Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
General
GeneralCardiologyVisionDentistryPharmacyLaboratoryNutritionAlternative
Diseases and Disorders
AIDSAlzheimer'sArthritisAsthmaCancerBreast CancerDiabetesEpilepsyGlaucomaHepatitisHerpesLupusProstate BPHProstate CancerProstatitisSinusitisTinnitus

Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Diabetes / March 2008

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

diabetes FAQ: general (part 1 of 5)

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Edward Reid - 31 Mar 2008 05:23 GMT
Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part1
Posting-Frequency: biweekly
Last-modified: 15 Dec 2006 (excludes change list and Table of Contents)

Changes: add aspartame topic in research section (14 July 2005)
         fix Avogadro's number (15 Dec 2006)

------------------------------

Subject: READ THIS FIRST

Copyright 1993-2006 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
of copyright law and convention requires the author's permission.

Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
Never substitute advice from the net for a physician's care. Diabetes is a
critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

------------------------------

Subject: Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
  READ THIS FIRST
  Table of Contents
GENERAL (found in part 1)
  Where's the FAQ?
  What's this newsgroup like?
  Abuse of the newsgroup
  The newsgroup charter
  Newsgroup posting guidelines
  What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
  What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
  What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
  What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
  Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
  How about discussing hypoglycemia?
  Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
  Exercise and insulin
BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
  How accurate is my meter?
  Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
  What do meters cost?
  Comparing blood glucose meters
  How can I download data from my meter?
  I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?
  What's HbA1c and what's it mean?
  Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?
  Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?
  HbA1c by mail
  Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
    and Somogyi effect?
TREATMENT (found in part 3)
  My diabetic father isn't taking care of himself. What can I do?
  Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
  So-and-so eats sugar! Isn't that poison for diabetics?
  Insulin nomenclature
  What is Humalog / LysPro / lispro / ultrafast insulin?
  Travelling with insulin
  Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
  Injectors: Pens
  Injectors: Jets
  Insulin pumps
  Type 1 cures -- beta cell implants
  Type 1 cures -- pancreas transplants
  Type 2 cures -- barely a dream
  What's a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
  Should I take a chromium supplement?
  I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
  Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
  Alcohol and diabetes
  Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
  Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
  Gastroparesis
  Extreme insulin resistance
  What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
  What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
  What's the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
  How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
  What's the bottom line on pycnogenol?
  Pycnogenol references
SOURCES (found in part 4)
  Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
  Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
  Online resources: commercial services
  Online resources: FTP
  Online resources: World Wide Web
  Online resources: other
  Where can I mail order XYZ?
  How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
  How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
  How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
  How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
  What about diabetes organizations outside North America?
  How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
  Could you recommend some good reading?
  Could you recommend some good magazines?
RESEARCH (found in part 5)
  What is the DCCT? What are the results?
  More details about the DCCT
  DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
  Is aspartame dangerous?
IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
  Who did this?

------------------------------

Subject: Where's the FAQ?

This FAQ attempts to answer the questions which have been most frequently
asked in misc.health.diabetes (m.h.d). This is not a complete informational
posting. My only criterion for inclusion is that the topic has frequently
appeared in m.h.d, either by an explicit question, or implicitly by posting a
related question or a common misconception.

This FAQ is posted biweekly to the Usenet newsgroup misc.health.diabetes.
If you obtained this article by some method other than reading Usenet,
refer to the section on "Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups"
for brief information on how to obtain access to Usenet newsgroups and
misc.health.diabetes in particular.

Feel free to make copies of this FAQ for your personal use or for a friend or
relative, including to share with health care providers. If you want to make
this FAQ available to others on an ongoing basis (for example, on a BBS),
please do *not* post or copy the entire FAQ. Instead, post only this section,
entitled "Where's the FAQ?". This will enable others always to retrieve the
most recent version.

I have removed the outdated informational posting on insulin pumps.

An informational posting on diabetes-related software is posted to m.h.d at
the same time as this FAQ. See below for retrieval information. It was
developed and is maintained by Rick Mendosa <mendosa(AT)mendosa.com>.

I've used ideas and information from many people in writing this FAQ. With a
few exceptions I haven't attempted to identify them, but I thank them all.
The words herein are mine unless otherwise credited.

If you read this and it helps you, please let me know what part helped, and
why. If you read this and can't find what you want, let me know that too.
Such comments will help me decide what is worth working on, and whether.
You'd be surprised how little feedback I get. If you are reading this on the
newsgroup, just reply to this article. If you found this on the web, send
email to <edward@paleo.org>.

