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- Message-ID: <diabetes/faq/part1_1084697642@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Supersedes: <diabetes/faq/part1_1083494666@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Expires: 12 Jun 2004 08:54:02 GMT
- X-Last-Updated: 2003/05/22
- From: Edward Reid <edward@paleo.org>
- Newsgroups: misc.health.diabetes,misc.answers,news.answers
- Followup-To: misc.health.diabetes
- Subject: diabetes FAQ: general (part 1 of 5)
- Organization: Paleolithic Refugia
- Reply-To: edward@paleo.org
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Summary: Discusses questions which have been asked frequently in
- misc.health.diabetes. Likely to be of interest to anyone who has
- diabetes or a friend or relative with diabetes or other blood
- glucose disorder.
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 16 May 2004 08:55:01 GMT
- Lines: 858
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: 1084697701 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 576 18.181.0.29
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu misc.health.diabetes:272325 misc.answers:17284 news.answers:271304
-
- Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part1
- Posting-Frequency: biweekly
- Last-modified: 21 May 2003 (excludes change list and Table of Contents)
-
- Changes: change URL on A1c variability (4 Jan)
- update A1c by mail info (28 Jan)
- update links to ADA Clinical Practice Recommendations (30 Apr)
- change attribution for software FAQ (now Rick Mendosa) (20 May)
- remove outdated insuline pump discussion (21 May)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: READ THIS FIRST
-
- Copyright 1993-2003 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
- of copyright law and convention requires the author's permission.
-
- Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
- Never substitute advice from the net for a physician's care. Diabetes is a
- critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
- personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
- based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Table of Contents
-
- INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
- READ THIS FIRST
- Table of Contents
- GENERAL (found in part 1)
- Where's the FAQ?
- What's this newsgroup like?
- Abuse of the newsgroup
- The newsgroup charter
- Newsgroup posting guidelines
- What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
- What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
- What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
- What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
- Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
- How about discussing hypoglycemia?
- Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
- Exercise and insulin
- BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
- How accurate is my meter?
- Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
- What do meters cost?
- Comparing blood glucose meters
- How can I download data from my meter?
- I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?
- What's HbA1c and what's it mean?
- Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?
- Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?
- HbA1c by mail
- Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
- and Somogyi effect?
- TREATMENT (found in part 3)
- My diabetic father isn't taking care of himself. What can I do?
- Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
- So-and-so eats sugar! Isn't that poison for diabetics?
- Insulin nomenclature
- What is Humalog / LysPro / lispro / ultrafast insulin?
- Travelling with insulin
- Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
- Injectors: Pens
- Injectors: Jets
- Insulin pumps
- Type 1 cures -- beta cell implants
- Type 1 cures -- pancreas transplants
- Type 2 cures -- barely a dream
- What's a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
- Should I take a chromium supplement?
- I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
- Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
- Alcohol and diabetes
- Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
- Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
- Gastroparesis
- Extreme insulin resistance
- What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
- What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
- What's the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
- How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
- What's the bottom line on pycnogenol?
- Pycnogenol references
- SOURCES (found in part 4)
- Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
- Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
- Online resources: commercial services
- Online resources: FTP
- Online resources: World Wide Web
- Online resources: other
- Where can I mail order XYZ?
- How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
- How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
- How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
- How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
- What about diabetes organizations outside North America?
- How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
- Could you recommend some good reading?
- Could you recommend some good magazines?
- RESEARCH (found in part 5)
- What is the DCCT? What are the results?
- More details about the DCCT
- DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
- IN CLOSING (found in all parts)
- Who did this?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Where's the FAQ?
-
- This FAQ attempts to answer the questions which have been most frequently
- asked in misc.health.diabetes (m.h.d). This is not a complete informational
- posting. My only criterion for inclusion is that the topic has frequently
- appeared in m.h.d, either by an explicit question, or implicitly by posting a
- related question or a common misconception.
-
- This FAQ is posted biweekly to the Usenet newsgroup misc.health.diabetes.
- If you obtained this article by some method other than reading Usenet,
- refer to the section on "Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups"
- for brief information on how to obtain access to Usenet newsgroups and
- misc.health.diabetes in particular.
-
- Feel free to make copies of this FAQ for your personal use or for a friend or
- relative, including to share with health care providers. If you want to make
- this FAQ available to others on an ongoing basis (for example, on a BBS),
- please do *not* post or copy the entire FAQ. Instead, post only this section,
- entitled "Where's the FAQ?". This will enable others always to retrieve the
- most recent version.
