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Diabetes Discussion
Gestational Diabetes
All women with the "hunter" gene get gestational diabetes.
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<blockquote data-quote="yetta2mymom" data-source="post: 1568557" data-attributes="member: 279057"><p>Hi</p><p></p><p> I have reactive hypoglycemia (a different condition, but maybe endocrine related). It is also possible that your specialist and I, just disagree. Many doctors have read my web site. A total of going on 9000 people have read it, that includes some double counting. I advertise in google to health care professionals in the U.S. and India. Less than 1/2 the (word?) are from google the rest are directly to my web site. I ask for feedback and provide 3 methods of giving same. I remember a total of 5 responses (all antonymous) none questioned anything I wrote. One said his/her urologist gave me a 10/of a possible 10 but he/she thought I was full of ****. I have written to the 10 people on the board of directors of this web site and asked if anything I say is repudiated with actual evidence. They have allowed me to make this posting. I get very low blood sugar about 3 1/2 hours after eating much too much sugar/starch/alchol. I get fatigue after eating too much sugar, over 1 hour later. I do not get hypoglycemia spontaneously. This is somewhat untrue. I got some fatigue symptoms, not as bad as before my diet, for a few years into my diet. I also disturbed my vagus nerve and got many episodes of a slow pulse rate. One happened while I was wired up for a colonoscopy. What a way to learn about that possible problem. This lasted for several years into my diet. I have not had my very low blood sugar for many (53?) years. I started my problem in 1957 (note: fine until I turned 18) when I lost 20-25 lbs (is that about 8 kilograms?) in about 1 month and had (still have) an overactive bladder. I developed fatigue. This is the classical symptoms of an autoimmune problem when 1 type cell in your body is destroyed by your immune system. I figured out (1964) that I had very low blood sugar from what happened in a glucose tolerance test. I did not get very low blood sugar but I had a very minor shaking about 3 1/2 hours into the test. I was tested for 2 hours but since I have the "hunter" gene my blood sugar had slowed its rise but was still rising (185). The nurse took a reading after 3 hours and saw my blood sugar was 100. Then, as I was leaving the hospital I got a very mild shaking. I knew I got these very mild shaking (innumerable times) near simultaneously (have no idea whether it was (always?) a few minutes (seconds?) later or preceding) suddenly recovering from sever fatigue. I made the educated guess that the times I had the symptoms I had read occur when you have very low blood sugar were as I have postulated. The ignorant diabetes specialist who looked at my glucose tolerance test didn't care what I said he just noted my 185 reading of blood sugar after 2 hours and proclaimed me prediabetic. The smart doctor who sent me for the glucose tolerance test did so because I had all the classical symptoms of very low blood sugar. Yes, my fatigue could have been one of the symptoms (how confusing). I had 1 blood sugar reading while I was in my fatigue state it was 60. This is low ,but not low enough, for the amount of fatigue I was experiencing.</p><p> In case anyone reads this, I should indicate that I have postulated that since we are abusing our reactions to prevent very low blood sugar with many releases of the hormones which make us temporarily diabetic. Maybe diabetes is the hormones being on all the time. After all my hormones are in general on most of the time and have been on all the time for many years. Yes, I am simulating a type 2 diabetic.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yetta2mymom, post: 1568557, member: 279057"] Hi I have reactive hypoglycemia (a different condition, but maybe endocrine related). It is also possible that your specialist and I, just disagree. Many doctors have read my web site. A total of going on 9000 people have read it, that includes some double counting. I advertise in google to health care professionals in the U.S. and India. Less than 1/2 the (word?) are from google the rest are directly to my web site. I ask for feedback and provide 3 methods of giving same. I remember a total of 5 responses (all antonymous) none questioned anything I wrote. One said his/her urologist gave me a 10/of a possible 10 but he/she thought I was full of ****. I have written to the 10 people on the board of directors of this web site and asked if anything I say is repudiated with actual evidence. They have allowed me to make this posting. I get very low blood sugar about 3 1/2 hours after eating much too much sugar/starch/alchol. I get fatigue after eating too much sugar, over 1 hour later. I do not get hypoglycemia spontaneously. This is somewhat untrue. I got some fatigue symptoms, not as bad as before my diet, for a few years into my diet. I also disturbed my vagus nerve and got many episodes of a slow pulse rate. One happened while I was wired up for a colonoscopy. What a way to learn about that possible problem. This lasted for several years into my diet. I have not had my very low blood sugar for many (53?) years. I started my problem in 1957 (note: fine until I turned 18) when I lost 20-25 lbs (is that about 8 kilograms?) in about 1 month and had (still have) an overactive bladder. I developed fatigue. This is the classical symptoms of an autoimmune problem when 1 type cell in your body is destroyed by your immune system. I figured out (1964) that I had very low blood sugar from what happened in a glucose tolerance test. I did not get very low blood sugar but I had a very minor shaking about 3 1/2 hours into the test. I was tested for 2 hours but since I have the "hunter" gene my blood sugar had slowed its rise but was still rising (185). The nurse took a reading after 3 hours and saw my blood sugar was 100. Then, as I was leaving the hospital I got a very mild shaking. I knew I got these very mild shaking (innumerable times) near simultaneously (have no idea whether it was (always?) a few minutes (seconds?) later or preceding) suddenly recovering from sever fatigue. I made the educated guess that the times I had the symptoms I had read occur when you have very low blood sugar were as I have postulated. The ignorant diabetes specialist who looked at my glucose tolerance test didn't care what I said he just noted my 185 reading of blood sugar after 2 hours and proclaimed me prediabetic. The smart doctor who sent me for the glucose tolerance test did so because I had all the classical symptoms of very low blood sugar. Yes, my fatigue could have been one of the symptoms (how confusing). I had 1 blood sugar reading while I was in my fatigue state it was 60. This is low ,but not low enough, for the amount of fatigue I was experiencing. In case anyone reads this, I should indicate that I have postulated that since we are abusing our reactions to prevent very low blood sugar with many releases of the hormones which make us temporarily diabetic. Maybe diabetes is the hormones being on all the time. After all my hormones are in general on most of the time and have been on all the time for many years. Yes, I am simulating a type 2 diabetic. [/QUOTE]
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All women with the "hunter" gene get gestational diabetes.
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