Natural Eradication of Diabetes
Worldwide, more than 100 million people suffer from diabetes.
Diabetic disorders have a genetic background and are
divided into two types: juvenile and adult. Juvenile diabetes is
generally caused by a genetic defect that leads to an insufficient
production of insulin in the body and requires regular
insulin injections to control blood sugar levels. The majority of
diabetic patients, however, develop this disease as adults.
Adult forms of diabetes also have a genetic background.
However, the causes that trigger the outbreak of the disease in
these patients at any stage in their adult lives have been
unknown. It is, therefore, not surprising that diabetes is yet
another disease that is still growing on a global scale.
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Conventional medicine is confined to treating the symptoms
of
adult diabetes by lowering elevated blood levels of sugar.
However, cardiovascular disease and other diabetic complications
occur even in those patients with controlled blood sugar
levels. Thus, lowering blood sugar levels is a necessary, but
incomplete, treatment of diabetic disorders.
Modern Cellular Medicine now provides a breakthrough in
our understanding of the causes, prevention and adjunct treatment
of adult diabetes. The primary cause of adult onset diabetes
is a long-term deficiency of certain vitamins and other
essential nutrients in the millions of cells in the pancreas (the
organ that produces insulin), the liver and the blood vessel
walls, as well as other organs.
On the basis of an inherited diabetic
disorder, deficiencies of vitamins and other essential
nutrients can trigger a diabetic metabolism and the onset of
adult diabetes. Conversely, the optimum intake of vitamins and
other ingredients in Dr. Rath’s Cellular Health recommendations
can help prevent the onset of adult diabetes and help correct
existing diabetic conditions and its complications.
Scientific research and clinical studies have documented the
particular value of vitamin C, vitamin E, certain B vitamins,
chromium and other essential nutrients in helping to normalize
a diabetic metabolism and prevent cardiovascular disease.
Diabetes is a particularly malicious metabolic disorder.
Circulatory problems and clogging can occur in virtually any
part of the 60,000-mile-long blood vessel pipeline.
How Diabetic Cardiovascular Disease
Develops
The key to understanding cardiovascular disease in diabetics is
understanding the similarity in the molecular structure of vitamin
C and sugar (glucose) molecules. This similarity leads to
metabolic confusion with severe consequences:
The cells of our
blood vessel walls contain tiny biological pumps specialized
for pumping sugar and — at the same time — vitamin C molecules
from the bloodstream into the blood vessel wall. In a
healthy person, these pumps transport an optimum amount of
sugar and vitamin C molecules into the blood vessel wall,
enabling normal function of the wall and, thus, preventing cardiovascular
disease.
Because of
the high sugar concentration in the blood, the sugar and vitamin
C pumps are overloaded with sugar molecules. This leads to an
overload of sugar and, at the same time, to a deficiency of vitamin
C inside the blood vessel walls. The consequence of these
mechanisms is a thickening of the walls throughout the blood
vessel pipeline, which puts organs at risk for infarctions.
The optimum daily intake of selected cellular nutrients — in particular vitamin C —
helps to restore the balance between vitamin C and sugar
metabolism inside the cells of the pancreas, blood vessel walls
and other organs.
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