|
- <html>
- <head><title>Diabetes, scleroderma, oils and hormones</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Diabetes, scleroderma, oils and hormones
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- The basic argument: Stress and aging make cells less responsive in many ways by damaging their ability to
- produce energy and to adapt. The polyunsaturated fats are universally toxic to the energy producing system,
- and act as a "misleading signal" channeling cellular adaptation down certain self-defeating pathways.
- Diabetes is just one of the "terminal" diseases that can be caused by the polyunsaturated vegetable oils.
- Coconut oil, in diabetes as in other degenerative diseases, is highly protective.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the oral contraceptive pill was new (Enovid), it was found to produce signs of diabetes, including
- decreased glucose tolerance. Spellacy and Carlson (1966) suggested that an elevation of circulating free
- fatty acids might be responsible, and remarked that "Free fatty acids can block the Krebs cycle, with
- relative insulin action resistance resulting." "The potential danger of the oral contraceptives is one of
- prolonged pancreatic stimulation." Recent papers are reporting that the estrogen used to "treat menopause"
- causes an increase in free fatty acids. Spellacy and Carlson suggested that estrogen's effect was mediated
- by growth hormone, and that is now the consensus. Women are much more likely than men to develop diabetes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ephraim Racker observed that free unsaturated fatty acids inhibit mitochondrial respiration, and recent
- studies are finding that free linoleic and linolenic acids act as intracellular regulators, stimulating the
- protein kinase C (PKC) system, which is also stimulated by estrogen and the (cancer promoting) phorbol
- esters. They stimulate the cell while blocking the energy it needs to respond.
- </p>
- <p>
- Scleroderma, or systemic sclerosis, is a supposedly mysterious condition in which tissues harden, with an
- excessive deposition of fibrous material. Besides hardening the skin, it can involve fibrosis of the heart
- and other organs, and can cause changes in blood vessels of the kidneys like those seen in some types of
- hypertension, and often involves Raynaud's phenomenon and osteoporosis of the fingers. (Silicone functions
- as an adjuvant, making exposure to irritants, solvents or infections more harmful. This seems to be the
- reason for the association between breast implants and scleroderma.) Another type of disease that involves
- hardening of the skin is scleredema, in which the skin thickens with an accumulation of "mucin" between
- collagen bundles, and in which fibroblasts are overactive in producing collagen. (Varga, et al.) This
- condition is believed to often follow a "febrile illness" and is associated with diabetes. My interest in
- these conditions comes from my awareness that estrogen promotes collagen formation, and that changes in the
- connective tissue are deeply associated with the processes of stress and aging, following the ideas of
- Metchnikov and Selye.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many people are still committed to the various old theories of diabetes, though a few are showing ways in
- which multiple causes can lead to diabetes. Increasingly, old age itself is seen to be "like diabetes
- (Meneilly, et al.; Smith, et al.), and the situation is ripe for a recentering of our understanding of
- diabetes around some of the general facts about aging and stress.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Diabetes mellitus, as named, refers to excessive urination and sugary urine, but it is now often diagnosed
- in people who neither urinate excessively nor pass glucose in the urine, on the basis of a high level of
- glucose in the blood. Many other signs (abnormal mucopolysaccharide metabolism with thickening of basement
- membranes, leakage of albumin through capillary walls and into the urine, a high level of free fatty acids
- in the blood, insensitivity of tissues to insulin, or reduced sensitivity of the beta cells to glucose) are
- considered diagnostic by some people, who believe that the worst aspects of the disease can be prevented if
- they can diagnose early and take preventive measures. This attitude derives largely from the genetic theory
- of causation, though it incorporates a belief that (environmental) intervention can ameliorate the course of
- the disease. When I wrote Nutrition for Women, I mentioned that the sudden appearance of diabetes in
- non-European Jews when they moved to Isreal made the genetic theory of diabetes untenable, and since then
- other studies have made the similar point that environmental factors seem crucial. (Shaltout, et al.) Many
- people are arguing for the racial/genetic theory of diabetes, but they are failing to consider some simple
- dietary factors, especially the high consumption of unsaturated seed oils and the combination of nutritional
- deficiencies and environmental stress.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have known adults and children who were diagnosed as diabetic, and given insulin (and indoctrinated with
- the idea that they had a terminal degenerative disease) on the strength of a single test showing excessive
- glucose. When I taught at the naturopathic medical school in Portland, I tried to make it clear that
- "diabetes" (a term referring to excessive urination) is a function, and that a high level of glucose in the
- blood or urine is also a function, and that the use of insulin should require a greater diagnostic
- justification than the use of aspirin for a headache does, because insulin use itself constitutes a serious
- health problem. (And we seldom hear the idea that "diabetes" might have a positive side [Robinson and
- Johnston], for example that it reduces the symptoms of asthma [Vianna and Garcialeme], which get worse when
- insulin is given. Normal pregnancy can be considered "diabetic" by some definitions based on blood sugar. I
- got interested in this when I talked to a healthy "diabetic" woman who had a two year old child whose IQ
- must have been over 200, judging by his spontaneous precocious hobbies. Old gynecologists told me that it
- was common knowledge that "diabetic" women had intellectually precocious children.)