These documents -- the FAQ and the software overview -- are available
from the news.answers archives at rtfm.mit.edu. Using anonymous ftp, get
the files:

   /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part1
   /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part2
   /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part3
   /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part4
   /pub/faqs/diabetes/faq/part5
   /pub/faqs/diabetes/software

or in web browser format:

   ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/faqs/diabetes/

If your net access is by email only, send an email message to
mail-server(AT)rtfm.mit.edu, subject ignored, body containing:

   send faqs/diabetes/faq/part1
   send faqs/diabetes/faq/part2
   send faqs/diabetes/faq/part3
   send faqs/diabetes/faq/part4
   send faqs/diabetes/faq/part5
   send faqs/diabetes/software

If you are using the World Wide Web, you can reach a WWW-formatted version of
the FAQ and other documents via the URL

   http://www.faqs.org/faqs/diabetes/

You can also retrieve the plain text by FTP from the rtfm.mit.edu site
mentioned above, which has long been the most reliable source. However,
it only offers the simplest retrieval capability.
------------------------------

Subject: What's this newsgroup like?

Posting topics range through emotional support, treatment techniques,
psychological factors, health care practices, and insurance. We talk about
our problems, frustrations, depressions and complications to find out how
others handle the same issues and for mutual support. The atmosphere is
generally a highly supportive one, and most participants believe strongly
that this is an important aspect. As in other parts of the net, there are one
or two regular participants who believe that it is important to question the
motives and/or knowledge of anyone posting a new problem. If you find that
the first response is antagonistic, please wait a few hours. Every
antagonistic response will elicit a dozen sympathetic responses.

Meta-topics include discussions of how to best convey health information on
the Usenet, ethical treatment of other participants, what topics and
information are appropriate for m.h.d, where to find diabetes information,
and what the newsgroup should be like.

Betsy Butler says eloquently:

   The positive posts of people who are in great control are very
   motivating, but it is also helpful to hear from people who don't find
   it so easy. I'm sure there are a lot of people who struggle to keep
   control. The people who are having trouble also need to know that there
   are others who struggle, and that they are not alone. It can be very
   intimidating, and a blow to self-esteem for people to suggest that if
   you would just do X, Y and Z, you will be in control. There are 100s of
   factors to balance, and I think people need to be reassured that "yes,
   it's hard to balance so many things, many of which can't be measured or
   that don't act predictably."

Topics closely related to diabetes mellitus which do not have their own place
in Usenet are welcome. Examples are diabetes insipidus, hypoglycemia, glucose
intolerance, legal and employment ramifications of chronic illness, effects
on family members, how family members can best provide support, and so on.
misc.health.diabetes tends to be inclusive of anyone who needs it.

The same caveat applies here as in all newsgroups: the advice is worth what
you paid for it. This applies in spades to a critical health topic such as
diabetes. Never substitute informal advice for a physician's care. Advice
given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice.

The variety of individual responses to diabetes is exceeded only by the
variety of individual responses to life. No two patients respond alike, and
many respond *very* differently from others. These differences are
physiological, not just psychological. They reflect not only varying
responses, but the fact that diabetes itself probably has many causes, many
more than the few types currently recognized (see section on types). When you
read advice, realize that what works (or doesn't work) for someone else may
not work (or may work) for you. When you give advice, try to remember that
most advice is relative to the individual, not absolute. Recognize that you
can't treat your own diabetes by a set of rules, but only by knowing how your
own individual body and physiology work and by adjusting to your own
mechanisms.

------------------------------

Subject: Abuse of the newsgroup

As mentioned above, a few participants believe that name-calling and abusive
language are more effective than polite discussion, support and interchange
of information. They are wrong, and the vast majority of participants support
a more civilized and polite view of humanity. Since misc.health.diabetes is
unmoderated, we all have to live together.

A few m.h.d. participants have received abusive email. Some are afraid to
expose such abuse, having been told that email must always be private.
However, abusive email is no more deserving of privacy than obscene phone
calls or threatening letters. There is no authority to which you can report
abusive email (unless it contains an actual threat, in which can you may be
justified in contacting a law enforcement agency). Steve Kirchoefer
<swkirch(AT)chrisco.nrl.navy.mil> is willing to try to mediate problems with
email. Though Steve has no official authority, he has experience in dealing
with problems on the net and may be able to help clear up such problems. Send
him complete copies of any abusive email.

------------------------------

Subject: The newsgroup charter

The actual charter which led to the creation of the newsgroup in May 1993
follows. This charter was proposed by Steve Kirchoefer
<swkirch(AT)chrisco.nrl.navy.mil> and approved by a public vote of the Usenet
readership, and is the official statement of the scope and purpose of this
newsgroup.

