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White Flour Contains Diabetes-
How does alloxan cause diabetes? According to Dr. Hari Sharma's Freedom from Disease, the uric acid derivative initiates free radical damage to DNA in the beta cells of the pancreas, causing the cells to malfunction and die. When these beta cells fail to operate normally, they no longer produce enough insulin, or in other words, they cause one variety of adult-onset type 2 diabetes. Alloxan's harmful effects on the pancreas are so severe that the Textbook of Natural Medicine calls the chemical "a potent beta-cell toxin." However, even though the toxic effect of alloxan is common scientific knowledge in the research community, the FDA still allows companies to use it when processing foods we ingest. The FDA and the white flour industry could counter-argue that, if alloxan were to cause diabetes, a higher proportion of Americans would be diabetic. After all, more consumers consume white flour on a regular basis than are actually diabetic. This point is valid, but it does not disprove the alloxan-diabetes connection. While alloxan is one cause of adult-onset type 2 diabetes, it is of course not the only cause. As the Textbook of Natural Medicine states, "current theory suggests an hereditary beta-cell predisposition to injury coupled with some defect in tissue regeneration capacity" may be a key cause. For alloxan to cause injury to an individual's beta cells, the individual must have the genetic susceptibility to injury. This is similar to the connection between high-cholesterol foods and heart disease. Eating high-cholesterol foods causes heart disease, especially in people who have family histories of heart disease. The link between alloxan and diabetes is as clear and solid as the link between cholesterol and heart disease. If you've been eating white bread for years and you have a family history of diabetes, all hope is not lost for you. Studies show that you can reverse the effects of alloxan by supplementing your diet with vitamin E. According to Dr. Gary Null's Clinicians Handbook of Natural Healing, vitamin E effectively protected lab rats from the harmful effects of administered alloxan. Now, you're not a lab rat, but you're a mammal and vitamin E is definitely worth adding to your daily regimen of nutritional supplements, especially if you have a history of eating foods made with white flour and are at high risk for diabetes. Even if you are already diabetic, some simple changes to your diet can help treat your diabetes. First of all, stop eating foods made with white flour. Even though you already have diabetes, vitamin E supplements can still help you, as can many common foods. Garlic, for example, does wonders for diabetes. As Dr. Benjamin Lau states in his book Garlic for Health, "When fed garlic, the rabbits' elevated blood sugar dropped almost as much as it did when they were given the antidiabetic drug tolbutamide. Researchers postulated that garlic may improve the insulin effect." If you can't handle the taste of natural garlic, you can take it in widely available supplements. Aloe vera is a traditional diabetic remedy in the Arabian Peninsula, and its therapeutic characteristics are now gaining worldwide acceptance in the treatment of diabetes. According to both human and animal research studies, aloe vera lowers blood glucose levels by an unknown mechanism. According to the Clinicians Handbook of Natural Healing, this natural hypoglycemic effect extended over a period of 24 hours. Adding onions to your diet (along with the garlic) can also significantly reduce your blood sugar level. Additionally, as Dr. Michael T. Murray writes in The Healing Power of Herbs, studies show that ginseng controls glucose in both diabetic humans and diabetic laboratory animals. It all comes down to asking if putting yourself at risk for diabetic coma, blindness, limb amputation and death is worth eating white bread. If you're willing to risk your quality of life and your life itself, then go ahead and eat all the foods made with white flour you want. However, if you want to stop poisoning yourself with alloxan, a known toxic chemical, then make a few simple dietary changes. Eat groceries (see related notebook on groceries) made with whole-grain wheat flour, not processed white flour Animal experiments have shown that animals which have
their Beta cells destroyed by alloxan are able to regenerate Beta cells
after a few months when taking GS, a herb grown in India. The Beta cell
is the cell that produces insulin. Diabetics needing insulin treatment
(Type 1) have been able to decrease their insulin after GS therapy. In the mid-1980s, however (when herbal remedies again
were popular), pata de vaca's continued use as a natural insulin substitute
was reiterated in two Brazilian studies. Both studies reported in vivo
hypoglycemic actions in various animal and human models. Chilean research
in 1999 reported the actions of pata de vaca in diabetic rats. Their study
determined that pata de vaca was found to "elicit remarkable hypoglycemic
effects," and brought about a "decrease of glycemia in
alloxan diabetic rats by 39%." In 2002, two in vivo studies on
the blood sugar-lowering effects of pata de vaca were conducted by two
separate research groups in Brazil. The first study reported "a
significant blood glucose-lowering effect in normal and diabetic rats."… When beta cells in the pancreas fail to secrete enough
insulin, the body loses its ability to metabolize carbohydrates and to
reduce glucose levels in the bloodstream. Researchers believe that some
people have weak free radical defenses in these beta cells, and that free
radical damage to DNA in beta cells, resulting in dysfunction or cell
death, helps cause maturity-onset diabetes. It is known, for example,
that many chemicals including alloxan, paraquat, and certain chemotherapeutic
agents can stimulate excessive production of oxy radicals in the nuclei
of beta cells. ...nearly two decades later, researchers at RNT Medical
College in India induced diabetes in rabbits with intravenous injections
of alloxan. When fed garlic, the rabbits' elevated blood sugar dropped
almost as much as it did when they were given the antidiabetic drug tolbutamide.
