![]() |
|
|
|
#1 (permalink) |
|
Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 34
|
hey listen this interesting podcast on how to fight Diabetes...
click on this link Executive Mindshare - Landing Page Last edited by Terrie : 12-05-2008 at 16:40. |
|
|
|
|
|
#3 (permalink) |
|
Member
|
Aww Terrie, Have a read of this then as we are not too far away from perfecting a cure!!!
|
|
|
|
|
|
#5 (permalink) |
|
Member
|
Yeah, We have sorted the immune T-cells to keep the icelet cells that houses the insulin from being attacked and import the beta cells that makes the insulin so It's just to get the icelet to get the inplant is just the only stumbing block.
![]() I have had a read of your public profile and you are allmost the same as me. I had my diagnosis in '77 so 37 years a diabetic. ![]()
__________________
We inject to stay alive!!! So that i can enjoy what you enjoy!!! ![]() Peter... Insulins Novorapid and Levemir.
![]() So I am well armed to enjoy food of any kind!!! |
|
|
|
|
|
#6 (permalink) | |
|
Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 566
|
Quote:
Hello Peter: ![]() I noticed your nick is Anthill. How did you come across a name like that for yourself?? Do you prefer to be called Anthill or Peter or either?Yes, you are right about the cells. It's just the immune system that is the big problem now. I think I read somewhere that they still say another 5-10 years before it's all figured out. That would be hard to believe after all this time of having Diabetes. Ya, you're almost as many years with Diabetes, as I am. How old were you when were you diagnosed? Well, we are still doing pretty Good considering, eh? When I was 7, I heard my Optometrist tell my Mom that I would be blind by age 19. And of course, other older citizens said I'd have to have my legs amputated and I would be dead by age 35. None of that stuff has happened to me yet(touch wood). It sure wasn't much Fun with those thoughts in the far back of my mind while growing up though. I guess you heard the same remarks from People also. ***Congrats on Your 37th Year With Diabetes*** Terrific!! Hey, Cool sig that you have there Peter. I haven't put any thought into mine yet. Be Good. ![]() *Terrie* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#7 (permalink) | |||||||
|
Member
|
Quote:
Quote:
![]() Quote:
![]() Quote:
![]() Quote:
Not good at all. ![]() Quote:
![]() Quote:
![]() Do you like ballet?
__________________
We inject to stay alive!!! So that i can enjoy what you enjoy!!! ![]() Peter... Insulins Novorapid and Levemir.
![]() So I am well armed to enjoy food of any kind!!! |
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#8 (permalink) | ||||
|
Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 566
|
Quote:
Well, that certainly is true and an interesting way to choose a nick. Quote:
Ya, that's how most Kids with Type 1 end up before they are dxd. Then it takes some time to gain the weight back. Quote:
Do you have retinopathy also? I also have some hypo unawareness. But I think when we get that, that we have a 6th sense like a blind Person. I get a feeling (kind of a buzzy feeling on my skin of my head if I occasionally get a low now. When I feel that, I stop and test my sugar. Sure enough I would need a juice. I never had that feeling for a low before. So that's helpful. Quote:
Ummm...nope, I do not care much ballet. I used to love doing gymnastics and I still watch the competitions on tv. I also like the figure skating. *Terrie* ![]() |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
#9 (permalink) |
|
Junior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 1
|
Hey, do you know that Insulin Is Not Always Necessary For Long-Term Control Of Type 2 Diabetes. Some patients with type 2 diabetes can control their disease for years yet avoid insulin injections by using multiple classes of oral diabetic medications, a new study found. The results were presented at The Endocrine Society's 90th Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
Findings from the study contradict common beliefs about non-insulin diabetic medications, said principal investigator Arthur Swislocki, MD, of the Veterans Affairs (VA) Northern California Health Care System in Martinez. Oral diabetes medications help control blood glucose, or sugar, levels in people whose bodies still produce some insulin, as is true for many patients with type 2 diabetes. "Generally, both patients and physicians believe that long-term use of oral diabetic medications is not possible because these drugs lose their effectiveness over time as the patient's pancreas fails," Swislocki said. "Our data suggest that some patients can remain in good glucose control for years using non-insulin, oral diabetic agents." The study result is good news for people who need medical therapy for type 2 diabetes, according to Swislocki. "They may be able to delay or avoid the use of insulin," he said. Some patients prefer pills over insulin injections because they are easier to use or because the patient fears needles or getting low blood sugar, as is possible with insulin treatment, he said. Swislocki and his coworkers studied the VA medical records of 191 veterans (188 men and 3 women) with type 2 diabetes who received treatment beginning in 1992 and received follow-up for 15 consecutive years. Of these patients, 96 began treatment solely with oral drugs. The researchers found that 55 percent of the patients (53 of 96) who started treatment with oral diabetic agents were able to continue using them 15 years later and achieve good blood sugar control. A measure of long-term blood sugar control - hemoglobin A1c - improved from an average of nearly 8 percent to about 7 percent 15 years later in this group. Thank you electra Last edited by Terrie : 28-06-2008 at 03:27. |
|
|
|
|
|
#10 (permalink) |
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Kingston, NY
Posts: 123
|
Ahhh! Terrie and Peter, two of my favirite peeps! How nice........Did someone say it has been forever for us? I have survived 62 years of forever. How more years does it take until I have survived forever??? I fully intend to live forever. Will I be the first diabetic to do that? LOL!
Hey Terrie, why aren't there any smileys on this board? Maybe Merien can give us some. Do you think? Richard |
|
|
|