-
- I have removed the outdated informational posting on insulin pumps.
-
- An informational posting on diabetes-related software is posted to m.h.d at
- the same time as this FAQ. See below for retrieval information. It was
- developed and is maintained by Rick Mendosa <mendosa(AT)mendosa.com>.
-
- I've used ideas and information from many people in writing this FAQ. With a
- few exceptions I haven't attempted to identify them, but I thank them all.
- The words herein are mine unless otherwise credited.
-
- If you read this and it helps you, please let me know what part helped, and
- why. If you read this and can't find what you want, let me know that too.
- Such comments will help me decide what is worth working on, and whether.
- You'd be surprised how little feedback I get. If you are reading this on the
- newsgroup, just reply to this article. If you found this on the web, send
- email to <edward@paleo.org>.
-
- These documents -- the FAQ and the software overview -- are available
- from the news.answers archives at rtfm.mit.edu. Using anonymous ftp, get
- the files:
-
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part1
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part2
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part3
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part4
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part5
- /pub/faqs/diabetes/software
-
- or in web browser format:
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/faqs/diabetes/
-
- If your net access is by email only, send an email message to
- mail-server(AT)rtfm.mit.edu, subject ignored, body containing:
-
- send faqs/diabetes/faq/part1
- send faqs/diabetes/faq/part2
- send faqs/diabetes/faq/part3
- send faqs/diabetes/faq/part4
- send faqs/diabetes/faq/part5
- send faqs/diabetes/software
-
- If you are using the World Wide Web, you can reach a WWW-formatted version of
- the FAQ and other documents via the URL
-
- http://www.faqs.org/faqs/diabetes/
-
- You can also retrieve the plain text by FTP from the rtfm.mit.edu site
- mentioned above, which has long been the most reliable source. However,
- it only offers the simplest retrieval capability.
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: What's this newsgroup like?
-
- Posting topics range through emotional support, treatment techniques,
- psychological factors, health care practices, and insurance. We talk about
- our problems, frustrations, depressions and complications to find out how
- others handle the same issues and for mutual support. The atmosphere is
- generally a highly supportive one, and most participants believe strongly
- that this is an important aspect. As in other parts of the net, there are one
- or two regular participants who believe that it is important to question the
- motives and/or knowledge of anyone posting a new problem. If you find that
- the first response is antagonistic, please wait a few hours. Every
- antagonistic response will elicit a dozen sympathetic responses.
-
- Meta-topics include discussions of how to best convey health information on
- the Usenet, ethical treatment of other participants, what topics and
- information are appropriate for m.h.d, where to find diabetes information,
- and what the newsgroup should be like.
-
- Betsy Butler says eloquently:
-
- The positive posts of people who are in great control are very
- motivating, but it is also helpful to hear from people who don't find
- it so easy. I'm sure there are a lot of people who struggle to keep
- control. The people who are having trouble also need to know that there
- are others who struggle, and that they are not alone. It can be very
- intimidating, and a blow to self-esteem for people to suggest that if
- you would just do X, Y and Z, you will be in control. There are 100s of
- factors to balance, and I think people need to be reassured that "yes,
- it's hard to balance so many things, many of which can't be measured or
- that don't act predictably."
-
- Topics closely related to diabetes mellitus which do not have their own place
- in Usenet are welcome. Examples are diabetes insipidus, hypoglycemia, glucose
- intolerance, legal and employment ramifications of chronic illness, effects
- on family members, how family members can best provide support, and so on.
- misc.health.diabetes tends to be inclusive of anyone who needs it.
-
- The same caveat applies here as in all newsgroups: the advice is worth what
- you paid for it. This applies in spades to a critical health topic such as
- diabetes. Never substitute informal advice for a physician's care. Advice
- given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice.
-
- The variety of individual responses to diabetes is exceeded only by the
- variety of individual responses to life. No two patients respond alike, and
- many respond *very* differently from others. These differences are
- physiological, not just psychological. They reflect not only varying
- responses, but the fact that diabetes itself probably has many causes, many
- more than the few types currently recognized (see section on types). When you
- read advice, realize that what works (or doesn't work) for someone else may
- not work (or may work) for you. When you give advice, try to remember that
- most advice is relative to the individual, not absolute. Recognize that you
- can't treat your own diabetes by a set of rules, but only by knowing how your
- own individual body and physiology work and by adjusting to your own
- mechanisms.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Abuse of the newsgroup
-
- As mentioned above, a few participants believe that name-calling and abusive
- language are more effective than polite discussion, support and interchange
- of information. They are wrong, and the vast majority of participants support
- a more civilized and polite view of humanity. Since misc.health.diabetes is
- unmoderated, we all have to live together.
