When
a person's pancreas ceases to produce adequate
amounts of the hormone/enzyme insulin, which
regulates the levels of sugar in the blood, we call
this condition diabetes. Though the chemistry of
diabetes is extremely complex, it is not difficult to
explain in practical terms.
Type-I diabetes, or
"juvenile-onset diabetes," is diagnosed in children
and young adults who are unable to produce insulin
and are, therefore, incapable of regulating
blood/sugar levels internally.
The common belief
is that type-I diabetics were born with an
irreversible pancreatic disorder and are, therefore,
incurably dependent on insulin injections until they
die.
A Type-I diabetes
diagnosis is not necessarily incurable. Often
pancreatic tissues become damaged by a class of
parasites called "flukes." After eliminating the
parasites, orthomolecular protocols discussed in this
guide may be employed to heal damaged pancreatic
tissues. Once the organ itself heals, its proper
functions may be restored and normal insulin
production may begin or resume. Young children have a
tendency to readily regenerate damaged tissue-that
includes damaged pancreatic tissue.
Type-II diabetes,
often referred to as "adult-onset diabetes," is
epidemic among American adults. In recent years,
increasing numbers of children and young people are
being diagnosed with type-II diabetes.
Type-II diabetics,
however, are considered "curable" because their blood
sugar aberrations have developed over time through
poor eating, drinking and smoking habits combined
with sedentary lifestyles.
It is estimated that
90 percent of type-II diabetes cases can be
prevented/reversed if people refrain from eating,
drinking and smoking substances identified with the
development of diabetes-and get more exercise.
In both types of diabetes, insulin production is
not sufficient to properly oxidize carbohydrates
(sugars). This leads to improper carbohydrate
utilization by the body which leads to abnormalities
in the metabolism of fats and proteins. Ultimately,
the end products of fat metabolism accumulate in the
blood.
Unfortunately, the
most commonly prescribed treatments for diabetes make
no attempt to correct the foundational problem: The
inability of the pancreas to produce insulin.
This oversight insures
that diabetics will eventually experience strokes,
both ischaemic and haemorrhagic heart failure,
obesity, atherosclerosis, elevated blood pressure,
elevated cholesterol, elevated triglycerides,
impotence, retinopathy, renal failure, liver failure,
polycystic ovary syndrome (if you are a woman),
elevated blood sugar, systemic candida, impaired
carbohydrate metabolism, poor wound healing, impaired
fat metabolism, peripheral neuropathy, diabetic coma
and death.
Type-I and type-II
diabetics have reported that they have been able to
reverse their symptoms with diet, exercise, MoRE, No
Fool i, Master Formulas II and RAANOW
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