  1. The purpose of misc.health.diabetes is to provide a forum for the
     discussion of issues pertaining to diabetes management, i.e.: diet,
     activities, medicine schedules, blood glucose control, exercise, medical
     breakthroughs, etc.  This group addresses the issues of management of
     both Type I (insulin dependent) and Type II (non-insulin dependent)
     diabetes.  Both technical discussions and general support discussions
     relevant to diabetes are welcome.

  2. Postings to misc.health.diabetes are intended to be for discussion
     purposes only, and are in no way to be construed as medical advice.
     Diabetes is a serious medical condition requiring direct supervision
     by a primary health care physician.

------------------------------

Subject: Newsgroup posting guidelines

The following posting guidelines were adopted by a vote of m.h.d participants
in September 1994.

Posting guidelines for misc.health.diabetes:

Postings to misc.health.diabetes should be compliant with the standards
for all material posted to Usenet.  The following articles may be found
in news.announce.newusers, and should be reviewed by all posters:

-Emily Postnews Answers Your Questions on Netiquette
-Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
-A Primer on How to Work With the Usenet Community
-Rules for posting to Usenet
-What is Usenet?

Posting to misc.health.diabetes should be compliant with the group charter,
[which is in the previous section].

In addition to the above, the following guidelines are emphasized as
particularly relevant for contributions to misc.health.diabetes:

-No personal attacks or insults.  Avoid argumentative debates.  Responses
 should concentrate on the issues presented.

-No private discussions.  Take private discussions to email.  When in
 doubt, use email.

-Edit responses to avoid unnecessary inclusions of earlier postings.

-Edit subject lines as necessary to remain consistent with the topic.

-Support factual statements with your sources.  If you can not recall the
 source, then say so.  Do not imply authority which you can not actually
 support.

Additional information can be found in the general FAQ posted periodically
to this group.

------------------------------

Subject: What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?

Glucose is a specific form of sugar, one of the simplest. It is the form
found in the bloodstream. "Blood sugar" always refers to blood glucose, and
is abbreviated bG. All bG meters are specific for glucose and will not
respond to other sugars, such as fructose, sucrose, maltose and lactose.

Although sucrose (table sugar) is the most common sugar in food, glucose is
also common. Most fruits, fruit juices, and soft drinks contain large amounts
of glucose, and many foods contain small amounts. This means that you must be
very careful to clean any food residue from your fingers before drawing blood
for a bG check. Since the normal level of bG is only 1g/L (=100mg/dl), it
only takes a tiny speck of glucose on your finger to contaminate the sample
and give you a falsely high reading. 10 *micrograms* of glucose could raise
the reading enough to cause you to overreact dangerously.

------------------------------

Subject: What are mg/dl and mmol/l? How to convert? Glucose? Cholesterol?

There are two main methods of describing concentrations: by weight, and
by molecular count. Weights are in grams, molecular counts in moles. (If you
really want to know, a mole is 6.023*10^23 molecules.) In both cases, the
unit is usually modified by milli- or micro- or other prefix, and is always
"per" some volume, often a liter.

This means that the conversion factor depends on the molecular weight of the
substance in question.

mmol/l is millimoles/liter, and is the world standard unit for measuring
glucose in blood. Specifically, it is the designated SI (Systeme
International) unit. "World standard", of course, means that mmol/L is used
everywhere in the world except in the US. A mole is about 6*10^23 molecules;
if you want more detail, take a chemistry course.

mg/dl (milligrams/deciliter) is the traditional unit for measuring bG (blood
glucose). All scientific journals are moving quickly toward using mmol/L
exclusively. mg/dl won't disappear soon, and some journals now use mmol/L as
the primary unit but quote mg/dl in parentheses, reflecting the large base of
health care providers and researchers (not to mention patients) who are
already familiar with mg/dl.

Since m.h.d is an international newsgroup, it's polite to quote both figures
when you can. Most discussions take place using mg/dl, and no one really
expects you to pull out your calculator to compose your article. However, if
you don't quote both units, it's inevitable that many readers will have to
pull out their calculators to read it.

Many meters now have a switch that allows you to change between units.
Sometimes it's a physical switch, and sometimes it's an option that you can
set.

To convert mmol/l of glucose to mg/dl, multiply by 18.

To convert mg/dl of glucose to mmol/l, divide by 18 or multiply by 0.055.

These factors are specific for glucose, because they depend on the mass
of one molecule (the molecular weight). The conversion factors are
different for other substances (see below).

