Archive for Diabetes Care

Mar
08

The Definition of Insanity

Posted by: Dr. Jade Malay | Comments (0)

We’re all familiar with the saying, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different outcome.

With regard to Diabetic treatment in the U.S., the pharmaceutical approach to this disease is just that…insane.  Increasing drugs, adding drugs, changing drug after drug is not REVERSING anyone’s diabetes.  And for those who think their diabetes is under control because they “feel okay” are playing with fire that will burn them sooner or later.

The majority of medical professionals will tell you that once you are diabetic, you will always have this disease…because that’s their experience, that’s their truth.

My experience and the truth for me is that diabetes can be reversed, you just have to have the right tools to reverse it.

If you’re tired of seeing your list of medications get longer, you slowly see your life being stolen from you and you want to change, you may qualify for my program.  I’d be glad to talk with you and helping you gain your sanity.

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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If you needed another reason to take control of your Diabetes and do whatever it takes to reduce and or eliminate your need for medication, GlaxoSmithKline has given you another reason.  The report below was released by CNN on 2/20/2010 linking the danger of those Diabetics on Avandia.

The diabetes drug Avandia is linked with tens of thousands of heart attacks, and drug maker GlaxoSmithKline knew of the risks for years but worked to keep them from the public, according to a Senate committee report released Saturday.

The 334-page report by the Senate Finance Committee also criticized the Food and Drug Administration, saying that the federal agency that regulates food, tobacco and medications overlooked or overrode safety concerns found by its staff.

“Americans have a right to know there are serious health risks associated with Avandia and GlaxoSmithKline had a responsibility to tell them,” said U.S. Senator Max Baucus, a Democrat and committee chairman. “Patients trust drug companies with their health and their lives and GlaxoSmithKline abused that trust.”

The bipartisan report also was signed by Sen. Chuck Grassley, the top-ranking Republican on the committee.

GlaxoSmithKline rejected any assertions Saturday that the drug is not safe.

“We disagree with the conclusions in the report,” company spokeswoman Nancy Pekarek told CNN.

“The FDA had reviewed the data and concluded that the drug should be on the market.”

Seven clinical trials on the drug prove that it is not linked to heart attacks, Pekarek said.

“None of that data shows a statistically significant correlation between Avandia and myocardial ischemia or myocardial infarction [heart attack],” she said.

Ischemia is a condition in which blood flow and oxygen are blocked from going to certain parts of the body.

The Senate committee investigation stems from concerns that Avandia and other high-profile drugs put “public safety at risk because the FDA has been too cozy with drug makers and has been regularly outmaneuvered by companies that have a financial interest in downplaying or under-exploring potential safety risks,” the report states.

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg said she is waiting for the recommendations of an advisory committee that will hear reports on the drug this summer.

“Meanwhile,” Hamburg said in a statement, “I am reviewing the inquiry made by Senators Baucus and Grassley and I am reaching out to ensure that I have a complete understanding and awareness of all of the data and issues involved.”

The Senate report was developed over the past two years by committee investigators who reviewed more than 250,000 pages of documents provided by GlaxoSmithKline, the FDA and several research institutes. Committee investigators also conducted numerous interviews and phone calls with GlaxoSmithKline, the FDA and anonymous whistleblowers.

According to the Senate report:

• FDA scientists estimated in July 2007 that Avandia was associated with approximately 83,000 heart attacks since the drug came to market.

“Had GSK considered Avandia’s potential increased cardiovascular risk more seriously when the issue was first raised in 1999 … some of these heart attacks may have been avoided,” the report states.

• GlaxoSmithKline undertook attempts to undermine information critical of Avandia.

“GSK executives attempted to intimidate independent physicians, focused on strategies to minimize or misrepresent findings that Avandia may increase cardiovascular risk and sought ways to downplay findings that a competing drug might reduce cardiovascular risk,” the report says.

As an example, committee investigators say they found that GlaxoSmithKline experts verified an outside study showing the cardiac problem, but the company publicly attacked the findings as incorrect.

• Two FDA safety officials sounded a clear alarm in October 2008 writing, “There is strong evidence that rosiglitazone [Avandia] confers an increased risk of [heart attacks] and heart failure compared to pioglitazone [rival drug on market].” They concluded and trials comparing the two would be “unethical and exploitive.” Yet, the trial is still under way, the senators say.