-
- A few m.h.d. participants have received abusive email. Some are afraid to
- expose such abuse, having been told that email must always be private.
- However, abusive email is no more deserving of privacy than obscene phone
- calls or threatening letters. There is no authority to which you can report
- abusive email (unless it contains an actual threat, in which can you may be
- justified in contacting a law enforcement agency). Steve Kirchoefer
- <swkirch(AT)chrisco.nrl.navy.mil> is willing to try to mediate problems with
- email. Though Steve has no official authority, he has experience in dealing
- with problems on the net and may be able to help clear up such problems. Send
- him complete copies of any abusive email.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: The newsgroup charter
-
- The actual charter which led to the creation of the newsgroup in May 1993
- follows. This charter was proposed by Steve Kirchoefer
- <swkirch(AT)chrisco.nrl.navy.mil> and approved by a public vote of the Usenet
- readership, and is the official statement of the scope and purpose of this
- newsgroup.
-
- 1. The purpose of misc.health.diabetes is to provide a forum for the
- discussion of issues pertaining to diabetes management, i.e.: diet,
- activities, medicine schedules, blood glucose control, exercise, medical
- breakthroughs, etc. This group addresses the issues of management of
- both Type I (insulin dependent) and Type II (non-insulin dependent)
- diabetes. Both technical discussions and general support discussions
- relevant to diabetes are welcome.
-
- 2. Postings to misc.health.diabetes are intended to be for discussion
- purposes only, and are in no way to be construed as medical advice.
- Diabetes is a serious medical condition requiring direct supervision
- by a primary health care physician.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Newsgroup posting guidelines
-
- The following posting guidelines were adopted by a vote of m.h.d participants
- in September 1994.
-
- Posting guidelines for misc.health.diabetes:
-
- Postings to misc.health.diabetes should be compliant with the standards
- for all material posted to Usenet. The following articles may be found
- in news.announce.newusers, and should be reviewed by all posters:
-
- -Emily Postnews Answers Your Questions on Netiquette
- -Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
- -A Primer on How to Work With the Usenet Community
- -Rules for posting to Usenet
- -What is Usenet?
-
- Posting to misc.health.diabetes should be compliant with the group charter,
- [which is in the previous section].
-
- In addition to the above, the following guidelines are emphasized as
- particularly relevant for contributions to misc.health.diabetes:
-
- -No personal attacks or insults. Avoid argumentative debates. Responses
- should concentrate on the issues presented.
-
- -No private discussions. Take private discussions to email. When in
- doubt, use email.
-
- -Edit responses to avoid unnecessary inclusions of earlier postings.
-
- -Edit subject lines as necessary to remain consistent with the topic.
-
- -Support factual statements with your sources. If you can not recall the
- source, then say so. Do not imply authority which you can not actually
- support.
-
- Additional information can be found in the general FAQ posted periodically
- to this group.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
-
- Glucose is a specific form of sugar, one of the simplest. It is the form
- found in the bloodstream. "Blood sugar" always refers to blood glucose, and
- is abbreviated bG. All bG meters are specific for glucose and will not
- respond to other sugars, such as fructose, sucrose, maltose and lactose.
-
- Although sucrose (table sugar) is the most common sugar in food, glucose is
- also common. Most fruits, fruit juices, and soft drinks contain large amounts
- of glucose, and many foods contain small amounts. This means that you must be
- very careful to clean any food residue from your fingers before drawing blood
- for a bG check. Since the normal level of bG is only 1g/L (=100mg/dl), it
- only takes a tiny speck of glucose on your finger to contaminate the sample
- and give you a falsely high reading. 10 *micrograms* of glucose could raise
- the reading enough to cause you to overreact dangerously.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: What are mg/dl and mmol/l? How to convert? Glucose? Cholesterol?
-
- There are two main methods of describing concentrations: by weight, and
- by molecular count. Weights are in grams, molecular counts in moles. (If you
- really want to know, a mole is 6.23*10^23 molecules.) In both cases, the unit
- is usually modified by milli- or micro- or other prefix, and is always "per"
- some volume, often a liter.
-
- This means that the conversion factor depends on the molecular weight of the
- substance in question.