And remember that reflectance meters have a some error margin due to
both intrinsic limitations and environmental factors, and that plasma
readings are 15% higher than whole blood (as of 2002 most meters are
calibrated to give plasma readings, thus matching lab readings, but this
is a recent development), and that capillary blood is different from
venous blood when it's changing, as after a meal. So round off to make
values easier to comprehend and don't sweat the hundredths place. For
example, 4.3 mmol/l converts to 77.4 mg/dl but should probably be quoted
as 75 or 80. Similarly, 150 mg/dl converts to 8.3333... mmol/l but 8.3
is a reasonable quote, and even just 8 would usually convey the meaning.

Actually, a table might be more useful than the raw conversion factor, since
we usually talk in approximations anyway.

   mmol/l     mg/dl     interpretation
   ------     -----     --------------
     2.0        35      extremely low, danger of unconciousness
     3.0        55      low, marginal insulin reaction
     4.0        75      slightly low, first symptoms of lethargy etc.
     5.5       100      mecca
    5 - 6     90-110    normal preprandial in nondiabetics
     8.0       150      normal postprandial in nondiabetics
    10.0       180      maximum postprandial in nondiabetics
    11.0       200
    15.0       270      a little high to very high depending on patient
    16.5       300
    20.0       360      getting up there
    22         400      max mg/dl for some meters and strips
    33         600      high danger of severe electrolyte imbalance

Preprandial  = before meal
Postprandial = after meal

More conversions:

To convert mmol/l of HDL or LDL cholesterol to mg/dl, multiply by 39.
To convert mg/dl of HDL or LDL cholesterol to mmol/l, divide by 39.

To convert mmol/l of triglycerides to mg/dl, multiply by 89.
To convert mg/dl of triglycerides to mmol/l, divide by 89.

To convert umol (micromoles) /l of creatinine to mg/dl, divide by 88.
To convert mg/dl of creatinine to umol/l, multiply by 88.

------------------------------

Subject: What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?

Thanks to Andrew Torres <andym(AT)ku.edu> for this section.

C-peptide blood levels can indicate whether or not a person is producing
insulin and roughly how much.

Insulin is initially synthesized in the form of proinsulin.  In this form the
alpha and beta chains of active insulin are linked by a third polypeptide
chain called the connecting peptide, or c-peptide, for short. Because both
insulin and c-peptide molecules are secreted, for every molecule of insulin
in the blood, there is one of c-peptide. Therefore, levels of c-peptide in
the blood can be measured and used as an indicator of insulin production in
those cases where exogenous insulin (from injection) is present and mixed
with endogenous insulin (that produced by the body) a situation that would
make meaningless a measurement of insulin itself. The c-peptide test can also
be used to help assess if high blood glucose is due to reduced insulin
production or to reduced glucose intake by the cells.

There is little or no c-peptide in blood of type 1 diabetics, and c-peptide
levels in type 2 diabetics can be reduced or normal. The concentrations of
c-peptide in non-diabetics are on the order of 0.5-3.0 ng/ml.

------------------------------

Subject: What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and gestational diabetes?

The term diabetes mellitus comes from Greek words for "flow" and "honey",
referring to the excess urinary flow that occurs when diabetes is untreated,
and to the sugar in that urine.

Diabetes mellitus (DM) comes in the following classifications (which some
will argue don't really represent the actual types very well):

   type 1 -- characterized by total destruction of the insulin-producing beta
             cells, probably by an autoimmune reaction. Onset is most common
             in childhood, thus the common (but now deprecated) term
             "juvenile-onset", but the onset up to age 40 is not uncommon and
             can even occur later. Patients are susceptible to DKA (diabetic
             ketoacidosis). There seems to be some genetic tendency, but the
             genetic situation is unclear. Most patients are lean. Always
             requires treatment by insulin. Not sex-linked. Also referred to
             as IDDM (insulin dependent diabetes mellitus).

   type 2 -- characterized by insulin resistance despite adequate insulin
             production. A large majority of patients are overweight at onset,
             and a majority are female. Most are over 40, hence the common
             (but now deprecated) terms "adult-onset" or "maturity-onset", but
             onset can occur at any age. Patients are not susceptible to DKA
             (diabetic ketoacidosis). There is a strong genetic tendency, but
             not simple inheritance. Depending on the individual, treatment
             may be by diet, exercise, weight loss, oral drugs which stimulate
             the release of insulin, or insulin injections -- and usually a
             combination of several of these. Also referred to as NIDDM (non
             insulin dependent diabetes mellitus) *even when treated with
             insulin* -- a confusing terminology which, unfortunately, is
             supported by the ADA.