- </p>
-
- <p>
- When non-diabetic apes were given insulin treatments, they developed some of the same "complications of
- diabetes" that are seen in humans, and antibodies to insulin were found in their retinas, suggesting that
- some "complications of diabetes" were complications of insulin treatment. Patients were seldom well informed
- of the arguments against the use of insulin, but the justification for the new genetically engineered human
- insulin is precisely that it avoids immunological damage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Insulin was introduced into medicine in the 1920s. According to the Britannica Book of the Year for 1947,
- page 265, "Mortality from diabetes in 1920 in the United States was 16.0 per 100,000, 14,062 deaths, but in
- 1944, it was 26.4 per 100,000, 34,948 deaths."
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the theories of the cause of diabetes is that a virus damages the beta cells in the pancreas, and the
- main argument for that in the 1970s was that the onset of diabetes in children can often be dated to a time
- shortly after a severe viral infection. It is true that intense sickness and a high fever (and high doses of
- drugs given to treat the sickness) can cause very high levels of glucose in the blood, and even glucose in
- the urine, but this is a fairly well recognized consequence of stress. High doses of cortisone (prednisone,
- etc.) typically cause elevated glucose levels. Cushing's syndrome usually involves hyperglycemia. Normally,
- this is just a functional response to an excess of glucocorticoids, but studies in dogs suggested that
- intense and/or prolonged stress can damage the insulin-secreting cells in the pancreas. Dogs had half of
- their pancreas removed, to increase the burden put on the remaining tissue, and after a large dose of
- cortisone the dogs became (and remained) diabetic.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the problems associated with diabetes is the calcification of blood vessels, though now there is more
- emphasis on fatty degeneration. Other blood vessel problems include hypertension, and poor circulation in
- general, leading to gangrene of the feet, impotence, and degeneration of the retina. In muscles, and
- probably in other tissues of diabetics, capillaries are more widely spaced, as if the basal oxidative
- requirement were lower than normal. However, mitochondria contain more respiratory enzymes, as if to partly
- compensate for the poor delivery of oxygen to the cells. Osteoporosis or osteopenia is a common complication
- of diabetes, and seems to be associated with the calcification of soft tissues.
- </p>
- <p>
- F. Z. Meerson's description of the stress-injured heart is very similar to the general changes that occur in
- chronic diabetes. He found that the stressed heart becomes rigid and unable to contract completely, or to
- relax completely. Excess calcium enters cells, and fatty acids are mobilized both locally and systemically,
- and both of these tend to damage the mitochondria. In diabetes, fatty acids are mobilized and oxidized
- instead of glucose, and calcium enters cells, increasing their rigidity and preventing relaxation of muscles
- in blood vessels. (I'm not sure whether it is relevant to cell physiology, but the presence of an excess of
- free unsaturated fatty acids, and of calcium, in cells makes me think of the insoluble soap that these
- substances form in other situations, including the intestine. It seems that this could form a harmful
- deposit in cells, blocking many metabolic processes.)
- </p>
- <p></p>
- <p>
- For many years, histologists have observed that calcium and iron tend to be deposited together in
- "devitalized" tissues. Now we know that cell death from a great variety of causes involves the cell's
- absorption of increased amounts of calcium. Simply the lack of energy increases the amount of calcium in a
- cell, and stimulation or excitation does the same, creating or exaggerating a deficiency of energy. In low
- thyroid people, many (if not all) tissues are very easily damaged. Since glucose is needed by liver cells to
- produce the active (T3) form of thyroid, diabetes almost by definition will produce hypothyroidism, since in
- diabetes glucose can't be absorbed efficiently by cells.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In the form of cell damage caused by the "excitotoxins," glutamic and aspartic acids, the damage seems to
- require both stimulation, and difficulty in maintaining adequate energy production. This combination leads
- to both calcium uptake and lipid peroxidation. When cells are de-energized, they tend to activate iron by
- chemical reduction, producing lipid peroxidation. This could explain the presence of chemically active iron,
- but an actual increase in the iron concentration suggests that there has been prolonged injury (oxidative
- stress) to the cell, with increased production of the heme group, which binds iron.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hans Selye found that he could produce scleroderma (hardening and calcification of the skin) in rats by
- giving them a toxic dose of a heavy metal, and then irritating the skin a little by plucking hair. Iron is
- now tending to be recognized as a factor in inflammation. Vitamin E was able to prevent the development of
- scleroderma under Selye's experimental conditions, suggesting that the irritation allowed the heavy metal to
- cause oxidative damage to the skin. Selye found other ways to cause calcification of tissues, including the
- walls of arteries, but he directed most of his attention to the role of "pro-inflammatory" hormones. A
- decreased blood supply was often used to predispose an organ to calcification. In diabetes, a characteristic
- feature is that the blood supply is relatively remote from cells in muscle and skin, so the oxygen and
- nutrients have to diffuse farther than in normal individuals, and the ATP level of cells is
- characteristically lower than normal. In blood cells, both red (Garnier, et al.) and white cells are
- probably more rigid in diabetes, because of lower ATP production, and higher intracellular calcium and
- sodium.