-
- mmol/l is millimoles/liter, and is the world standard unit for measuring
- glucose in blood. Specifically, it is the designated SI (Systeme
- International) unit. "World standard", of course, means that mmol/L is used
- everywhere in the world except in the US. A mole is about 6*10^23 molecules;
- if you want more detail, take a chemistry course.
-
- mg/dl (milligrams/deciliter) is the traditional unit for measuring bG (blood
- glucose). All scientific journals are moving quickly toward using mmol/L
- exclusively. mg/dl won't disappear soon, and some journals now use mmol/L as
- the primary unit but quote mg/dl in parentheses, reflecting the large base of
- health care providers and researchers (not to mention patients) who are
- already familiar with mg/dl.
-
- Since m.h.d is an international newsgroup, it's polite to quote both figures
- when you can. Most discussions take place using mg/dl, and no one really
- expects you to pull out your calculator to compose your article. However, if
- you don't quote both units, it's inevitable that many readers will have to
- pull out their calculators to read it.
-
- Many meters now have a switch that allows you to change between units.
- Sometimes it's a physical switch, and sometimes it's an option that you can
- set.
-
- To convert mmol/l of glucose to mg/dl, multiply by 18.
-
- To convert mg/dl of glucose to mmol/l, divide by 18 or multiply by 0.055.
-
- These factors are specific for glucose, because they depend on the mass
- of one molecule (the molecular weight). The conversion factors are
- different for other substances (see below).
-
- And remember that reflectance meters have a some error margin due to
- both intrinsic limitations and environmental factors, and that plasma
- readings are 15% higher than whole blood (as of 2002 most meters are
- calibrated to give plasma readings, thus matching lab readings, but this
- is a recent development), and that capillary blood is different from
- venous blood when it's changing, as after a meal. So round off to make
- values easier to comprehend and don't sweat the hundredths place. For
- example, 4.3 mmol/l converts to 77.4 mg/dl but should probably be quoted
- as 75 or 80. Similarly, 150 mg/dl converts to 8.3333... mmol/l but 8.3
- is a reasonable quote, and even just 8 would usually convey the meaning.
-
- Actually, a table might be more useful than the raw conversion factor, since
- we usually talk in approximations anyway.
-
- mmol/l mg/dl interpretation
- ------ ----- --------------
- 2.0 35 extremely low, danger of unconciousness
- 3.0 55 low, marginal insulin reaction
- 4.0 75 slightly low, first symptoms of lethargy etc.
- 5.5 100 mecca
- 5 - 6 90-110 normal preprandial in nondiabetics
- 8.0 150 normal postprandial in nondiabetics
- 10.0 180 maximum postprandial in nondiabetics
- 11.0 200
- 15.0 270 a little high to very high depending on patient
- 16.5 300
- 20.0 360 getting up there
- 22 400 max mg/dl for some meters and strips
- 33 600 high danger of severe electrolyte imbalance
-
- Preprandial = before meal
- Postprandial = after meal
-
- More conversions:
-
- To convert mmol/l of HDL or LDL cholesterol to mg/dl, multiply by 39.
- To convert mg/dl of HDL or LDL cholesterol to mmol/l, divide by 39.
-
- To convert mmol/l of triglycerides to mg/dl, multiply by 89.
- To convert mg/dl of triglycerides to mmol/l, divide by 89.
-
- To convert umol (micromoles) /l of creatinine to mg/dl, divide by 88.
- To convert mg/dl of creatinine to umol/l, multiply by 88.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
-
- Thanks to Andrew Torres <andym(AT)ku.edu> for this section.
-
- C-peptide blood levels can indicate whether or not a person is producing
- insulin and roughly how much.
-
- Insulin is initially synthesized in the form of proinsulin. In this form the
- alpha and beta chains of active insulin are linked by a third polypeptide
- chain called the connecting peptide, or c-peptide, for short. Because both
- insulin and c-peptide molecules are secreted, for every molecule of insulin
- in the blood, there is one of c-peptide. Therefore, levels of c-peptide in
- the blood can be measured and used as an indicator of insulin production in
- those cases where exogenous insulin (from injection) is present and mixed
- with endogenous insulin (that produced by the body) a situation that would
- make meaningless a measurement of insulin itself. The c-peptide test can also
- be used to help assess if high blood glucose is due to reduced insulin
- production or to reduced glucose intake by the cells.
-
- There is little or no c-peptide in blood of type 1 diabetics, and c-peptide
- levels in type 2 diabetics can be reduced or normal. The concentrations of
- c-peptide in non-diabetics are on the order of 0.5-3.0 ng/ml.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and gestational diabetes?