Researchers postulated that garlic may improve the insulin effect by either
increasing the pancreatic secretion of insulin or by releasing bound insulin. Commercial yeasted breads, even the whole-grain varieties,
often have other problems. They typically contain flour bleach, which
forms alloxan, a compound known to cause diabetes in animals by destroying
the beta cells of the pancreas (Clinical Nutrition Newsletter, Dec. 1982).
… Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus is generally recognized
to be due to an insulin deficiency.1 Although the exact cause is unknown,
current theory suggests an hereditary beta-cell predisposition to injury
coupled with some defect in tissue regeneration capacity. Causes of injury
are most likely hydroxyl and other free radicals, viral infection, and
autoimmune reactions. alloxan, the uric acid derivative used to induce
experimental diabetes in animals, is a potent beta-cell toxin, causing
destruction via hydroxyl radical formation. In this study, mice received intraperitoneally melatonin
in doses ranging from 100 to 450 mg/kg. Results showed that such treatment
proved plasma glucose increase due to alloxan-induced pancreatic toxicity.
Bleached white flour. Not only have the bran and germ
been stripped away, but bleached flour also contains a substance from
the flour bleach (alloxan) which causes diabetes in animals. Unbleached
white flour should also be avoided since it is stripped of essential nutrients.
Aloe vera also exhibits a hypoglycemic effect in both
normal and alloxan-induced diabetic mice. A small human study shows benefit
in diabetics. Five patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes ingested
half a teaspoonful of aloe 4 times daily for 14 weeks. Fasting blood sugar
in every patient fell from a mean of 273 to 151 mg/dl with no change in
body weight. The authors concluded that aloe lowers blood glucose levels
by an unknown mechanism…. Results of this study showed that rats given vitamin
E before being administered either streptozotocin or alloxan provided
protection against the diabetogenic effects of each. It was also observed
that rats with a depleted antioxidant state due to a vitamin E and selenium-deficient
diet showed increased diabetogenic susceptibility to normally nondiabetogenic
doses of streptozotocin. Noting that the dried sap of the aloe plant to be a
traditional diabetic remedy in the Arabian peninusla, this study examined
its ability to reduce blood glucose levels in 5 non-insulin-dependent
diabetics and in Swiss albino mice made diabetic with alloxan. Results
showed that the intake of 1/2 teaspoon of aloes daily for 4-14 weeks significantly
reduced the fasting serum glucose level fell in all patients. Fasting
plasma glucose was significantly reduced in diabetic mice by glibenclamide
and aloes after 3 days. This study examined the effects of exudate of Aloe
barbadensis leaves (oral administration of 500 mg/kg) and its bitter principle
(ip administration of 5 mg/kg) on plasma glucose levels of alloxan-diabetic
mice. Results showed that the hypoglycemic effect of a single oral dose
of aloes on serum glucose level was insignificant in while that of the
bitter principle was highly significant and extended over a period of
24 hours. Ginseng exerts numerous pharmacological effects in
humans and laboratory animals, including … improved glucose control in
humans and diabetic (alloxan-induced) rats; Per: Zeus Information Service 4th June 2005
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