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List Info
Thread: diabetes problems
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| diabetes problems |

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2006-01-07 21:00:58 |
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--- In Alternative_Medicine_Forum@yahoogroups.com, "shirleel88"
<shirleel88 y...> wrote:
>
> Im 46 female with high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes. I am
on
> ALOT of medicines and insulins and still out of control. I am
> overweight,energyless and depressed. Are there any alternative
methods that may help me?
GYMNEMA (Gymnema sylvestre )
http://www.oneearthherbs.squarespace.com/important-herbs/gymnema-
gymnema-sylvestre-.html
Gymnema is bitter It improves blood sugar control in diabetics,
numbs the taste of sweet completely (for about 20 minutes), and
decreases appetite (for about 90 minutes)
STARTING DOSAGE:
• 1:1 extract: five to 10 ml per day
• Pill: 500-1000 mg three times per day
Gymnema actually means "sugar destroyer."
Japanese studies have shown that it improves glucose tolerance in
animal models of diabetes, and other studies show that the effects
can last for up to two months after discontinuation.
This herb is a good long-term tonic for Type I and II diabetics.
Results are best seen after long-term administration, over six
months to a year.
I prefer to use it in combination with several other herbs for
blood sugar control, because it affects only a few aspects of the
imbalance.
In case you're curious, sugar tastes like sand for twenty minutes
after you chew on a little gymnema.
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Research Highlights
• Triterpenoid saponins in gymnema are responsible for its dramatic
sweet taste-blocking action (Baskaran et al., 1990).
• One animal study testing extracts of gymnema confirmed earlier
conclusions of human studies that the herb stimulates insulin
release, adding that it works by increasing permeability in the
islets of Langerhans, allowing more insulin to escape into the blood
(Persaud et al., 1999; Shanmugasundaram et al., 1990).
• In tests on diabetic rabbits, gymnema dried leaf powder not only
helped control elevated blood sugars, it also corrected metabolic
derangements in the liver, kidney and muscles (Shanmugasundaram KR
et al., 1983).
• Gymnema does not seem to improve insulin resistance in diabetic
rats, although other herbs have been known to do so (Tominaga et
al., 1995).
• Gymnemic acids found in gymnema have been found to bind
cholesterol, causing it to be excreted in the stool of animals
(Nakamura et al., 1999).
• Gymnemic acids also bind glucose and a common fatty acid (oleic
acid) in the intestine, causing reduced uptake into the blood (Wang
et al., 1998, Shimizu et al., 1997).
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