I can also only hazard a guess.. Really old school, methodology "witch finder general" bleed the evil?(Though, by this time the persecution should have stopped?)
However. Is it advisable to create & open a wound on a diabetic with high BGs?
I was thinking of the 'cheat' peeps have mentioned, you know the one about donating blood prior to having an A1c? Though who they would be cheating is questionable. But yeah, open wounds not advisable (it might have brought on the hysteria, weren't they obsessed at that time with women's wombs and all kinds?).
I was thinking of the 'cheat' peeps have mentioned, you know the one about donating blood prior to having an A1c? Though who they would be cheating is questionable. But yeah, open wounds not advisable (it might have brought on the hysteria, weren't they obsessed at that time with women's wombs and all kinds?).
William Banting's 'A Letter On Corpulence Addressed To The Public', published in the early 1860s after he reversed his diabetes, described a low carbohydrate diet which his doctor had advised after learning about it from a French colleague. It would seem that the French were using low carb diets in the 19th century.
I suspect a low carb diet has been around for millennia but was considered normal, long before an abundance of cakes, pastries, rice, spuds, bread became the staples.
Bread has been a staple item of food for millennia, it's only in the last hundred years or less since has been over processed.I suspect a low carb diet has been around for millennia but was considered normal, long before an abundance of cakes, pastries, rice, spuds, bread became the staples.
Bread has been a staple item of food for millennia, it's only in the last hundred years or less since has been over processed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bread
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