   gestational -- occurs in about 3% of all pregnancies as a result of
             insulin antagonists secreted by the placenta. It is recommended
             that all pregnant women receive a screening glucose tolerance
             test (GTT) between the 24th and 28th weeks of pregnancy to detect
             gestational diabetes early if it occurs, as diabetes can cause
             serious difficulties in pregnancy. Sometimes requires insulin
             treatment. Not susceptible to DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis).
             Usually disappears after childbirth, but about 40% of patients
             develop type 2 diabetes within five years. Most authorities state
             that the typical patient is female ...

   malnutrition-related -- severe malnutrition sometimes causes diabetes --
             hyperglycemia and all the usual symptoms. The reason is unknown,
             and since this syndrome occurs almost entirely in third world
             countries, research on this form of diabetes is nearly
nonexistent.

   other types -- sometimes called secondary. A catchall for forms not covered
             by the types described above. Causes include loss of the entire
             pancreas (to trauma, cancer, alcohol abuse, or exposure to
             chemicals), diseases that destroy the beta cells, certain
             hormonal syndromes, drugs that interfere with insulin secretion
             or action, and some rare genetic conditions.

These terms are not used entirely consistently. Some doctors will refer to
any diabetic using insulin as type 1, and will refer to the early onset of
type 1 diabetes as type 2 until insulin therapy is required. This usage does
not fit with most modern usage as described above (type 1 is beta cell
destruction, type 2 is insulin resistance). The situation is complicated by
the fact that early in the course of the disease it can be difficult to
determine which type is occuring, especially for patients in their 30's, the
age when the onset of both types is common.

Different patients respond very differently to what is categorized above as
the same disease. The root causes of all forms of diabetes are not
understood, and are likely more complex and varied than the simple categories
show. Type 1 diabetes likely has a few root causes, and type 2 diabetes
probably has a larger number of root causes.

There are also well documented reports of cases of diabetes with unexplained
combinations of syndromes from types 1 and 2. These are sometimes referred to
as "type 1-1/2", and the reasons are not understood.

The classification above is not completely standard, and other classifications
exist.

About 90% of diabetes patients are type 2 (some 12 million in the US), and
about 10% are type 1 (some 1 million in the US). Discussion on m.h.d tends to
run about 2/3 type 1, I'd guess. This probably reflects the fact that type 1
diabetes is harder to ignore, and that type 2 seldom strikes the younger
people who are more likely to have net access. Type 2 is *not* less serious.

"1" and "2" are often written in Roman numerals: type I, type II. Because
typography is often unclear on computer terminals, I've stuck with the Arabic
numeral version.

Diabetes accounts for about 5% of all health care costs in the US, some
US$90 billion per year.

------------------------------

Subject: Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?

Diabetes insipidus (DI) results from abnormalities in the production or
use (two main types) of the hormone arginine vasopressin. The main
symptoms are excessive thirst and massive urination. The excess urine
flow is devoid of sugar. There are no blood glucose abnormalities, and
in fact there is nothing in common with diabetes mellitus except the
excess urination when untreated.

Diabetes insipidus caused by failure to produce vasopressin. This is
known as neurogenic DI (or central DI, or pituitary DI). It can be
treated with hormone replacement (by nasal spray or other routes). DI
caused by failure to use vasopressin (nephrogenic DI) is more difficult
to treat, but several drugs are available which help.

DI is much less common than diabetes mellitus, though a few people have
discussed it on misc.health.diabetes and are reading m.h.d. Such
participation is certainly welcome, but because the number of DI
patients is only 1 or 2 per 10,000 population (25,000-50,000 in the
US), there probably isn't a critical mass for discussion on Usenet.

I'm aware of two organizations which offer support specifically
related to DI.

DIARD publishes a support newsletter, maintains a support network,
distributes information on DI, and promotes education and research
related to DI, and has a web page with information and links:

    Diabetes Insipidus and Related Diseases Network
    535 Echo Court
    Saline, MI 48176-1270
    USA
    +1 734 944 0078
    email: GSMAYES(AT)aol.com
    web:   http://members.aol.com/ruudh/dipage1.htm

The DI Foundation publishes a quarterly newsletter, Endless Water,
promotes public awareness and understanding of DI, and provides
informational material to patients, medical practitioners and
researchers:

    The Diabetes Insipidus Foundation, Inc.
    4533 Ridge Drive
    Baltimore, MD 21229
    USA
    +1 410 247 3953
    email: diabetesinsipidus(AT)maxInter.net
    web:   http://diabetesinsipidus.maxInter.net

------------------------------

Subject: How about discussing hypoglycemia?

