Diabetes is linked to acute thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency
Thursday, June 06, 2013 by: Paul Fassa
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/040654_diabetes_vitamin_B1_thiamine
html#ixzz2VQ430RCW
(NaturalNews) Stuart Lindsay is a PharmD (PhD in pharmacy) who contributed
an article to orthomolecular.org entitled "Confessions of a Frustrated
Pharmacist." He wrote of his frustrations of being ostracized from members
of the medical community as he became aware of how drugs weren't working to
cure much of anything.
Orthomolecular medicine is the appropriate application of high dosage
nutraceutical supplements for treating diseases.
Stuart was observing people on pharmaceutical drugs not getting better, and
he was hearing vitamin users talk of their improved health conditions. He
began reading more about supplements and questioning his superiors at the
pharmacist's graduate school he was attending.
He managed to obtain his PharmD degree despite his occasional conflicts and
disagreements with the teaching staff. (1)
Then he was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. His vision was good and other
common type 2 diabetes symptoms were not unbearable. His main symptom of
concern was the neuropathy affecting his feet, sometimes numb and sometimes
painful.
The frustrated pharmacist takes another path
Realizing the pain pills for his feet and other drugs prescribed by his
doctor wouldn't help his condition, Stuart decided to go with his
non-mainstream medical research and use supplements.
After researching several studies, most importantly UK Dr. Paul Thornalley's
theory of diabetes as an acute thiamine deficiency, Stuart started taking
300 mg three times a day using benfotiamine, a fat soluble or lipid form of
thiamine.
Having researched Dr. Thornalley's theory of diabetes being an acute
thiamine deficiency and other supporting studies, he started a regimen of
vitamin and mineral supplements.
He told his doctor that if it didn't work out, he'd succumb to the doctor's
list of prescribed drugs, which included pain killers and statin drugs. But
that didn't happen. Within a week the intense foot pain was gone, and
withing three weeks all peripheral neuropathy sensations had ceased.
They would come back when he stopped taking them, but at least he wasn't
suffering from the side effects of expensive drugs. Diabetics lose thiamine
with their usually increased urination issues.
Stuart states, "If you go to PubMed and enter the keywords 'thiamine
deficiency' and 'diabetes' you will get dozens of references that describe
how many symptoms of diabetes are caused by a thiamine deficiency it
generates." (2)
Dr. Dach concurs
Dr. Jeffrey Dach, a holistic MD based in South Florida, concurs with Stuart
s decisions except for one item, Stuart's rejection of Metformin, which Dr.
Dache asserts is a rare "good drug" for diabetics.
He lists the supplements used with Stuart's nutraceutical approach:
* Benfotiamine thiamine - 300mg 3X daily
* Pyridoxal-5-phosphate - 100 mg daily
* Magnisium citrate - 300 mg 3X daily with meals
* Acetyl-L-Canitine - 1,000 mg between meals daily
* Buffered vitamin C - 2,000 to 3,000 mg with meals
Dr. Dach added a few of his own recommendations:
* Alpha Lipoic Acid
* Vanadium with Chromium
* Dietary Fiber
* Tocotrienol Vitamin E
* Exercise and weight reduction program, for which he advises to call his
office
Dr. Dach concludes in his article linked below that benfotiamine thiamine
should be included for all diabetes patients. He cites several academic
sources in addition to his report on the diabetic symptom reduction by the
frustrated pharmacist". (3)
Both Stuart and Dr. Dach refer to the ACCORD (Action to Control
Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes) five-year study failure that proved the
opposite of their stated aim. (4) (5)
Essentially they're both saying diabetes or its symptoms are not completely
handled by mainstream medicine, and that nutritional medicine does at least
handle the symptoms that even lowering blood sugar doesn't.
Sources for this article include:
(1) http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v08n05.shtml
(2) http://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v08n19.shtml
(3) http://jeffreydach.com
(4) http://www.diabetes.org
(5) http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/07/health/07diabetes.html?_r=1&
About the author:
Paul Fassa is dedicated to warning others about the current corruption of
food and medicine and guiding others toward a direction for better health
with no restrictions on health freedom. You can visit his blog at
http://healthmaven.blogspot.com
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/040654_diabetes_vitamin_B1_thiamine.html#ixzz2VQ4Go2OV














