What's the Bottom Line?
Since type 2 diabetes is really a severe case of insulin
resistance, the solution to your condition is to find a way
to increase the sensitivity of your cells to insulin and
help your body get the sugar out of the blood and into the
cells so it can be metabolized and turned into energy. (This
inability to metabolize sugar is one of the reasons why most
diabetics often feel tired and fatigued.)
The Deadly Effects of Excess Insulin
Your "metabolism" is the food processing and energy
production system of your body. It is made up of many
extremely fine-tuned internal processes, and can be thrown
off by even the tiniest of imbalances.
Insulin is the master hormone of your metabolism. When it
is out of balance and your insulin levels are consistently
elevated, a long list of deadly complications are created:
* Heart Disease
* Hardening of the Arteries
* Damage to Artery Wallsv * Increased Cholesterol Levels
* Vitamin & Mineral Deficiencies
* Kidney Disease
* Fat Burning Mechanism Shutdown
* Accumulation & Storage of Fat
* Weight Gain
In his best-selling book, "Protein Power," Dr. Michael
Eades wrote, "When insulin levels become too high...
metabolic havoc ensues with elevated blood pressure,
elevated cholesterol and triglycerides, diabetes, and
obesity all trailing in its wake. These disorders are merely
symptoms of a single more basic disturbance in metabolism,
excess insulin and insulin resistance."
Nutritional Deficiencies from Excess Insulin
Science has shown that excess insulin also causes your
body to become deficient in many vitamins, minerals and
other nutrients. It's a proven fact that being deficient in
these nutrients is directly linked to and a cause of high
blood sugar levels.
Chromium
Chromium is essential to proper metabolism and
maintaining safe sugar levels. Excess insulin depletes your
body's chromium. In "Protein Power," Dr. Eades further
states, "The insulin receptor, the structure on the surfaces
of your cells that actually become resistant to insulin,
requires chromium to function properly. Deficiency of
chromium is rampant - it affects 90% of the American
population - because a diet high in starch and sugar puts a
heavy demand on the insulin system to handle the incoming
carbohydrate load, and that demand depletes chromium."
Chromium is critical to blood sugar metabolism and, and
as a diabetic you can be pretty sure that you are severely
deficient in this nutrient. If you ever wondered where your
"sweet tooth" and sugar cravings come from, now you know -
chromium deficiency!
Continued...
Back