- </p>
- <p>
- Magnesium in the cell is largely associated with ATP, as the complex Mg-ATP. When ATP is "used" or converted
- to ADP, this lower-energy substance associates with calcium, as Ca-ADP. In a hypothyroid state, the energy
- charge can be depleted by stress, causing cells to lose magnesium. ATP is less stable when it isn't
- complexed with magnesium, so the stress-induced loss of magnesium makes the cell more susceptible to stress,
- by acting as a chronic background stimulation, forcing the cell to replace the ATP which is lost because of
- its instability. In this state, the cell takes up an excess of calcium.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The picture that I think explains many of the features of diabetes is that an energy deficit produces an
- alarm state, causing increased production of adrenalin and cortisol. Adrenalin mobilizes fat from storage,
- and the free fatty acids create a chronic problem involving 1) blocked ATP production, 2) activation of the
- protein kinase C system (increasing tension in blood vessels), 3) inhibition of thyroid function with its
- energetic, hormonal, and tissue-structure consequences, 4) availability of fats for prostaglandin synthesis,
- and 5) possibly a direct effect on clot dissolving, besides the PAI-1 (plasminogen activator inhibitor)
- effect seen in diabetes (Ceriello, et al., Udvardy, et al., Vague, et al.). (Estrogen has many pro-clotting
- effects, and one of them is a decreased activity of vascular plasminogen activator. K. E. Miller and S. V.
- Pizzo, "Venous and arterial thromboembolic disease in women using oral contraceptives," Am. J. Obst. Gyn.
- 144, 824, 1982. In 1968, D. G. Daniel et al., reported that estrogen promotes thromboembolism by increasing
- clotting factor IX in the blood.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Increased entry of calcium into cells is complexly related to increased exposure to unsaturated fatty acids,
- decreased energy, and lipid peroxidation. Osteoporosis, calcification of soft tissues and high blood
- pressure are promoted by multiple stresses, hypothyroidism, and magnesium deficiency. The particular
- direction a disease takes--diabetes, scleroderma, lupus, Alzheimer's, stroke, etc.--probably results from
- the balance between resources and demands within a particular organ or system. Calcium overload of cells
- can't be avoided by avoiding dietary calcium, because the bones provide a reservoir from which calcium is
- easily drawn during stress. (In fact, the reason calcium can temporarily help prevent muscle cramps seems to
- be that it makes magnesium more available to the muscles.)
- </p>
- <p>
- If we want to stop a disease that involves abnormal calcification or contraction of muscle (see Zenere, et
- al.), we can increase our consumption of magnesium, and to cause cells to absorb and retain the magnesium,
- we can increase our thyroid function. The use of coconut oil provides energy to stabilize blood sugar while
- protecting mitochondria and the thyroid system from the harmful effects of unsaturated fats.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1947, B. A. Houssay found that a diet based on sugar as a source of energy was more protective against
- diabetes than a diet based on lard, while the most protective diet was based on coconut oil. Lard reflects
- the pigs' diet, and is usually extremely unsaturated, especially since it became standard to fatten them on
- soybeans and corn. Essentially, his study seems to show that unsaturated (pork) fat permits diabetes to
- develop, sugar is slightly protective, and coconut oil is very protective against the form of diabetes
- caused by a poison.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the same time, A. Lazarow was demonstrating that a low protein diet made animals more sensitive to
- diabetes, and that cysteine, glutathione, and thioglycolic acid (antioxidants) are protective against
- diabetes. The chelator of metals, BAL (British anti-lewisite), was also found to protect against diabetes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Taken together, those studies suggest that the oxidizable unsaturated fats are involved in the process of
- producing diabetes. At the same time, other studies were showing that the unsaturated oils suppress the
- thyroid, and that coconut oil increases the metabolic rate, apparently by normalizing thyroid function.
- Hypothyroidism is known to include deposition of mucopolysaccharides in tissues, increased permeability of
- capillaries with leakage of albumin out of the blood, elevated adrenalin which can lead to increased
- production of cortisol, decreased testosterone production, high risk of heart and circulatory disease,
- including a tendency to ulceration of the extremities, and osteoporosis, all of which are recognized
- "complications of diabetes." Broda Barnes gave all of his diabetic patients a thyroid supplement, and found
- that none of them developed the expected complications of diabetes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Recently, a high safflower oil diet was found to cause diabetes (Ikemoto, et al.), and obesity itself is
- thought to be a factor in developing diabetes. The hormone patterns associated with obesity can be seen as
- either cause or effect of the obesity (or both cause and effect), since, for example, low thyroid can
- increase both estrogen and cortisol, which support the formation of fat, and the fat cells can become a
- chronic source of estrogen synthesis.
