Shocking news I got from medical doctor

All I can say is to follow the doctor's order and stick with it. You can google up and/or go out to buy a book and watch what you eat.

I know it is not easy. My mom, sister and 2 nephews have em. I have been tested about 3 times in my life and nothing yet. I am knocking on wood. I dont need another one of disease since I do have other health condition and that is enough.

I wish you the best and go easy.
 
Heath said:
Long Beach was not too bad. I remember going there on some kind of subway or trolley system ? They had a very nice public library that seemed to be right there and I am trying to remember what else ? I can't remember right now but Long Beach seemed to be some kind of a smaller town within a city right? Somebody was telling me to not hang out in Long Beach at night time. I didn't ask since it made sense. There seemed to be alots of black gang members on some street and someone Deaf himself told me that Snoop Dogg used to live somewhere on I think 22nd or 23rd St. somewhere like that then I noticed the Mexican gangs seemed to live on the another side of Long Beach and it was in a much more cleaner area where more Latinos were working very hard. Security seemed to be much more tighter there. There weren't too many White people in Long Beach except for business people etc. during the daytime. I noticed there was alots more police presence in Long Beach than in L.A. so I left the area. I don't think I ever saw the beach itself but I did see the ocean in the distance and a lots of cargo ships that seemed to come and go near Long Beach. I saw a couple U.S. Navy warships off in the distance. That was it.

Well, Just check in East Long Bach and Downtown LB, it's alot of white people live here, middle class region in Northeast LB is alot of white people and Asians. Long Beach is diverseful city and many new condo, skyscraper, building and much more are up. Long Beach has no majority neighborhood and population is more than 500,000.
 
Pomeranian said:
All I can say is to follow the doctor's order and stick with it. You can google up and/or go out to buy a book and watch what you eat.

I know it is not easy. My mom, sister and 2 nephews have em. I have been tested about 3 times in my life and nothing yet. I am knocking on wood. I dont need another one of disease since I do have other health condition and that is enough.

I wish you the best and go easy.

Thank you Pomeranian :) :thumb:
 
TrippLA said:
Well, Just check in East Long Bach and Downtown LB, it's alot of white people live here, middle class region in Northeast LB is alot of white people and Asians. Long Beach is diverseful city and many new condo, skyscraper, building and much more are up.

I will have to remember that the next time if I am ever in California. I did not see any Asians at that time when I was there the last time in Long Beach.
 
Cane Corso said:
I'm sorry, I disagree with your doctor. Obvious he needs to go back to medicial school. I'm not here to offend you, but you really have no idea how important it is not to drink soda and eat regular food that contains HFCS. Actually, did you know that cooking with any food contains butter is worse than cooking with olive oil? If you don't believe this, I'm more than happy to collect all my notes from my classes on sugar and their sugar structures. You are more than welcome to study them.

Do you want to know how much sugar is really in the soda? It has NO important nutrition. They are full of sugar and sodium carbonate. I was told that Coke and Pepesi companies put about 4 cups of sugar in one soda. That is one hell a lot of sugar!

You don't understand what I said. Again, it's depends on your body and doctors would give recommanded for you to take care with it. Doctor said that drink soda is fine for me but some people get limited because depends on obese issue and high suugar blood, also, high pressure blood. I don't have any high sugar or pressure blood and doctor give a recommanded for execrise, not need be focus with diet except for fast food. I just drink about 3 Mountain Dew cans per day and other additional in weekend. Doctor said that need not worry about soda issues but exercise is important for me.
 
Heath said:
I will have to remember that the next time if I am ever in California. I did not see any Asians at that time when I was there the last time in Long Beach.

Just like NYC, LA is very diverseful city and many stuff that you can see different thing. White flight is almost on peak in LA and migrating out from city would be no longer in around after 2010, just same with LA County. I remember that white flight is started in 1970's until late 90's and it getting more slow now. Black flight would be more issue than white flight does. Many people would believe that can work out with uncontrol sprawl in Phoenix. More people from Northeast are moving to Phoenix than in moving from California. For 5 years, from 2000-2005, domestic migration in CA is losing about 400,000 and about 40% are blacks, also, my friend told me that blacks want have better life and affordable place to live in South, it called "Reserve Great Migration" but not only for CA, there's also occured in NJ, NY, IL, MI and northeast states are losing black population too. I have said that white people is just live in anywhere.
 
Here is a diabetic related article.... then in the next post. I will show you what my mom put me on a program to help me with.....

WEDNESDAY, May 24 (HealthDay News) -- Drinking lemonade could help prevent painful kidney stones, new research shows.

Regular consumption of the refreshing drink -- or even lemon juice mixed with water -- may increase the production of urinary citrate, a chemical in the urine that prevents the formation of crystals that may build up into kidney stones.


