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Can Neuropathy be reversed?

Can I refer you to my earlier answers regarding this supposed deficiency/non deficiency.........

Have a read of this LA Times article........it says it all.......

http://www.latimes.com/health/la-he-fit ... 3222.story

You seem to be repeating what has already been posted here by my old pal soundgen. Are you a friend of his by any chance..........not Gerry are you ? :wink:

I'll leave you to it I think....... I can't be bothered to repeat what has gone before. Head and brick wall come to mind.
 

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I started benfotiamine to see if it would resolve the burning tingling sensation in my hands and it did. I take 300mg/d.

If you experience a hyperglycemic event and do not shunt the glycolitic metabolites to the pentose phosphate pathway they will be used in the formation of AGE ; the hexosamine pathway and DAG protien kinase pathway that are all implicated in diabetic complications.

Perhaps I am not taking enough benfotiamine to access the pentose phosphate pathway but I hope I am as for the neuropathy question yes it did resolve mine.

As for the fourth pathway the polyol pathway google polyol pathway vitamin c sorbitol another vitamin in our quiver against diabetic complications.


http://www.nature.com/nm/journal/v9/n3/abs/nm834.html
 
I would have expected that the now-documented use of false claims would have enabled the FDA to have taken legal action against the purveyors of Benfotiamine.
 
phraedus said:
I would have expected that the now-documented use of false claims would have enabled the FDA to have taken legal action against the purveyors of Benfotiamine.

phraedus.........

Now isn't that a coincidence ? You have posted something that almost EXACTLY matches this........

CactusCritter - Jun 13, 2008

* Rank: 5 / 5 (1)

I would have expected that the now-documented use of false claims would have enabled the FDA to have take legal action against the purveyors of Benfotiamine.

That was posted as a response to the article I quoted earlier. As this is a UK site I have no idea why the FDA have maybe not done anything about the documented false claims. Perhaps you should ask them yourself.

The European Food Standards Agency have commented about Benfotiamine back in 2008......


http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/scdocs/doc/864.pdf

In my experience there are many odd and false claims that seem to be allowed to run, even here in the UK........usually it's because whilst the claims may be false and based on unsound science, more work and evidence is needed not only to prove the claims, but also to disprove them too. In other words they have better things to do than spend large sums of money on disproving unsubstantiated claims by some 'purveyors' of stuff such as this. Mostly they rely on people using their common sense and seeing the claims for what they are.........promotion of something that makes somebody a lot of money.

Now if you and others want to waste money on a supplement that at best MAY have some benefit rather than a proven benefit........well, that is your choice. Just don't 'parrot' the psuedo-science on here as if it is a proven fact and is incontrovertible. Some of us are not so gullible and can see when something is being touted as a cure all.......with little or no proof that it actually has any benefit at all. There is only anecdotal evidence that it MAY be. I deal in hard facts and so far I have seen none that Benfotiamine does much. A few people on here who swear by it........who always push it as the thing to take because it has soooooo many benefits. They seem to have some sort of agenda to keep it in the spotlight........are they connected in some way to the 'purveyors' of this stuff ? Who knows, but something tells me that Fish I had the other day is going off.........must get rid of it methinks :wink:

This is the latest research carried out at the University of Bristol by Professor of Experimental Cardiovascular Medicine, Paolo Madeddu who said, "Supplementation with benfotiamine from early stages of diabetes improved the survival and healing of the hearts of diabetic mice that have had heart attacks, and helped prevent cardiovascular disease in mice with both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes. We conclude that benfotiamine could be a novel treatment for people with diabetes, and the next step in this research will be testing whether similar effects are seen in humans."

The DUK response 6/12/2010......

Seems the research is ongoing........nothing proven, unless you are a mouse.......eek eek ! I go along with Dr Victoria King (no connection).........I think her conclusions say it better than I.
 
If peripheral neuropathy in your hands/legs is a problem from a symptom point of view then medications such as pregabalin or gabapentin sometimes work really well
 
phraedus said:
I would have expected that the now-documented use of false claims would have enabled the FDA to have taken legal action against the purveyors of Benfotiamine.
except that those purveyers carefully word their claims and include a disclaimer such as this

As Cugila says, be wary how you treat these claims. The supplement industry is just as much multi-billion industry as big 'pharma' just not so well regulated.
 
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