- </p>
- <p>
- On a diet lacking the "essential" unsaturated fatty acids, Benhamou (1995) found that nonobese diabetic mice
- didn't develop diabetes, that is, the unsaturated fats themselves, without obesity, are sufficient to cause
- diabetes. (Also see Girard; Golay, et al., and Kusunoki, et al.)
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Estrogen and the polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), linoleic and linolenic acid, alike activate the protein
- kinase C (PKC) system of cellular activation. Many of the functions of PUFA are similar to the functions of
- estrogen (e.g., antagonism to thyroid function, promotion of age pigment/lipofuscin), so this information
- showing that they both act similarly on the same basic regulatory pathway is important. Estrogen increases
- secretion of growth hormone (GH; it's closely associated with prolactin, also increased by estrogen), and GH
- causes an increase in free fatty acids in the blood. Estrogen promotes iron retention, so it sets the stage
- for oxidative stress. At least in some systems, both estrogen and PUFA promote the entry of calcium into the
- cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- In diabetes, there is a generalized excess activation of the PKC system. The starch-based diet, emphasizing
- grains, beans, nuts, and vegetables, has been promoted with a variety of justifications. When people are
- urged to reduce their fat and sugar consumption, they are told to eat more starch. Starch stimulates the
- appetite, promotes fat synthesis by stimulating insulin secretion, and sometimes increases the growth of
- bacteria that produce toxins. It is often associated with allergens, and according to Gerhard Volkheimer,
- whole starch grains can be "persorbed" from the intestine directly into the blood stream where they may
- block arterioles, causing widely distributed nests of cell-death. I have heard dietitians urge the use of
- "complex carbohydrates" (starch) instead of sugar. In the first physiology lab I took, we fed rats a large
- blob of moist cornstarch with a stomach tube, and then after waiting a few minutes, were told to dissect the
- rat to find out "how far the starch had gone." In such a short time, we were surprised to find that not a
- trace of the starch could be found. The professor's purpose was to impress us with the rapidity with which
- starch is digested and absorbed. Various studies have demonstrated that starch (composed of pure glucose)
- raises blood glucose more quickly than sucrose (half fructose, half glucose) does. The sudden increase of
- blood glucose is sometimes thought to contribute to the development of diabetes, but if it does, it is
- probably mediated by fat metabolism and the hormones other than just insulin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brewer's yeast has been used successfully to treat diabetes. In the l930s, my father had severe diabetes,
- but after a few weeks of living on brewer's yeast, he recovered and never had any further evidence of
- diabetes. Besides its high B-vitamin and protein content, yeast is an unusual food that should be sparingly
- used, because of its high phosphorous/calcium ratio, high potassium to sodium ratio, and high estrogen
- content. The insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas have estrogen receptors, but I don't know of any
- new research investigating this aspect of yeast therapy. In rabbit studies, diabetes produced by alloxan
- poisoning, which kills the beta cells, was cured by DHEA treatment, and beta cells were found to have
- regenerated in the pancreatic islets.
- </p>
- <p>
- I think the basic anti-aging diet is also the best diet for prevention and treatment of diabetes,
- scleroderma, and the various "connective tissue diseases." This would emphasize high protein, low
- unsaturated fats, low iron, and high antioxidant consumption, with a moderate or low starch consumption. In
- practice, this means that a major part of the diet should be milk, cheese, eggs, shellfish, fruits and
- coconut oil, with vitamin E and salt as the safest supplements. It should be remembered that amino acids,
- especially in eggs, stimulate insulin secretion, and that this can cause hypoglycemia, which in turn causes
- cortisol secretion. Eating fruit (or other carbohydrate), coconut oil, and salt at the same meal will
- decrease this effect of the protein. Magnesium carbonate and epsom salts can also be useful and safe
- supplements, except when the synthetic material causes an allergic bowel reaction..
- </p>
- <p>
- Although I started this newsletter with the thought of discussing the Mead acids--the unsaturated (n-9) fats
- that are formed under certain conditions, especially when the dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids are
- "deficient"--and their prostaglandin derivatives as a distinct anti-stress, anti-aging system, the loss of
- which makes us highly susceptible to injury, I will save that argument for a future time, leaving this
- newsletter as an addition to the view that an excess of the polyunsaturated fats is central to the
- development of degenerative diseases: Cancer, heart disease, arthritis, immunodeficiency, diabetes,
- hypertension, osteoporosis, connective tissue disease, and calcification.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><h3>
- REFERENCES WITH EXCERPTS AND COMMENTS
- </h3></strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- A. A. Alzaid, et al., "Effects of insulin on plasma magnesium in noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus:
- Evidence for insulin resistance," J. of Clin. Endocr. and Metab. 80(4), 1376-1381, 1995. "...insulin
- resistance in subjects with NIDDM impairs the ability of insulin to stimulate magnesium as well as glucose
- uptake."
