerated. Our data could be interpreted to mean that insulin speeds up the glucose carrier mechanism so that it works with increased velocity in both directions,” they wrote in the copyrighted report. With that kind of knowledge, one ought to be intelligent enough to realize that the diabetic with high glucose or insufficient insulin needs professional medical assistance not blame. Coming soon the book about why diabetic pills might kill you and a another fictional book about a type 1 diabetic who refused to pay his doctor for insulin prescriptions and went on a rampage robbing drug stores with his young girl friend. More details coming soon.
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