Sure ...

To clarify: the term "hypoglycemia" is used to refer to two distinct
conditions. The word just means "low blood glucose". This can occur as
an insulin reaction, the result of too much injected insulin (taken to
treat diabetes) compared to food intake and exercise. But low blood
glucose can also be a chronic condition resulting from abnormalities of
insulin secretion, and this chronic condition is also called
hypoglycemia.

Chronic hypoglycemia may be caused by beta cells which overreact to an
increase in blood glucose (bg) by releasing too much insulin, which
then causes a too-rapid drop in bG. Such a condition, called reactive
hypoglycemia, is usually handled by dietary adjustments, in particular
avoiding refined sugars and large meals which stimulate the
overreaction. This often requires an effort in calculating the diet and
monitoring bG levels that is equal to what anyone with diabetes needs.

Tumors (insulinomas) can cause a steady overproduction of insulin.
These generally require surgical removal.

There are other causes as well. Mayer Davidson discusses some in his
book _Diabetes Mellitus: Diagnosis and Treatment_. But you'll have to
find the Second Edition, because he dropped this chapter from the Third
Edition. I don't believe anyone claims to understand all the causes of
hypoglycemia. The US NIDDK has a booklet online which discusses some of
the less common causes:

  http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/diabetes/pubs/hypo/hypo.htm

So chronic hypoglycemia is closely related to diabetes mellitus in
being a disorder of insulin production and use, and requires many of
the same techniques for its treatment. The two are a natural for
discussion in the same newsgroup. Which is good, since there really
isn't anywhere else in Usenet at present to discuss chronic
hypoglycemia. Welcome.

A hypoglycemia mailing list, HYPO-L, is available and sees moderate
traffic. See the section on mailing lists in part 4 of this FAQ for
subscription information.

Lars Idema maintains a hypoglycemia FAQ and information on a variety of
hypoglycemia resources on the Internet. See his web page at

  http://hypoglykemie.nl

------------------------------

Subject: Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting

Diagnosis of marginal type 2 diabetes, and even more so of
hypoglycemia, can be an iffy task. Single-point blood glucose
measurements often miss significant readings, especially for
hypoglycemia. While I don't recommend self-diagnosis, you can take some
steps on your own to aid your health care team in your diagnosis and
treatment. These are safe and useful steps. The first is purely
monitoring and not treatment or diagnosis on your part. The others are
good advice for anyone who does not have some other medical condition
to contraindicate the action, and are particularly good for those with
type 2 diabetes.

1) Get a blood glucose meter and start checking your blood glucose
before meals and at bedtime. Keep records. Also note what you ate, any
exercise, any unusual stress. If you suspect type 2 diabetes, also try
to check an hour after eating. If you suspect hypoglycemia, check any
time you have suspicious symptoms; you may also want to set up a few
runs where you check every 15-30 minutes for up to five hours after
eating.

Don't try to make any adjustments based on the readings until you review
them with your doctor -- just keep the record and show it to the
doctor. This will give the doctor more information than any examination
or lab test can give. Furthermore, if you are waiting for an
appointment, this record will put you ahead of the game when you
actually see the doctor. (If during this monitoring you see a dramatic
rise in blood glucose, to preprandial levels of 250 mg/dl [15 mmol/L]
and above, call the doctors and say you need an appointment *now*, not
in a month, not next week, and quote your bg levels.)

As an additional advantage, doing this monitoring on your own will
demonstrate to the doctor that you are willing to put in this kind of
effort. Often doctors are reluctant to ask patients to put in serious
time to monitor their health because so many patients don't follow up.

Blood glucose meters and all the supplies are OTC items. (True in the
USA, and I haven't heard of any country with a different policy.)
However, depending on where you live and what type of insurance or
national medical coverage you have, you may have to pay from your own
pocket if you do not have a prescription or proper pre-authorization.
For a month or so of monitoring, this is probably worth the cost.

2) Increase your exercise level, within levels that are safe in light
of any other medical conditions. In other words, if you are not already
in an exercise program, consult your doctor. Exercise will also help
with other stresses you are under. This is primarily applicable if you
suspect type 2 diabetes, but may help with hypoglycemia also.

3) Improve your diet if you are not already watching it carefully. A
standard diet with moderate calories and fat is good at this stage,
until you see the specialist. If you suspect hypoglycemia, you may want
to be especially careful of eating large amounts at one time, and avoid
concentrated sugars.