- </p>
- <p>
- A. B. Akella, et al., "Diminished Ca++ sensitivity of skinned cardiac muscle contractility coincident with
- troponin T-band shifts in the diabetic rat," Circulation Research 76(4), 600-606, 1995.D. A. Antonetti, et
- al., "Increased expression of mitochondrial-encoded genes in skeletal muscle of humans with diabetes
- mellitus--Rapid publication," J. of Clinical Investigation 95(3), 1383-1388, 1995. "The increased
- mitochondrial gene expression may contribute to the increase in mitochondrial respiration observed in
- uncontrolled diabetes." (Low ATP with high respiration would suggest uncoupling; unsaturated fatty acids are
- known uncouplers of respiration from energy production.)
- </p>
-
- <p>
- S. Asakuma, et al., "The effects of antianginal drugs on energy expernditure during exercise in normal
- subjects," Japanese Circulation Journal--English Edition 59(3), 137-145, 1995. "RQ (carbohydrate consumption
- relative to fat consumption) during exercise was significantly increased and VO2 was decreased after
- propranolol, metoprolol and amosulalol." "These data suggest that propranolol, metoprolol and amosulalol
- [beta-blockers] increase the efficiency of energy expenditure during ordinary physical activity by
- increasing the utilization of carbohydrate and by decreasing the utilization of fat."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Bardicef, et al., "Extracellular and intracellular magnesium depletion in pregnancy and gestational
- diabetes," Amer. J. of Obst. and Gyn. 172(3), 1009-1013, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. E. Beales, et al., "Baclofen, a gamma-aminobutyric acid-b receptor agonist, delays diabetes onset in the
- non-obese diabetic mouse," Acta Diabetologica 32(1), 53-56, 1995.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- P. Y. Benhamou, et al., :"Essential fatty acid deficiency prevents autoimmune diabetes in nonobese diabetic
- mice through a positive impact on antigen-presenting cells and Th2 lymphocytes," Pancreas 11(1), 26-37,
- 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- C. D. Berdanier, "Diet, autoimmunity, and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: A controversy," Proc. Soc.
- Exp. Biol. Med. 209(3), 223-230, 1995. "The majority of the genetic mutations that result in the phenotypic
- expression of the insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus genotype are in the immune system." Antibodies to milk
- protein can be found in the patient, but these probably represent antigen mimicry, resulting from the loss
- of antibody specificity which is a feature of autoimmune disease.
- </p>
- <p>
- G. Bianchi, et al., "Thyroid volume in type 1 diabetes patients without overt thyroid disease," Acta
- Diabetologica 32(1), 49-52, 1995. "An association between insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (type 1) and
- thyroid diseases has long been reported...."
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Bjorntorp, "Insulin resistance: The consequence of a neuroendocrine disturbance?" Int. J. Obes. 19(Suppl.
- 1), S6-S10, 1995. "The decreased capillary density may...be of importance for the apparent insulin
- resistance."
- </p>
- <p>
- R. Bouillon, et al., "Influence of age, sex, and insulin on osteoblast function: Osteoblast dysfunction in
- diabetes mellitus," J. of Clin. Endocr. and Metab. 80(4), 1194-1202, 1995. "...the osteoblast function is
- significantly decreased in diabetic patients...."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- A. Ceriello, et al., "The defence against free radicals protects endothelial cells from
- hyperglycaemia-induced plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 over-production," Blood Coagulation &
- Fibrinolysis 6(2), 133-137, 1995. "The hypothesis that oxidative stress may play an important role in the
- pathogenesis of diabetic complications is ... supported by this study." [GSH reduced PAI-1.]
- </p>
- <p>
- V. Coiro, et al., "Low-dose ovine corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation test in diabetes mellitus with
- or without neuropathy," Metabolism--Clinical and Experimental 44(4), 538-542, 1995. "...basal and
- CRH-induced cortisol levels were significantly higher in diabetics than in normal controls." "...even
- uncomplicated diabetes mellitus is associated with adrenal hyperfunction."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- S. R. Colberg, et al., "Skeletal muscle utilization of free fatty acids in women with visceral obesity," J.
- Clin. Invest. 95(4), 1846-1853, 1995. "Visceral obesity is strongly associated with insulin resistance."
- "...visceral adiposity is clearly associated with skeletal muscle insulin resistance but this is not due to
- glucose-FFA [free fatty acid] substrate competition. Instead, women with visceral obesity have reduced
- postabsorptive FFA utilization by muscle."
- </p>
- <p>
- G. A. Colditz, et al., "Weight gain as a risk factor for clinical diabetes mellitus in women," Annals of
- Internal Medicine 122(7), 481-486, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- C. Douillet and M. Ciavatti, "Effect of vitamin E treatment on tissue fatty acids and cholesterol content in
- experimental diabetes," J. Nutr. Biochem. 6(6), 319-326, 1995. "Diabetes induced a decrease of
- monounsaturated fatty acids and particularly palmitoleic acid in all studied tissues: liver, aorta, plasma."