GlaxoSmithKline counters that the Senate report relies on outdated information.

“In essence, the report is a compilation of information and events that took place years ago,” spokeswoman Pekarek said. “There’s no new data there.”

The FDA has evaluated at the drug, Pekarek said, and updated product labeling in 2007 to say information on Avandia’s relationship to myocardial ischemia is inconclusive.

“The FDA exists to ensure patient safety,” she said. “That is their purpose.”

Avandia has been under scrutiny for years. The New England Journal of Medicine called the drug’s safety into question in 2007. The Journal of the American Medical Association also questioned whether Avandia was safe in 2007.

“Among patients with impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes, rosiglitazone use for at least 12 months is associated with a significantly increased risk of myocardial infarction and heart failure, without a significantly increased risk of cardiovascular mortality,” the AMA journal wrote, adding that the “findings have potential regulatory and clinical implications.”

“Regulatory agencies ought to re-evaluate whether rosiglitazone should be allowed to remain on the market,” the report said. “Health plans and physicians should not wait for regulatory actions. They should avoid using rosiglitazone in patients with diabetes who are at risk of cardiovascular events, especially since safer treatment alternatives are available.”

In 2007, an FDA panel recommended by a vote of 22-1 that Avandia should remain on the market despite an analysis showing links to increased risk of heart attack. The vote was not binding, but a suggestion to FDA regulators.

The panel also voted 20-3 at the same meeting in support of data that showed Avandia increased the risk of cardiac ischemia in patients with the most common type of diabetes.

The Senate report does not address the issue of whether Avandia should be removed from the market

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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This is part two in the series of videos covering the case for Ruth Crowley.  Visit the previous post to refresh where she was when she started, and then listen to where she is at now.  Her blood sugar has dropped over 100 points as of this video.  Enjoy!

Dr. Stafford

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Charles Stafford, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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This is part 1 in the journey of Ruth Crowley as she enters our Diabetes program.  Follow along with us monthly as she updates her status.  Part 2, which is after just three weeks will be posted next week.  Listen to her frustration in this video and then watch future episodes as she moves through the program.

Dr. Stafford

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Charles Stafford, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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This is a common question I get all the time that I’d like to talk about today.

What I do is called Functional Medicine.  Functional medicine addresses how well your body may or may not be functioning and supports function of that organ, gland, chemical pathway, etc.  Once function is restored…then health is restored.

The current Western Medicine approach to disease is based on treating symptoms….you have high cholesterol, well then take this drug to lower the cholesterol…you have high blood pressure, then here’s the drug for lowering high blood pressure…you get the idea.  Western Medicine does not treat what is CAUSING the high cholesterol or what is CAUSING the high blood pressure…you see the difference?  So, in effect someone’s disease whether it be Type 2 Diabetes or any other chronic disease that is killing millions of Americans…the CAUSE of that disease is not addressed.

There are some forward thinking Medical Doctors who do practice Functional Medicine.  As the chronic diseases become more and more common in our society, Functional Medicine will become more and more popular as the current Medical Model fails in restoring health.

So you have to ask yourself….do you want your problem covered up?  Or do you want the underlying CAUSE of the problem to be fixed.  In my mind, the answer is easy.  You DO have a choice when it comes to your health.

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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To really address the diabetes aspect of this statement, we have to evaluate what functional vs pathological blood chemistry even means.  The trend for years has been to look at our blood work from a on or off proposition with very little gray area.  Physicians look at the numbers and if nothing is out of the pathological range, it is just a wait and see attitude.  Now this wouldn’t be the worst part of it, if the values for what is considered normal were not averaged by the growing population of sick people.  What this means is, that as our society becomes sicker, the qualifications to get into this crowd becomes more difficult.  So by the time a disease process is caught, it can be a long time into development.

The functional ranges are more stringent and therefore easier to discern what is going wrong with the body.  The patterns for disease process are evaluated as a whole and the “gray areas” are what we are looking for to assist people from a pre-disease state to a healthy state.

What does this mean to my diabetes?  First, with functional blood chemistry it is possible that you could have avoided it in the first place.  Second, it means that there are tools to help you understand why your blood sugar is out of control.  And finally, it means that there could be a solution to getting your blood sugar under control and avoiding the horrible outcome that diabetics face as the disease process continues to destroy the body regardless of medications.