------------------------------

Subject: Exercise and insulin

Charles Coughran <ccoughran(AT)ucsd.edu> contributed this section.

The best way to deal with problems associated with diabetes and exercise
begins with understanding of what goes on in the metabolic system of
normal people and what the differences are for diabetics. Only with
such understanding can you make intelligent choices about
pharmacological tactics. Relying on rules of thumb can cause more
problems it solves because of the wide variability of individual
responses and the wide variety of diseases that fall under the rubric
of diabetes. Not to mention, I have seen postings where the rules of
thumb were clearly misunderstood.

While the following is intended for those who take insulin, it may
assist those on oral medications as well. Exercise in this context
means extended aerobic activity, say a minimum of 20 minutes of
jogging. This is a somewhat simplified account but I think it captures
the most important aspects for exercise related bg control. Comments
encouraged.

When a normal person starts to exercise, the insulin output of his
pancreas goes down. At first blush, this seems backward since the
muscles are working hard and therefore require more glucose to be
transported from the blood into the cells. There are two reasons more
glucose can be transported with less available insulin. The first is
that during exercise insulin becomes much more efficient. The mechanism
of this effect is not fully understood, but it helps overcomes the
reduction in circulating insulin.

Second, exercise activates non-insulin mediated glucose transport
pathways. These pathways are not sufficient to handle the load in the
absence of insulin, but do increase the effective insulin efficiency.

When insulin levels decline relative to the counterregulatory hormones
-- glucagon, epinephrine, norepinephrine, growth hormone, and cortisol
-- the liver is stimulated to release stored glucose. The blood glucose
that is being transported into the cells is replaced by that from
hepatic stores. It is this hormonal balance system that keeps the
levels of blood glucose in the normal narrow range during exercise.

For those of us who inject insulin, the first problem is obvious. Our
circulating levels of insulin do not react to exercise. Absent any
correction, when the muscles demand glucose and insulin becomes more
efficient our blood glucose plummets and we become hypoglycemic. This
is the reason for a commonly encountered prohibition to not schedule
exercise when your insulin is peaking. The higher the level of
circulating insulin, the more pronounced the effect.

One solution is to reduce our circulating insulin levels by reducing
insulin intake. Here specific advice starts to be difficult due to the
wide variety of insulins, regimens, and individual variability. The
spectrum spans from a Type II who takes a little NPH to help his beta
cells out to a c-peptide free pumper. I have spoken to diabetic runners
whose tactics would put me in an ambulance, even though our situations
seem to be very similar. You see a lot of advice of the form, "reduce
your insulin 2 units for every hour of strenuous exercise". This kind
of advice ignores real world variability and is sometimes much worse
than useless.

Clearly, someone who takes one shot/day has a much more limited ability
to adjust circulating insulin levels than someone using multiple
injections or a pump.

The other approach is to increase blood glucose levels by eating
carbohydrates timed to arrive at the blood stream in the form of
glucose when it is needed. The easiest way to do that is usually to eat
fast acting carbohydrates during or immediately preceding exercise.
Again, there are rules of thumb around about so many grams of
carbohydrates for a particular length of exercise at some defined
level. Again, they seem to be swamped by individual and circumstantial
variability.

Some of us do a combination of both and pump up our bg levels somewhat
before exercise and reduce insulin levels to keep things on an even
keel.

The bottom line is to make careful adjustments and test, and test, and
test, to find out how things work for your particular body.

So much for too much insulin. What happens when the circulating insulin
level is too low? When levels are so low that even the increase in
insulin efficiency doesn't overcome the defect, glucose isn't
transported into the cells. Worse, since insulin levels are low the
liver continues to pump glucose into the blood. The result is bg levels
rise with exercise. The muscles get stressed due to lack of fuel and
the metabolism of fats kicks in, ketones start being produced and the
danger of ketosis or ketoacidosis looms. This is the basis for another
rule of thumb which is often misunderstood. The rule is usually stated
"don't exercise when your bg is above 240 mg/dl (13.3 mmol/l) and
ketones are present in the urine". This makes sense because those are
signs that you have inadequate insulin supplies -- that's how many of
us got diagnosed. Exercise in those circumstances will make things
worse, not better. On the other hand, if you are 300 mg/dl (16.7
mmol/l) because you just drank a large regular cola by mistake with
lunch, exercise is a great way to bring that bg down in a hurry. Why
your bg is elevated is just as important as the fact of the elevated
level when deciding whether or not exercise is contraindicated. The 240
is also a somewhat arbitrary number. Some people start throwing ketones
at significantly lower levels.