-
- The term diabetes mellitus comes from Greek words for "flow" and "honey",
- referring to the excess urinary flow that occurs when diabetes is untreated,
- and to the sugar in that urine.
-
- Diabetes mellitus (DM) comes in the following classifications (which some
- will argue don't really represent the actual types very well):
-
- type 1 -- characterized by total destruction of the insulin-producing beta
- cells, probably by an autoimmune reaction. Onset is most common
- in childhood, thus the common (but now deprecated) term
- "juvenile-onset", but the onset up to age 40 is not uncommon and
- can even occur later. Patients are susceptible to DKA (diabetic
- ketoacidosis). There seems to be some genetic tendency, but the
- genetic situation is unclear. Most patients are lean. Always
- requires treatment by insulin. Not sex-linked. Also referred to
- as IDDM (insulin dependent diabetes mellitus).
-
- type 2 -- characterized by insulin resistance despite adequate insulin
- production. A large majority of patients are overweight at onset,
- and a majority are female. Most are over 40, hence the common
- (but now deprecated) terms "adult-onset" or "maturity-onset", but
- onset can occur at any age. Patients are not susceptible to DKA
- (diabetic ketoacidosis). There is a strong genetic tendency, but
- not simple inheritance. Depending on the individual, treatment
- may be by diet, exercise, weight loss, oral drugs which stimulate
- the release of insulin, or insulin injections -- and usually a
- combination of several of these. Also referred to as NIDDM (non
- insulin dependent diabetes mellitus) *even when treated with
- insulin* -- a confusing terminology which, unfortunately, is
- supported by the ADA.
-
- gestational -- occurs in about 3% of all pregnancies as a result of
- insulin antagonists secreted by the placenta. It is recommended
- that all pregnant women receive a screening glucose tolerance
- test (GTT) between the 24th and 28th weeks of pregnancy to detect
- gestational diabetes early if it occurs, as diabetes can cause
- serious difficulties in pregnancy. Sometimes requires insulin
- treatment. Not susceptible to DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis).
- Usually disappears after childbirth, but about 40% of patients
- develop type 2 diabetes within five years. Most authorities state
- that the typical patient is female ...
-
- malnutrition-related -- severe malnutrition sometimes causes diabetes --
- hyperglycemia and all the usual symptoms. The reason is unknown,
- and since this syndrome occurs almost entirely in third world
- countries, research on this form of diabetes is nearly nonexistent.
-
- other types -- sometimes called secondary. A catchall for forms not covered
- by the types described above. Causes include loss of the entire
- pancreas (to trauma, cancer, alcohol abuse, or exposure to
- chemicals), diseases that destroy the beta cells, certain
- hormonal syndromes, drugs that interfere with insulin secretion
- or action, and some rare genetic conditions.
-
- These terms are not used entirely consistently. Some doctors will refer to
- any diabetic using insulin as type 1, and will refer to the early onset of
- type 1 diabetes as type 2 until insulin therapy is required. This usage does
- not fit with most modern usage as described above (type 1 is beta cell
- destruction, type 2 is insulin resistance). The situation is complicated by
- the fact that early in the course of the disease it can be difficult to
- determine which type is occuring, especially for patients in their 30's, the
- age when the onset of both types is common.
-
- Different patients respond very differently to what is categorized above as
- the same disease. The root causes of all forms of diabetes are not
- understood, and are likely more complex and varied than the simple categories
- show. Type 1 diabetes likely has a few root causes, and type 2 diabetes
- probably has a larger number of root causes.
-
- There are also well documented reports of cases of diabetes with unexplained
- combinations of syndromes from types 1 and 2. These are sometimes referred to
- as "type 1-1/2", and the reasons are not understood.
-
- The classification above is not completely standard, and other classifications
- exist.
-
- About 90% of diabetes patients are type 2 (some 12 million in the US), and
- about 10% are type 1 (some 1 million in the US). Discussion on m.h.d tends to
- run about 2/3 type 1, I'd guess. This probably reflects the fact that type 1
- diabetes is harder to ignore, and that type 2 seldom strikes the younger
- people who are more likely to have net access. Type 2 is *not* less serious.
-
- "1" and "2" are often written in Roman numerals: type I, type II. Because
- typography is often unclear on computer terminals, I've stuck with the Arabic
- numeral version.
