I have a slight cold (slight headache, high temperature, sore throat
and dizziness -- my pharmacist agreed that this sounds like a cold),
and am wondering about using mega-vitamin therapy (large doses -- I
think it needs about 1g per day -- of Vitamin C) to deal with it.
However, today I started a new tub of test strips, and one thing which
Bayer says might cause false results is the presence in the bloodstream
of unusually high concentrations of Vitamin C (ascorbic acid).
I'm wondering if it's alright to take up mega-vitamin therapy, or would
this push the ascorbic acid concentration high enough to cause false
readings?
Bernard Peek - 14 Feb 2005 22:03 GMT
>I have a slight cold (slight headache, high temperature, sore throat
>and dizziness -- my pharmacist agreed that this sounds like a cold),
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>this push the ascorbic acid concentration high enough to cause false
>readings?
The vitamins won't do anything for the cold and might screw up the
tests. Have stiff drink instead. It won't help the cold either, but you
might feel a little better for a while.

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Bernard Peek
London, UK. DBA, Manager, Trainer & Author.
Tiger Lily - 14 Feb 2005 23:17 GMT
Zinc works better...........................

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I have no medical qualifications beyond my own experience.
Choose your advisers carefully, because experience can be
an expensive teacher.
> I have a slight cold (slight headache, high temperature, sore throat
> and dizziness -- my pharmacist agreed that this sounds like a cold),
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> this push the ascorbic acid concentration high enough to cause false
> readings?
Maggie Davey - 14 Feb 2005 23:23 GMT
> I have a slight cold (slight headache, high temperature, sore throat
> and dizziness -- my pharmacist agreed that this sounds like a cold),
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> this push the ascorbic acid concentration high enough to cause false
> readings?
If you're at all concerned that you might not be getting enough
vitamins, go with a good one-a-day vitamin-mineral supplement. Unless
you have a known deficiency in something, you shouldn't need anything
else.
My favourite quotation about colds: "A cold will last a week if you
treat it, and seven days if you don't". Wish I could remember where I
heard it, it deserves to have a proper attribution.
I agree with Bernard. I *always* treat a cold with neat whisky. I still
have the cold for a week, but, with careful dosages, I don't care how I
feel! ;-S
Maggie

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Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one
hundred percent. - RD Laing
Pete - 16 Feb 2005 22:25 GMT
>I have a slight cold (slight headache, high temperature, sore throat
>and dizziness -- my pharmacist agreed that this sounds like a cold),
>and am wondering about using mega-vitamin therapy (large doses -- I
>think it needs about 1g per day -- of Vitamin C) to deal with it.
>However, today I started a new tub of test strips, and one thing which
>Bayer says might cause false results is the presence in the bloodstream
>of unusually high concentrations of Vitamin C (ascorbic acid).
>I'm wondering if it's alright to take up mega-vitamin therapy, or would
>this push the ascorbic acid concentration high enough to cause false
>readings?
As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
Pumping what might be 'non normal' levels of anything can do
no good unless you know specifically which items you are
deficient. IMHO it's best to strive for 'control' and
stability and after achieving it you might find resistance
to such things will improve. To do otherwise, is only
chasing a forever moving shadow at best.
korax1214@mailandnews.co.uk - 16 Feb 2005 22:45 GMT
> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
korax1214@mailandnews.co.uk - 16 Feb 2005 22:45 GMT
> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
Nicky - 16 Feb 2005 23:02 GMT
>> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
>
> Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
I think it is - or at least one that is caused by / causes a bunch of
inflammation, which your immune system can't cope with.
Nicky.

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A1c 10.5/4.5/<6 Weight 95/78/72Kg
1g Metformin, 87.5ug Thyroxine
T2 DX 05/2004
Ozgirl - 17 Feb 2005 00:49 GMT
>> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
>
> Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
>
> AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
But can lead to a poor immune system. I have also noticed
there seems to be a higher incidence of people with type 2
who also have autoimmune diseases such as MS, psoriasis,
Hashimotos, lupus etc.
Pete - 18 Feb 2005 11:32 GMT
>> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
>Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
>AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
http://www.clinsci.org/cs/093/cs0930479.htm
Althought type 2 may not necessarily be defined as an
autoimmue deficiency, the boundry is not a simple case of
black and white. Genetic predisposition [if applicable] in
any area which gives rise to a greater incidence of diabetes
T2 could be defined as an AI deficiency since it is genetic.
As I understand it.
With nearly all T2's there is a level of IR to consider and
or a possible deficiency in insulin production both of which
seem to categorised as being generically part of the AI
working system.
Diabetics are advised to take care of their health
paticularly in areas because of a poorer or degraded ability
to heal. [Flu, cuts & scrapes etc]
The simple fact that a T2 has a greater level of glucose in
the blood system inhibits healing in that there is a
degredation of tissue nutrient uptake. Like putting sugar in
yer petrol tank.
So if you think your AI is 100% then fine but cetainly in my
case I see no logical reason to assume everything is ok
especially since I have not had a specific test to show as
much. It seems safer to assume otherwise and that was the
basis for my post. Asside from which, it does not seem
sensible in any event to artificially increase levels of
vitamins etc above the normal creating an imbalance in what
is already an imbalanced sittuation unless there is definate
knowledge of deficiency. That is common sense.
korax1214@mailandnews.co.uk - 16 Feb 2005 22:45 GMT
> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
Alan S - 16 Feb 2005 23:37 GMT
|> As a diabetic your immune system is malfunctioning as it is.
|
|Type 2 isn't an auto-immune disease...
|
|AFAIK there's nothing wrong with *my* immune system.
Had your immunoglobulins tested lately? IgA, IgM, IgG?
Cheers, Alan