- C18:3 n-6 and C20:4 n-6 were increased by diabetes.
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Garnier, et al., "Red blood cell sodium conent in NID diabetic patients with hemorheological
- abnormalities," Clinical Hemorheology 15(3), 325-333, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- K. D. Gerbitz, et al., "Mitochondrial diabetes mellitus: A review," BBA--Mol. Basis Dis. 1271(1), 253-260,
- 1995. This particular kind of diabetes, which is combined with deafness in 60% of the patients, involves a
- variant mitochondrial gene and occurs in about 1.5% of diabetics. "The underlying pathomechanism is probably
- a delayed insulin secretion due to an impaired mitochondrial ATP production in consequence of the mtDNA
- defect." To know the "causal" value of this gene we have to know how often it occurs in people who never
- develop diabetes. It is interesting that it is suggested to operate by way of impaired ATP production, which
- can be the result of so many factors, such as excess unsaturated fats, low thyroid, low magnesium, low
- copper, etc. Pages 141-151 of the same journal as an article by D. C. Wallace, et al., "Mitochondrial DNA
- mutations in human degenerative diseases and aging," which makes the point that "Generally, individuals
- inheriting these mitochondrial diseases are relatively normal in early life, develop symptoms during
- childhood, mid-life, or old age depending on the severity of the ... mutation; and then undergo a
- progressive decline." Their energy-producing systems are supposedly more susceptible to the effects of
- aging.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. Girard, "Role of free fatty acids in insulin resistance of subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes,"
- Diabetes Metab. 21(2), 79-88, 1995. "Studies performed in the rat suggest that impaired glucose-induced
- insulin secretion could also be related to chronic exposure of pancreatic beta cells to elevated plasma free
- fatty acid levels." [This direct effect of free fatty acids on the beta cells is extremely important.
- Estrogen--probably via GH--increases free fatty acids, and adrenalin--which is elevated in
- hypothyroidism--increases the release of free fatty acids from storage. Free fatty acids impair
- mitochondrail energy production.]
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Golay, et al., "Effect of lipid oxidation on the regulation of glucose utilization in obese patients,"
- Acta Diabetologica 32(1), 44-48, 1995. [Free fatty acids strongly and quickly depress the ability to oxidize
- or store glucose.]
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Gomes, et al., "Anti-hyperglycemic effect of black tea (Camellia sinensis) in rat," J. of
- Ethnopharmacology 45(3), 223-226, 1995. It "was found to possess both preventive and curative effects on
- experimentally produced diabetes in rats."
- </p>
- <p>
- Y. Hattori, et al., "Phorbol esters elicit Ca++-dependent delayed contractions in diabetic rat aorta," Eur.
- J. Pharmacol. 279(1), 51-58, 1995. [Diabetic tissue is more responsive to activation of protein kinase C by
- phorbol esters.]
- </p>
- <p>
- B. A. Houssay and C. Martinez, "Experimental diabetes and diet," Science 105, 548-549, 1947. [Mortality was
- zero on the high coconut oil diet, 100% on the high lard diet. It was 90% on the low protein diet, and 33%
- on the high protein diet. With a combination of coconut oil and lard, 20%.]
- </p>
- <p>
- B. A. Houssay, et al., "Accion de la administracion prolongada de glucosa sobre la diabetes de la rata,"
- Rev. Soc. argent. de biol. 23, 288-293, 1947.
- </p>
- <p>
- S. Ikemoto, et al., "High fat diet-induced hyperglycemia: Prevention by low level expression of a glucose
- transporter (GLUT4) minigene in transgenic mice," Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 92(8), 3096-3099, 1995. "...mice
- fed a high-fat (safflower oil) diet develop defective glycemic control, hyperglycemia, and obesity."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Inaba, et al., "Influence of high glucose on 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3-induced effect on human
- osteoblast-like MG-63 cells," J. Bone Miner. Res. 10(7), 1050-1056, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- J. S. Jensen, et al., "Microalbuminuria reflects a generalized transvascular albumin leakiness in clinically
- healthy subjects," Clin. Sci. 88(6), 629-633, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- G. Jorneskog, et al., "Skin capillary circulation severely impaired in toes of patients with IDDM, with and
- without late diabetic complications," Diabetologia 38(4), 474-480, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. M. Kahn and T. Song, "Insulin inhibits dog vascular smooth muscle contraction and lowers Ca++[i] by
- inhibiting Ca++ influx," J. of Nutrition 125(6 Suppl.), S1732-S1737, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- F. Kuhlencordt, et al., "Examination of the skeleton in diabetic patients up to age 45," Deutsche med.
- Wchnschr. 91, 1913-1917, 1966. "Some patients have a generalized osteoporosis-like process, and some have
- localized bone lesions...."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Kusunoki, et al., "Amelioration of high fat feeding-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle with
- the antiglucocorticoid RU486," Diabetes 44(6), 718-720, 1995. "These results suggest that glucocorticoids
- play, in a tissue-specific manner, a role in the maintenance and/or production of insulin resistance
- produced by high-fat feeding."