-
- Diabetes accounts for about 5% of all health care costs in the US, some
- US$90 billion per year.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
-
- Diabetes insipidus (DI) results from abnormalities in the production or
- use (two main types) of the hormone arginine vasopressin. The main
- symptoms are excessive thirst and massive urination. The excess urine
- flow is devoid of sugar. There are no blood glucose abnormalities, and
- in fact there is nothing in common with diabetes mellitus except the
- excess urination when untreated.
-
- Diabetes insipidus caused by failure to produce vasopressin. This is
- known as neurogenic DI (or central DI, or pituitary DI). It can be
- treated with hormone replacement (by nasal spray or other routes). DI
- caused by failure to use vasopressin (nephrogenic DI) is more difficult
- to treat, but several drugs are available which help.
-
- DI is much less common than diabetes mellitus, though a few people have
- discussed it on misc.health.diabetes and are reading m.h.d. Such
- participation is certainly welcome, but because the number of DI
- patients is only 1 or 2 per 10,000 population (25,000-50,000 in the
- US), there probably isn't a critical mass for discussion on Usenet.
-
- I'm aware of two organizations which offer support specifically
- related to DI.
-
- DIARD publishes a support newsletter, maintains a support network,
- distributes information on DI, and promotes education and research
- related to DI, and has a web page with information and links:
-
- Diabetes Insipidus and Related Diseases Network
- 535 Echo Court
- Saline, MI 48176-1270
- USA
- +1 734 944 0078
- email: GSMAYES(AT)aol.com
- web: http://members.aol.com/ruudh/dipage1.htm
-
- The DI Foundation publishes a quarterly newsletter, Endless Water,
- promotes public awareness and understanding of DI, and provides
- informational material to patients, medical practitioners and
- researchers:
-
- The Diabetes Insipidus Foundation, Inc.
- 4533 Ridge Drive
- Baltimore, MD 21229
- USA
- +1 410 247 3953
- email: diabetesinsipidus(AT)maxInter.net
- web: http://diabetesinsipidus.maxInter.net
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: How about discussing hypoglycemia?
-
- Sure ...
-
- To clarify: the term "hypoglycemia" is used to refer to two distinct
- conditions. The word just means "low blood glucose". This can occur as
- an insulin reaction, the result of too much injected insulin (taken to
- treat diabetes) compared to food intake and exercise. But low blood
- glucose can also be a chronic condition resulting from abnormalities of
- insulin secretion, and this chronic condition is also called
- hypoglycemia.
-
- Chronic hypoglycemia may be caused by beta cells which overreact to an
- increase in blood glucose (bg) by releasing too much insulin, which
- then causes a too-rapid drop in bG. Such a condition, called reactive
- hypoglycemia, is usually handled by dietary adjustments, in particular
- avoiding refined sugars and large meals which stimulate the
- overreaction. This often requires an effort in calculating the diet and
- monitoring bG levels that is equal to what anyone with diabetes needs.
-
- Tumors (insulinomas) can cause a steady overproduction of insulin.
- These generally require surgical removal.
-
- There are other causes as well. Mayer Davidson discusses some in his
- book _Diabetes Mellitus: Diagnosis and Treatment_. But you'll have to
- find the Second Edition, because he dropped this chapter from the Third
- Edition. I don't believe anyone claims to understand all the causes of
- hypoglycemia. The US NIDDK has a booklet online which discusses some of
- the less common causes:
-
- http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/diabetes/pubs/hypo/hypo.htm
-
- So chronic hypoglycemia is closely related to diabetes mellitus in
- being a disorder of insulin production and use, and requires many of
- the same techniques for its treatment. The two are a natural for
- discussion in the same newsgroup. Which is good, since there really
- isn't anywhere else in Usenet at present to discuss chronic
- hypoglycemia. Welcome.
-
- A hypoglycemia mailing list, HYPO-L, is available and sees moderate
- traffic. See the section on mailing lists in part 4 of this FAQ for
- subscription information.
-
- Lars Idema maintains a hypoglycemia FAQ and information on a variety of
- hypoglycemia resources on the Internet. See his web page at
-
- http://hypoglykemie.nl
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
-
- Diagnosis of marginal type 2 diabetes, and even more so of
- hypoglycemia, can be an iffy task. Single-point blood glucose
- measurements often miss significant readings, especially for
- hypoglycemia. While I don't recommend self-diagnosis, you can take some
- steps on your own to aid your health care team in your diagnosis and
- treatment. These are safe and useful steps. The first is purely
- monitoring and not treatment or diagnosis on your part. The others are
- good advice for anyone who does not have some other medical condition
- to contraindicate the action, and are particularly good for those with
- type 2 diabetes.