So conclude two studies presented Tuesday at the American Urological Association annual meeting in Atlanta.


Kidney stones develop when minerals from urine crystallize and build up on the inside of the kidney. In most people, urine contains a chemical that prevents crystal buildup, but that chemical does not work in people prone to kidney stones. When the body tries to remove the crystallized deposits through the narrow tubes of the urinary tract, a person may feel pain and burning.


In the study led by Kristina Penniston, an assistant scientist in the Department of Surgery at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, researchers retrospectively examined the medical records of 100 patients who had been prescribed lemonade therapy after seeking treatment for calcium oxalate kidney stones. Calcium oxalate stones are the most common type of kidney stones.


"We'd been recommending lemonade therapy for about 10 years, but within the last five or six years, we really noticed that people on lemonade therapy have extremely high urinary citrate concentrations," Penniston said. "We knew people were seeing results in urine biochemistries, and [lemonade therapy] was fairly well-tolerated."


About two thirds of the patients drank about 4 ounces of pure lemon juice that they poured into 2.5 liters of beverages throughout the day or 32 ounces of low-sugar or low-calorie prepared lemonade, Penniston said. The remaining patients in the study were treated with a combination of lemonade therapy and potassium citrate, a medication that maintains the antacid level in urine.


After an average treatment time of about 40 months, "in both groups, urinary citrate increased and so did urine volume. But the increase in volume was only significant in groups with lemonade therapy," Penniston said. For patients prone to kidney stones, drinking lots of fluids and increasing urinary volume may help prevent future stone formation.


In another study presented at the conference, conducted by researchers at Duke University, 12 patients with mild-to-moderate hypocitrauria -- a condition that causes a person to produce low levels of urinary citrate -- drank 120 milliliters of lemon juice mixed with two liters of water throughout the day.


After the researchers compared the people treated with lemonade therapy to patients taking potassium citrate, results showed that 11 of the 12 patients had increased urinary citrate levels during lemonade therapy.


The kidney stones of the people taking lemonade therapy also decreased in size and number during the course of the treatment, which lasted an average of 41 months.


Although the results of these two studies indicate that lemonade therapy may offer a simple alternative treatment to people with kidney stones who can't tolerate taking potassium citrate, much more research needs to be conducted, both study authors concluded.


"Both of these studies are addressing a very specific individual -- individuals with low urinary citrate. They're not suggesting that everyone with a stone problem try this," said Dr. Eric N. Taylor, of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.


Taylor also noted that the type of lemonade used in therapy may easily add extra sugar or calories to a person's diet. "The problem is, if someone would just drink 2 liters of lemonade, it could represent a significant amount of calories and sugar," he said. "When people think lemonade, they don't necessarily think of lemon juice. The key is you need real fruit," he said.


More information


For more information about the risk factors, symptoms, and prevention of kidney stones, visit the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
http://kidney.niddk.nih.gov/kudiseases/pubs/stonesadults/index.htm

Yahoo article at:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20060524/hl_hsn/lemonadeofferssweetrelieffromkidneystones
 
Heath said:
Here is the program my mom is putting me on to help me .....

Lemonade Diet ( 40 days fasting with drinking only lemonade and additional resources. I have to get the book and follow instructions..... )
I suggest you check this with your doctor first.
 
Reba said:
I suggest you check this with your doctor first.

Yes Reba, I will but my mom thinks it will be alright or I would not have done it.
 
FRIDAY, May 26 (HealthDay News) -- The number of Americans diagnosed with type 2 diabetes has now topped 19 million, and a new study says a third of adults with the disease don't even know they have it.

The researchers found that another 26 percent of adults had "impaired fasting glucose," a precursor to diabetes.


"So, if you add that together with the 9.3 percent of people with diabetes, that means that fully one-third of the adult population -- 73 million Americans -- have diabetes or they may be on their way to getting it," said lead researcher Catherine Cowie, director of the diabetes epidemiology program at the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.


Her team's report appears in the June issue of Diabetes Care.


The researchers note that about 95 percent of all cases of diabetes in the United States fall under the category of type 2 disease -- a gradual loss of insulin production and sensitivity that's usually linked to overweight and obesity.


According to the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, survey data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of 1988 to 1994 and 1999 to 2002 indicate the incidence of diabetes among people aged 20 and older has gone from about 5.1 percent of the population in the older survey to 6.5 percent by 2002.


"In the 1999 to 2002 survey, participants were interviewed to find out whether they had ever been told that they had diabetes," said Cowie. "In addition, the people had a blood test after they fasted overnight."


Among the 4,761 adults in surveyed, 9.3 percent had type 2 diabetes -- that translated to about 19.3 million people in the entire U.S. population, Cowie said. "In addition, we found that about one-third of the 9.3 percent don't know they have it," she noted.