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lazarow, "Protection against alloxan diabetes," Anat. Rec. 97, 353, 1947.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lazarow, "Protective effect of glutathione and cysteine against alloxan diabetes in the rat," Proc. Soc.
- Exp. Biol. & Med. 61, 441-447, 1946. [While certain doses of cysteine, glutathione, and thioglycolic
- acid completely prevented alloxan diabetes, it was interesting that all of the rats receiving ascorbic acid
- became diabetic. To me, this argues for the free radical cause of diabetes, rather than just the sulfhydryl
- oxidation. Lazarow suggested that succinic dehydrogenase, and various other sulfhydryl enzymes, including
- those involved in fatty acid oxidation, might be involved.]
- </p>
- <p>
- R. B. Lipton and J. A. Fivecoate, "High risk of IDDM in African-American and Hispanic children in Chicago,
- 1985-1990," Diabetes Care 18(4), 476-482, 1995. "The relatively early age at onset may point to an
- environmental factor associated with this high incidence of the disease."
- </p>
- <p>
- G. S. Meneilly, et al., "Insulin-mediated increase in blood flow is impaired in the elderly," J. Clin.
- Endocrinol. Metab. 80(6), 1899-1903, 1995. "Normal aging is characterized by resistance to insulin-mediated
- glucose uptake."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. Ma, et al., "Associations of serum and dietary magnesium with cardiovascular disease, hypertension,
- diabetes, insulin, and carotid arterial wall thickness: The ARIC study," J. Clin. Epidemiol. 48(7), 927-940,
- 1995. [Carotid wall thickness increased in women as serum Mg level decreased.]
- </p>
- <p>
- Y. Matsumoto, et al., "Creatine kinase kinetics in diabetic cardiomyopathy," Amer. J. Physiol.-Endocrinol.
- Met. 31(5), E1070-E1076, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- F. Mercure and G. Vanderkraak, "Inhibition of gonadotropin-stimulated ovarian steroid production by
- polyunsaturated fatty acids in teleost fish," Lipids 30(6), 547-554, 1995. "The inhibitory actions by PUFAs
- were not restricted to long-chain PUFAs, as linoleic and linolenic acids had similar actions in the
- goldfish. The inhibitory action of EPA on testosterone production was reversible upon removal of the PUFA
- from medium." "[Stimulated] ...testosterone production ... was attenuated by PUFAs...."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- H. Mulder, et al., "Non-parallelism of islet amyloid polypeptide (amylin) and insulin gene expression in rat
- islets following dexamethasone treatment," Diabetologia 38(4), 395-402, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- S. Nagasaka, et al., "Effect of glycemic control on calcium and phosphorus handling and parathyroid hormone
- level in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus," Endocr. J. 42(3), 377-383, 1995.
- "...hyperglycemia causes excess urinary calcium and phosphorus excretion in patients with NIDDM. In response
- to urinary calcium loss, PTH secretion is mildly stimulated. Bone formation seems to be suppressed in the
- hyperglycemic state in spite of increased PTH secretion." [These are the changes I would expect to see in
- hypothyroid people with high cortisol.]
- </p>
- <p>
- B. Oztas and M. Kucuk, "Influence of acute arterial hypertension on blood-brain barrier permeability in
- streptozocin-induced diabetic rats," Neuroscience Letters 188(1), 53-56, 1995.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- S. Phillips, et al., "Neuropathic arthropathy of the spine in diabetes," Diabetes Care 18(6), 876-869, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- J. F. Pouliot and R. Beliveau, "Palmitoylation of the glucose transporter in blood-brain barrier
- capillaries," Bioch. et Bioph. Acta--Biomembranes 1234(2), 191-196, 1995. "Palmitoylation may be involved in
- the regulation of glucose transport activity in hyperglycemia."
- </p>
- <p>
- R. Ramakrishnan and A. Namasivayam, "Norepinephrine and epinephrine levels in the brain of alloxan diabetic
- rats," Neuroscience Letters 186(2-3), 200-202, 1995. [Epinephrine increased in striatum, hippocampus and
- hypothalamus, Norepinephrine increased in hypothalamus and decreased in pons and medulla.]
- </p>
- <p>
- J. G. Regensteiner, et al., "Effects of non-insulin-dependent diabetes on oxygen consumption during
- treadmill exercise," Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 27(6), 874-881, 1995. "The reduced rate of increase in oxygen
- consumption during increasing submaximal work loads in NIDDM suggests that limitations in oxygen delivery
- may impair exercise performance in otherwise healthy persons with diabetes."