-
- 1) Get a blood glucose meter and start checking your blood glucose
- before meals and at bedtime. Keep records. Also note what you ate, any
- exercise, any unusual stress. If you suspect type 2 diabetes, also try
- to check an hour after eating. If you suspect hypoglycemia, check any
- time you have suspicious symptoms; you may also want to set up a few
- runs where you check every 15-30 minutes for up to five hours after
- eating.
-
- Don't try to make any adjustments based on the readings until you review
- them with your doctor -- just keep the record and show it to the
- doctor. This will give the doctor more information than any examination
- or lab test can give. Furthermore, if you are waiting for an
- appointment, this record will put you ahead of the game when you
- actually see the doctor. (If during this monitoring you see a dramatic
- rise in blood glucose, to preprandial levels of 250 mg/dl [15 mmol/L]
- and above, call the doctors and say you need an appointment *now*, not
- in a month, not next week, and quote your bg levels.)
-
- As an additional advantage, doing this monitoring on your own will
- demonstrate to the doctor that you are willing to put in this kind of
- effort. Often doctors are reluctant to ask patients to put in serious
- time to monitor their health because so many patients don't follow up.
-
- Blood glucose meters and all the supplies are OTC items. (True in the
- USA, and I haven't heard of any country with a different policy.)
- However, depending on where you live and what type of insurance or
- national medical coverage you have, you may have to pay from your own
- pocket if you do not have a prescription or proper pre-authorization.
- For a month or so of monitoring, this is probably worth the cost.
-
- 2) Increase your exercise level, within levels that are safe in light
- of any other medical conditions. In other words, if you are not already
- in an exercise program, consult your doctor. Exercise will also help
- with other stresses you are under. This is primarily applicable if you
- suspect type 2 diabetes, but may help with hypoglycemia also.
-
- 3) Improve your diet if you are not already watching it carefully. A
- standard diet with moderate calories and fat is good at this stage,
- until you see the specialist. If you suspect hypoglycemia, you may want
- to be especially careful of eating large amounts at one time, and avoid
- concentrated sugars.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Exercise and insulin
-
- Charles Coughran <ccoughran(AT)ucsd.edu> contributed this section.
-
- The best way to deal with problems associated with diabetes and exercise
- begins with understanding of what goes on in the metabolic system of
- normal people and what the differences are for diabetics. Only with
- such understanding can you make intelligent choices about
- pharmacological tactics. Relying on rules of thumb can cause more
- problems it solves because of the wide variability of individual
- responses and the wide variety of diseases that fall under the rubric
- of diabetes. Not to mention, I have seen postings where the rules of
- thumb were clearly misunderstood.
-
- While the following is intended for those who take insulin, it may
- assist those on oral medications as well. Exercise in this context
- means extended aerobic activity, say a minimum of 20 minutes of
- jogging. This is a somewhat simplified account but I think it captures
- the most important aspects for exercise related bg control. Comments
- encouraged.
-
- When a normal person starts to exercise, the insulin output of his
- pancreas goes down. At first blush, this seems backward since the
- muscles are working hard and therefore require more glucose to be
- transported from the blood into the cells. There are two reasons more
- glucose can be transported with less available insulin. The first is
- that during exercise insulin becomes much more efficient. The mechanism
- of this effect is not fully understood, but it helps overcomes the
- reduction in circulating insulin.
-
- Second, exercise activates non-insulin mediated glucose transport
- pathways. These pathways are not sufficient to handle the load in the
- absence of insulin, but do increase the effective insulin efficiency.
-
- When insulin levels decline relative to the counterregulatory hormones
- -- glucagon, epinephrine, norepinephrine, growth hormone, and cortisol
- -- the liver is stimulated to release stored glucose. The blood glucose
- that is being transported into the cells is replaced by that from
- hepatic stores. It is this hormonal balance system that keeps the
- levels of blood glucose in the normal narrow range during exercise.
-
- For those of us who inject insulin, the first problem is obvious. Our
- circulating levels of insulin do not react to exercise. Absent any
- correction, when the muscles demand glucose and insulin becomes more
- efficient our blood glucose plummets and we become hypoglycemic. This
- is the reason for a commonly encountered prohibition to not schedule
- exercise when your insulin is peaking. The higher the level of
- circulating insulin, the more pronounced the effect.