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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When the body goes through the stress response, which starts with alarm, goes to resistance and ultimately lands in exhaustion, it can ultimately cause an adrenal stress syndrome.  This is characterized by several signs and symptoms:

Fatigue
Headaches
Weak immune system
Gastric Ulcer
Bloated feeling
Blurred vision
Irritable before meals
Cannot fall asleep
Cannot stay asleep
Slow starter
Crave sweets, caffeine, nicotine

This list is not complete by any means but does illustrate just how common some of these are and how we likely are experiencing them right now.

So we have let the stress response go on unchecked, now we have created this syndrome, what does that affect?

Primarily, at least where we are concerned, blood sugar, it creates insulin resistance if the cortisol is elevated and it creates hyperinsulinemia, which creates a cascade effect with the blood sugar levels.  Also it can be decreased and impair the body’s ability to stabilize blood sugar levels and can create hypoglycemia.

It also has effects on the thyroid gland, pituitary gland, liver detoxification, intestinal tract, the immune system, gastric and duodenal disorders, bone density, depression, insomnia, neurodegenerative disease and cardiovascular disease.

The adrenals are just one area that we evaluate in our office, but as you can tell, they are very important to what is going on in the diabetic condition.

Dr. Charles Stafford

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Charles Stafford, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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Cortisol is a steroid hormone released by the adrenal glands.  It is a glucocorticoid and is secreted specifically by the adrenal cortex, or the outer portion of the adrenal gland.  It is very important to blood glucose concentration in two ways.

First it increases the liver production of glucose through a process called gluconeogenesis.  This is important in the body during times of stress or between meals for the body to have energy.  The second method is by impairing the utilization of glucose by the peripheral tissues.  In other words cortisol has an anti-insulin effect on tissues and impairs the uptake of glucose for energy.

Cortisol is diabetogenic since it raises blood glucose concentrations.

This is why the stress response and the circadian release of cortisol are so very important to diabetics or borderline diabetics.  This process if left uncontrolled drives the blood glucose problem in the body.  It is one way in which to address diabetes from a functional problem or stand point instead of just addressing the blood sugar.

Dr. Charles Stafford

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need.

Article by Dr. Charles Stafford, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

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When you have Type II Diabetes, you become Insulin Resistant.  What exactly does “Insulin Resistant” mean?  Our cells in our body have Receptor sites.  These are sites that allow transport of a substance into the cell.  With Type II Diabetes, the Insulin Receptors become resistant to allowing sugar to go into the cell.  Sugar is used for fuel.  This is why persons with Type II Diabetes are so tired…their cells are not getting the fuel they need.  It’s like driving your car up to a gas pump, but there is no hose to pump the gas into your car.  The other bad news is that excess sugar circulates in your body and wreaks havoc.  This excess sugar causes damage to all your tissues through a process called “oxidation.”  The oxidation process is like rust…so basically what is happening is you’re rusting from the inside out!  This is why Type II Diabetes is so dangerous and can lead to horrible things such as amputation.  Unfortunately, drugs only artificially lower the blood sugar levels, but rarely stabilize it to the point where the oxidation process stops and is under control.  That’s why people on diabetic medication still suffer the awful consequences, but think their diabetes is “under control.”

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need. You can also call one of our two locations: Carrolton – 972-492-0383 or Dallas – 214-599-9285

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Categories : Diabetes Care
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I am asked all the time by patients what foods to eat and what foods to avoid.  When it comes to artificial sweeteners, if you really want to get control of the “Diabetic Monster” you got to stay away from ALL artificial sweeteners.  I suggest Stevia to all my patients.  Stevia is actually a plant, so it is all natural.  All natural means that your body does not have to work so hard to process the Stevia.  When you look at the chemicals that make up artificial sweeteners, your body has to process all those chemicals and eliminate them.  If you are already fighting Diabetes, you gotta feed your body the easiest things to process and to avoid any undo stress on your system.  Stevia can be found at your local health food store or stores such as Whole Foods, Central Market, or Sprouts.

If you are suffering from Type 2 Diabetes and need help getting it and keeping it under control, please fill out the form to the right and we can help get you the information you need. You can also call one of our two locations: Carrolton – 972-492-0383 or Dallas – 214-599-9285

Article by Dr. Jade Malay, Type 2 Diabetes Professional, Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX

Comments (0)