Diabetes continues to affect blacks and Mexican-Americans about as much as whites, Cowie noted. "In fact, in blacks, diagnosed diabetes rose more significantly between the two surveys than it did for other groups," she said.


"In addition, it rose more significantly in men than in women," Cowie added.


It's even worse among older Americans. About 22 percent of those over 65 have diabetes, Cowie said. "Combine that with 40 percent of those with impaired fasting glucose, [and] it's affecting 62 percent of the adult population in that age group," she said.


There is a huge portion of the population who don't know they have diabetes or who are at risk for diabetes, Cowie said.


"We aren't doing a good enough job of diagnosing these one-in-three people who don't know they have diabetes as well as people who have pre-diabetes," Cowie said. "We really need to be a better job of convincing people that should be adopting healthy behaviors that will prevent these conditions."


One expert thinks that the number of undiagnosed diabetics and pre-diabetics may be underestimated.


"The findings suggest that the prevalence of undiagnosed diabetes is stable," said Dr. David L. Katz, an associate professor of public health and director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine. "This might be true, and due to the fact that as diabetes rates are rising, we're at least attentive to it, and usually finding it when it's there. But this finding might also be misleading."


Undiagnosed diabetes may be less likely in people who participate in health surveys than those who do not, Katz said. "I am suspicious that there is more undiagnosed diabetes than these findings suggest," he noted.


"Since type 2 diabetes is often preventable, almost any is too much," Katz said. "Seeing a steady rise in the rates of this serious and potentially debilitating disease we have the wherewithal to prevent is compelling testimony of past failings and future needs," he said.


This is neither the first, nor the last time this message will be delivered in a scientific paper, Katz said.

"My hope is that we will do what needs to be done to make healthful diets and activity patterns more accessible to all, and diabetes a bit less so," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20060526/hl_hsn/onethirdofusadultsdiabeticorprediabetic
 
The only way to control diabetes well is to exercise, exercise, exercise and eating a variety of foods consistently without too much simple carbohydrates. The more wholesome foods you consume, the better your health will benefit. Avoid transfat acids (found in partially hydrogenated oil) which is believed to cause diabetes but it's not conclusive.

Organics aren't gonna make a difference at all. Being a vegetarian won't make a difference either.
 
Heath said:
Yes Reba, I will but my mom thinks it will be alright or I would not have done it.
I'm not dissin' your momma but she's not a doctor is she?

I'm a momma, too, probably about your mom's age, and I wouldn't advise something that drastic without checking first with your physician. It is important for diabetics to keep their body chemistry level, and anything that upsets that balance can be dangerous.

As a diabetic, you need a long-term, life-time change in your eating and exercise habits. There are no quick solutions.
 
Reba said:
I'm not dissin' your momma but she's not a doctor is she?

I'm a momma, too, probably about your mom's age, and I wouldn't advise something that drastic without checking first with your physician. It is important for diabetics to keep their body chemistry level, and anything that upsets that balance can be dangerous.

As a diabetic, you need a long-term, life-time change in your eating and exercise habits. There are no quick solutions.

I never said you were disrespecting my mom at all. I said yes I would also check with my doctor to get any additional information with my mom and the doctor before I start the program that my mom wants me to try. Of course, I am sure you are about the same age as my mom is. I am just pre-diabetic and this can be reversible right now at this point so I am doing what I can now to reverse the pre-diabetics.
 
Changing You Lifestyle, Preparing Food Can Be Fun With All The Diabetic Cookbook Availble. Stick To It And You Will Be Surprised With The Outcome. I Know I Been There.
 
Shocking News

:fingersx:
CATLOVERS2000 said:
Changing You Lifestyle, Preparing Food Can Be Fun With All The Diabetic Cookbook Availble. Stick To It And You Will Be Surprised With The Outcome. I Know I Been There.
 
CATLOVERS2000 said:
Changing You Lifestyle, Preparing Food Can Be Fun With All The Diabetic Cookbook Availble. Stick To It And You Will Be Surprised With The Outcome. I Know I Been There.

Yes Catlover , that is what I am excitied about and going on a more healthier path will be awesome. Thank you for the positive motivating encouragement !!!!!!

God Bless !!!!!!!
:) :thumb: :angel:
 
Heath: The Master Cleanse (aka the Lemonade diet) is a cleanse, NOT a diet.

It's a nice jump start to a healthier track of life, by the way it doesnt have to be 40 days. The recommended is actually 10-14 days. I did it back in 2004. I now do juicing cleanses or water fasts.

I don't know how bad your eating habits are right now, so I don't know how hard it is for you to transition... you may want to check into Raw Foodism. I was vegetarian for years before I switched to raw, so it's been nothing but easy for me.

Again, whatever you choose, do a lot of research on it and make sure it's best for you. And the best may NOT be the easiest, but things get easier over time as they become habit. Good luck!
 
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