-
- One solution is to reduce our circulating insulin levels by reducing
- insulin intake. Here specific advice starts to be difficult due to the
- wide variety of insulins, regimens, and individual variability. The
- spectrum spans from a Type II who takes a little NPH to help his beta
- cells out to a c-peptide free pumper. I have spoken to diabetic runners
- whose tactics would put me in an ambulance, even though our situations
- seem to be very similar. You see a lot of advice of the form, "reduce
- your insulin 2 units for every hour of strenuous exercise". This kind
- of advice ignores real world variability and is sometimes much worse
- than useless.
-
- Clearly, someone who takes one shot/day has a much more limited ability
- to adjust circulating insulin levels than someone using multiple
- injections or a pump.
-
- The other approach is to increase blood glucose levels by eating
- carbohydrates timed to arrive at the blood stream in the form of
- glucose when it is needed. The easiest way to do that is usually to eat
- fast acting carbohydrates during or immediately preceding exercise.
- Again, there are rules of thumb around about so many grams of
- carbohydrates for a particular length of exercise at some defined
- level. Again, they seem to be swamped by individual and circumstantial
- variability.
-
- Some of us do a combination of both and pump up our bg levels somewhat
- before exercise and reduce insulin levels to keep things on an even
- keel.
-
- The bottom line is to make careful adjustments and test, and test, and
- test, to find out how things work for your particular body.
-
- So much for too much insulin. What happens when the circulating insulin
- level is too low? When levels are so low that even the increase in
- insulin efficiency doesn't overcome the defect, glucose isn't
- transported into the cells. Worse, since insulin levels are low the
- liver continues to pump glucose into the blood. The result is bg levels
- rise with exercise. The muscles get stressed due to lack of fuel and
- the metabolism of fats kicks in, ketones start being produced and the
- danger of ketosis or ketoacidosis looms. This is the basis for another
- rule of thumb which is often misunderstood. The rule is usually stated
- "don't exercise when your bg is above 240 mg/dl (13.3 mmol/l) and
- ketones are present in the urine". This makes sense because those are
- signs that you have inadequate insulin supplies -- that's how many of
- us got diagnosed. Exercise in those circumstances will make things
- worse, not better. On the other hand, if you are 300 mg/dl (16.7
- mmol/l) because you just drank a large regular cola by mistake with
- lunch, exercise is a great way to bring that bg down in a hurry. Why
- your bg is elevated is just as important as the fact of the elevated
- level when deciding whether or not exercise is contraindicated. The 240
- is also a somewhat arbitrary number. Some people start throwing ketones
- at significantly lower levels.
-
- In short: avoid exercise if your insulin level is too low. Do exercise
- if you are sure your insulin level is adequate but your blood glucose
- is too high.
-
- Exercise also produces effects at longer time scales. Sometime after
- exercise, there is often a take up of blood glucose by the muscles to
- replenish depleted stores. This most often occurs an hour or two after
- exercise, but has been reported in the range of 1/2 hour to 48 hours.
- Again, as is the case during exercise, artificially high insulin levels
- will lead to hypoglycemia. The last rule of thumb is to watch for
- hypoglycemia after exercise.
-
- *SPECULATION BEGINS HERE* A problem some of us encounter from time to
- time is a post exercise bg spike. Blood glucose readings will be
- reasonable after exercise but sharply elevated a few hours later. It is
- my speculation that this represents circulating insulin levels that
- were adequate to deal with exercise induced blood glucose demand with
- its attendant insulin efficiency increase, but too low to deal with the
- post exercise demand when insulin efficiency has lowered somewhat. It
- has been my experience that post exercise elevated bg levels respond to
- much less insulin than would be required in a more normal situation. It
- appears that insulin efficiency falls off after exercise at some rate
- and you can be on the correct side of the curve during exercise and the
- wrong side after. This hypothesis is the best of a couple I have come
- up with. *SPECULATION ENDS HERE*
-
- Regular exercise over time scales of weeks or months can reduce overall
- insulin requirements. In addition, as muscles become trained and
- improve their internal storage, it feeds back into the amount of
- glucose demand present during exercise, and thus into the entire
- control cycle.
-
- Diabetes makes exercise, and almost everything else, harder. But, hey,
- if it was easy it wouldn't be any fun :-)
-
- There are two very good, readable books from which you can get more
- information. The better is Campaigne and Lampman, _Exercise in the
- Clinical Management of Diabetes_. Almost as good is _The Health
- Professional's Guide to Diabetes and Exercise_ edited by Ruderman and
- Devlin and published by the American Diabetes Association.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Who did this?
-
- --
- Edward Reid <edward@paleo.org>
- Tallahassee FL
-