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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: 1630079" data-attributes="member: 279057"><p>Hi</p><p></p><p>Talk to my cousin. She has been told after pregnancy that from her glucose tolerance test (gtt) she was sure to get diabetes within 2 years (what a bunch of fools). She had the same autoimmune response I got at about the same time as I did in 1957 (virus? she didn't tell anyone for many years) and has many of my symptoms ever since. I do have an initial insulin response but I am insulin resistant most of the time and it doesn't show up in my gtt. We have different problems. Thanks for pointing out that the other form of RH also leads to fatigue. I will have to think about why? In a sense our bodies have the same sort of problem which leads to fatigue. My expert thinks my analysis that everyone has the ability to produce hormones that create insulin resistance fits all the facts. Your expert is probably 1 of the reasons I can not advertise my web site in scientific journals. The number of hits per day of my web site (advertise on google to medical professionals in the U.S. and India, if you want I can give you my email address in private and tell you the name of my web site if you ask) is slowly increasing. My theory is different but possibly consistent with his/hers. I wonder at what point enough people will agree with my theories that the medical establishment will have to take notice.</p><p></p><p>I think I should explain more. I lost 20-25 lbs (8 kg?) in about 2 months and had (have) an overactive bladder. I developed my fatigue symptom. This also happened to my cousin. This is the standard symptoms for destroying one type cell. In this case it is probably a cell of the adrenal glands. I guess that both forms of RH have the same type cell destroyed for whatever reason. I have figured out that all humans can generate the same hormones as appears in the placenta somewhere else in the body (explains too much). These hormones in all humans are used to prevent an overshoot of insulin. They are also used in all humans before we have an emergency dump of sugar from the liver. The cell destroyed is used in the probably complicated chemistry that has these hormones used during the insulin reaction. People with RH do not produce the hormones on schedule. We do produce the hormones in case of a sugar emergency. In my type of genetics (probably about 15% of the worlds population, probably the way we first processed sugar) the hormones stay on until our blood sugar gets too high. The normal population turns off the hormones as soon as they have done their job. I get tired because if I have my large insulin release before the effects of my hormones are completely dissipated (not a very large amount of sugar, after all I produce them for a long time) then I do not turn on the hormones (no emergency sugar situation) and my body keeps trying to turn on the hormones (it finally succeeds but I get exhausted).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yetta2mymom, post: 1630079, member: 279057"] Hi Talk to my cousin. She has been told after pregnancy that from her glucose tolerance test (gtt) she was sure to get diabetes within 2 years (what a bunch of fools). She had the same autoimmune response I got at about the same time as I did in 1957 (virus? she didn't tell anyone for many years) and has many of my symptoms ever since. I do have an initial insulin response but I am insulin resistant most of the time and it doesn't show up in my gtt. We have different problems. Thanks for pointing out that the other form of RH also leads to fatigue. I will have to think about why? In a sense our bodies have the same sort of problem which leads to fatigue. My expert thinks my analysis that everyone has the ability to produce hormones that create insulin resistance fits all the facts. Your expert is probably 1 of the reasons I can not advertise my web site in scientific journals. The number of hits per day of my web site (advertise on google to medical professionals in the U.S. and India, if you want I can give you my email address in private and tell you the name of my web site if you ask) is slowly increasing. My theory is different but possibly consistent with his/hers. I wonder at what point enough people will agree with my theories that the medical establishment will have to take notice. I think I should explain more. I lost 20-25 lbs (8 kg?) in about 2 months and had (have) an overactive bladder. I developed my fatigue symptom. This also happened to my cousin. This is the standard symptoms for destroying one type cell. In this case it is probably a cell of the adrenal glands. I guess that both forms of RH have the same type cell destroyed for whatever reason. I have figured out that all humans can generate the same hormones as appears in the placenta somewhere else in the body (explains too much). These hormones in all humans are used to prevent an overshoot of insulin. They are also used in all humans before we have an emergency dump of sugar from the liver. The cell destroyed is used in the probably complicated chemistry that has these hormones used during the insulin reaction. People with RH do not produce the hormones on schedule. We do produce the hormones in case of a sugar emergency. In my type of genetics (probably about 15% of the worlds population, probably the way we first processed sugar) the hormones stay on until our blood sugar gets too high. The normal population turns off the hormones as soon as they have done their job. I get tired because if I have my large insulin release before the effects of my hormones are completely dissipated (not a very large amount of sugar, after all I produce them for a long time) then I do not turn on the hormones (no emergency sugar situation) and my body keeps trying to turn on the hormones (it finally succeeds but I get exhausted). [/QUOTE]
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All women with the "hunter" gene get gestational diabetes.
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