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Diabetes
In recent years, the World Health Organization and the American Diabetes
Association have refined the classification of blood sugar levels to include
impaired fasting glucose (IFG, blood sugar levels slightly above normal before
eating) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT, slightly higher than normal blood
sugar levels two hours after a high-sugar test meal).
Normally, the hormone insulin is secreted after a meal to take sugar from the
blood to cells throughout the body. But patients with type 2 diabetes do not
respond to insulin. As a result, blood sugar can rise dangerously high, which,
over time, can increase a person's risk of heart disease, kidney failure, limb
amputations and blindness. Now experts are claiming that individuals whose blood
sugar is only slightly above normal face a much higher risk of developing type 2
diabetes later in life.
Although IGT was previously linked to type 2 diabetes later in life, little is
known about the link, if any, between IFG or the combination of IFG and IGT, and
the development of type 2 diabetes.
Among more than 1,300 men and women studied for up to eight years, about one
third of those with IGT or IFG at the beginning of the study developed diabetes
as compared with only 4.5 per cent of those who started with normal blood sugar.
Study participants who had both IGT and IFG at the outset, the chance of
developing diabetes was much higher. The results was 75 per cent for women and
53 per cent for men.
The Journal of the American Medical Association (2001;285:2109-2113) stated that
the authors concluded that the rate of diabetes among white persons aged 50 to
75 years is strongly related to both impaired fasting and impaired post-load
glucose levels at baseline.
Information provided is courtesy of and compiled by the Academy of Anti-aging
Research staffs, editors, and other reports.
Anti-Aging Perspective:
Diabetes is a runaway epidemic today. We are seeing more and more people in
their 30s and 40s developing Adult Onset Diabetes. This disease will shorten
your life and is preventable. Returning to a diet rich in fruits and vegetables
with tight control of simple and refined sugar is the key.
Traditionally, the "normal" blood fasting glucose level is 90-120. A blood
fasting glucose level of over 120 mg/dl is considered diabetes. If one eats a
diet high in vegetables, low in refined sugar, and proper amounts of protein,
the blood sugar level will be in the range of 70-90 mg/dl. This is the
anti-aging target range one should target. This article supports this
hypothesis. Do not kid yourself that you are not diabetic just because your
sugar is 115. The reality is that you are already a diabetic. Because it is not
so defined by conventional standards does not mean that you are free from the
disease.
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