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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
What exactly is "clean eating"
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<blockquote data-quote="dnfuss" data-source="post: 125049" data-attributes="member: 15487"><p>While you will find many statements on the internet to the contrary, cinnamon has never been demonstrated to have any ability whatsoever to lower blood sugar.</p><p></p><p>Oatmeal is a terrible choice for diabetics. It will raise blood sugars in them dramatically.</p><p></p><p>There are no magic solutions to reducing blood sugars.</p><p></p><p>Berberine is not something to fool around with. It does seem to work to some degree, but it may do so by <a href="http://diabetesupdate.blogspot.com/2013/08/berberine-works-but-may-very-well-be.html" target="_blank">affecting your liver in potentially dangerous ways</a>. It has not undergone the rigorous testing process to which all FDA-approved prescription drugs are subjected, much less evaluated for adverse side effects after years of prescribed use (see, e.g., sulfonylurea drugs (increased likelihood of heart attack), the incretin drugs (can damage the pancreas), and Avandia and Actos (can cause severe osteoporosis)). The near-unanimous view of responsible clinicians, which I share, is that berberine currently should not be prescribed for the treatment of diabetes or pre-diabetes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dnfuss, post: 125049, member: 15487"] While you will find many statements on the internet to the contrary, cinnamon has never been demonstrated to have any ability whatsoever to lower blood sugar. Oatmeal is a terrible choice for diabetics. It will raise blood sugars in them dramatically. There are no magic solutions to reducing blood sugars. Berberine is not something to fool around with. It does seem to work to some degree, but it may do so by [URL='http://diabetesupdate.blogspot.com/2013/08/berberine-works-but-may-very-well-be.html']affecting your liver in potentially dangerous ways[/URL]. It has not undergone the rigorous testing process to which all FDA-approved prescription drugs are subjected, much less evaluated for adverse side effects after years of prescribed use (see, e.g., sulfonylurea drugs (increased likelihood of heart attack), the incretin drugs (can damage the pancreas), and Avandia and Actos (can cause severe osteoporosis)). The near-unanimous view of responsible clinicians, which I share, is that berberine currently should not be prescribed for the treatment of diabetes or pre-diabetes. [/QUOTE]
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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
What exactly is "clean eating"
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