- </p>
- <p>
- A. A. Shaltout, et al., "High incidence of childhood-onset IDDM in Kuwait," Diabetes Care 18(7), 923-927,
- 1995. The incidence of IDDM in children is high in the region and has apparently increased nearly fourfold
- in the last decade. This is especially significant, since diabetes that appears in childhood is especially
- important for the theory of genetic causation. This study should give the gene people real trouble. They
- might have to call in the "gene for bed-wetting" people to help with their case.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- M. A. Smith, et al., "Radical AGEing in Alzheimer's disease," Trends in Neurosciences 18(4), 172-176, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Tchernof, et al., "Relation of steroid hormones to glucose tolerance and plasma insulin levels in men:
- Importance of visceral adipose tissue," Diabetes Care 28(3), 292-299, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Tchernof, et al., "Reduced testosterone and adrenal C-19 steroid levels in obese men," Metabolism--Clin.
- and Exp. 44(4), 513-519, 1995. "...reduced concentrations of testosterone and adrenal C-19 steroid
- precursors are associated with increased body fatness rather than with excess visceral fat accumulation."
- [These results] "...emphasize the importance of adrenal steroids as correlates of body composition in men."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- B. G. Trumper, et al., "Circadian variation of insulin requirement in insulin dependent diabetes
- mellitus--The relationship between circadian change in insulin demand and diurnal patterns of growth
- hormone, cortisol and glucagon during euglycemia," Hormone and Metabolic Research 27(3), 141-147, 1995. "The
- results of the study showed that the early morning rise in the insulin demand is related to the increased
- early morning cortisol secretion and to the nocturnal peaks of growth hormone concentration."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Udvardy, et al., "Altered lysis resistance of platelet-rich clots in patients with insulin-dependent
- diabetes mellitus," Thromb. Res. 79(1), 57-63, 1995. Suppression of clot-dissolving "...was remarkably
- stronger in IDDM, along with the highest PAI-1 activity concentration ratio of the platelet lysates,
- compared to plasmatic levels."
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Vague, et al., "Hypofibrinolysis and the insulin resistance syndrome," Int. J. Obes. 19(Suppl. 1),
- S11-S15, 1995. Hypofibrinolysis is observed among obese subjects and it has been shown that an excess of
- plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI 1) the main regulator of the fibrinolytic system, is closely
- associated to other components of the insulin resistance syndrome, namely, excessive body weight, high waist
- to hip ratio, elevated blood pressure, hyperinsulinemia and hypertriglyceridemia."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- E. O. Vianna and J. Garcialeme, "Allergen-induced airway inflammation in rats: Role of insulin," American J.
- of Respiratory and Critical Care Med. 151(3), 809-814, 1995. "Clinical asthma appears to be less severe when
- diabetes mellitus is superimposed."
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Warley, et al., "Capillary surface area is reduced and tissue thickness from capillaries to myocytes is
- increased in the left ventricle of streptozotocin-diabetic rats," Diabetologia 38(4), 413-421, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- G. C. Weir, "Which comes first in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: Insulin resistance or beta-cell
- failure? Both come first," JAMA 273(23), 1878-1879, 1995.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- N. R. Williams, et al., "Plasma, granulocyte and mononuclear cell copper and zinc in patients with diabetes
- mellitus," Analyst 120(3), 887-890, 1995. "...the copper and zinc status of these diabetic patients was
- reduced, providing further evidence of a role for these antioxidant" trace elements in this disease.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Yamakawa, et al., "Augmented production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in obese mice," Clinical
- Immunology and Immunopathology 75(1), 51-56, 1995. "...the TNF-alpha derived from adipose tissues might be
- involved in the induction of peripheral insulin resistance..."
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Yamashita, et al., "Increased transendothelial permeation of albumin by high glucose concentration,"
- Metabolism 44(6), 739-744, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- M. B. Zemel, "Insulin resistance vs. hyperinsulinemia in hypertension: Insulin regulation of Ca++ transport
- and Ca++-regulation of insulin sensitivity," Journal of Nutrition 125(6 Suppl.), S1738-S1743, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- B. M. Zenere, et al., "Noninvasive detection of functional alterations of the arterial wall in IDDM patients
- with and without microalbuminuria," Diabetes Care 18(7), 975-982, 1995. [There is a reduced vasodilatory
- capacity in diabetes, and especially in patients who are leaking albumin.]
- </p>
- <p>
- D. B. Zilvermit, et al., "Oxidation of glucose labelled with radioactive carbon by normal and
- alloxandiabetic rats," J. Biol. Chem. 176, 389-400, 1948. [Diabetic rats had the same rate of glucose
- oxidation as normal rats, in this experiment. This is an artificial form of diabetes that doesn't
- immediately involve an excess of unsaturated fatty acids, as occurs during stress, estrogen excess,
- hypothyroidism, or diets high in polyunsaturated fats which can cause a more "natural" kind of diabetes. The
- artificial alloxandiabetes forces the animal to oxidize an excess of fatty acids, and eventually should lead
- to the same kind of mitochondrial damage seen in natural diabetes.]
- </p>
-
- <p>
- © Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
- </p>
- </body>
- </html>
|