[Diabetes-talk] High sugars in the wake of skipping a snack?
cheryl echevarria
cherylandmaxx at hotmail.com
Mon Nov 22 18:34:21 UTC 2010
for someone who lost her vision and kidney in 2001 to organ damage from
Diabetes, I have first hand experience. I had a kidney transplant in 2005
from my dear friend who passed away in January of this year from Cancer.
Yes I do know how this can happen.
Also, a transplant is not a cure it is a treatment and if sugars aren't
under control tightly they can cause the same damage that happened the first
time.
The biggest compliment you can pay me is to recommend my services!
Cheryl Echevarria
http://Echevarriatravel.com
1-866-580-5574
Reservations at echevarriatravel.com
Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Montrose Travel CST-1018299-10
Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Absolute Cruise and Travel Inc.
join my yahoogroup
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael Park" <pageforpage at gmail.com>
To: "Diabetes Talk for the Blind" <diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, November 22, 2010 1:27 PM
Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] High sugars in the wake of skipping a snack?
> I would figure that if that is the case, this must contribute
> significantly to the damage that is done. Furthermore, the aftermath
> necessarily entails that sugars become unstable and that as a factor,
> speaking generally, also does additional damage. Many diabetics talk
> about high and low sugars having the potential for damage, but they
> don't realise that unstable sugars, and here I am talking fluctuations
> of in the 70's for general purposes, also have a huge potential for
> organ damage.
>
> Michael Park
> "I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God Than dwell in the
> tents of wickedness." (psalm 84:10 NKJV).
>
> We support NVDA, a free screenreading program for the blind, giving high
> quality computer access to many commercial applications, as well as
> portability.
>
> NVDA 2010.2 has been released.
>
>
> On 2010/11/22 16:39, cheryl echevarria wrote:
> > not only that you liver and kidneys go into over drive to compensate.
> >
> > The biggest compliment you can pay me is to recommend my services!
> >
> > Cheryl Echevarria
> > http://Echevarriatravel.com
> > 1-866-580-5574
> > Reservations at echevarriatravel.com
> >
> > Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Montrose Travel
> > CST-1018299-10
> > Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Absolute Cruise and Travel
> > Inc.
> >
> > join my yahoogroup
> > echevarriatravel-subscribe at yahoogroups.com
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Michael Park"<pageforpage at gmail.com>
> > To: "Diabetes Talk for the Blind"<diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
> > Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2010 10:43 PM
> > Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] High sugars in the wake of skipping a
> > snack?
> >
> >
> >> Hi there.
> >>
> >> The explanation given to me by my diabetes counsellor regarding the
> >> higher sugars in the wake of skipping a meal or a snack is this: the
> >> body is expecting the food to arrive, and sugar is released in order to
> >> help facilitate the digestive process. Because the food does not
> >> arrive,
> >> that sugar remains in the blood stream, elevating blood sugar levels.
> >>
> >> Michael Park
> >> "I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God Than dwell in
> >> the
> >> tents of wickedness." (psalm 84:10 NKJV).
> >>
> >> We support NVDA, a free screenreading program for the blind, giving
> >> high
> >> quality computer access to many commercial applications, as well as
> >> portability.
> >>
> >> NVDA 2010.2 has been released.
> >>
> >>
> >> On 2010/11/21 15:59, Dorothea Martin wrote:
> >>> Hello, Michael and list,
> >>> I noticed a similar experience a couple of days ago. I had been trying
> >>> to bring my sugar level down a bit so ate an early supper and nothing
> >>> at bedtime. What? The level was higher next morning. Last night I
> >>> again had an early supper but gave in and had a sandwich with a
> >>> neighbor. The level was lower this morning. I don't try to make sense
> >>> of this, just pass it along.
> >>> Dotty Martin
> >>>
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> >>
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