In short: avoid exercise if your insulin level is too low. Do exercise
if you are sure your insulin level is adequate but your blood glucose
is too high.

Exercise also produces effects at longer time scales. Sometime after
exercise, there is often a take up of blood glucose by the muscles to
replenish depleted stores. This most often occurs an hour or two after
exercise, but has been reported in the range of 1/2 hour to 48 hours.
Again, as is the case during exercise, artificially high insulin levels
will lead to hypoglycemia. The last rule of thumb is to watch for
hypoglycemia after exercise.

*SPECULATION BEGINS HERE* A problem some of us encounter from time to
time is a post exercise bg spike. Blood glucose readings will be
reasonable after exercise but sharply elevated a few hours later. It is
my speculation that this represents circulating insulin levels that
were adequate to deal with exercise induced blood glucose demand with
its attendant insulin efficiency increase, but too low to deal with the
post exercise demand when insulin efficiency has lowered somewhat. It
has been my experience that post exercise elevated bg levels respond to
much less insulin than would be required in a more normal situation. It
appears that insulin efficiency falls off after exercise at some rate
and you can be on the correct side of the curve during exercise and the
wrong side after. This hypothesis is the best of a couple I have come
up with. *SPECULATION ENDS HERE*

Regular exercise over time scales of weeks or months can reduce overall
insulin requirements. In addition, as muscles become trained and
improve their internal storage, it feeds back into the amount of
glucose demand present during exercise, and thus into the entire
control cycle.

Diabetes makes exercise, and almost everything else, harder. But, hey,
if it was easy it wouldn't be any fun :-)

There are two very good, readable books from which you can get more
information. The better is Campaigne and Lampman, _Exercise in the
Clinical Management of Diabetes_. Almost as good is _The Health
Professional's Guide to Diabetes and Exercise_ edited by Ruderman and
Devlin and published by the American Diabetes Association.

------------------------------

Subject: Who did this?

Signature

Edward Reid <edward@paleo.org>
Tallahassee FL
--
Art works by Melynda Reid: http://paleo.org

Edward Reid - 31 Mar 2008 05:23 GMT
Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part2
Posting-Frequency: biweekly
Last-modified: 24 December 2005

Changes: see part 1 of the FAQ for a list of changes to all parts.

------------------------------

Subject: READ THIS FIRST

Copyright 1993-2005 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
of copyright law and convention requires the author's permission.

Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
Never substitute advice from the net for a physician's care. Diabetes is a
critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

------------------------------

Subject: Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
  READ THIS FIRST
  Table of Contents
GENERAL (found in part 1)
  Where's the FAQ?
  What's this newsgroup like?
  Abuse of the newsgroup
  The newsgroup charter
  Newsgroup posting guidelines
  What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
  What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
  What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
  What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
  Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
  How about discussing hypoglycemia?
  Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
  Exercise and insulin
BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
  How accurate is my meter?
  Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
  What do meters cost?
  Comparing blood glucose meters
  How can I download data from my meter?
  I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?
  What's HbA1c and what's it mean?
  Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?
  Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?
  HbA1c by mail
  Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
    and Somogyi effect?
TREATMENT (found in part 3)
  My diabetic father isn't taking care of himself. What can I do?
  Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
  So-and-so eats sugar! Isn't that poison for diabetics?
  Insulin nomenclature
  What is Humalog / LysPro / lispro / ultrafast insulin?
  Travelling with insulin
  Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
  Injectors: Pens
  Injectors: Jets
  Insulin pumps
  Type 1 cures -- beta cell implants
  Type 1 cures -- pancreas transplants
  Type 2 cures -- barely a dream
  What's a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
  Should I take a chromium supplement?
  I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
  Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
  Alcohol and diabetes
  Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
  Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
  Gastroparesis
  Extreme insulin resistance
  What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
  What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
  What's the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
  How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
  What's the bottom line on pycnogenol?
  Pycnogenol references
SOURCES (found in part 4)
  Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
  Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
  Online resources: commercial services
  Online resources: FTP
  Online resources: World Wide Web
  Online resources: other
  Where can I mail order XYZ?
  How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
  How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
  How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
  How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
  What about diabetes organizations outside North America?
  How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
  Could you recommend some good reading?
  Could you recommend some good magazines?
RESEARCH (found in part 5)
  What is the DCCT? What are the results?
  More details about the DCCT
  DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
  Is aspartame dangerous?
IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
  Who did this?

------------------------------

Subject: How accurate is my meter?

bG (blood glucose) meters are not as accurate as the readings you get from
them imply. For example, you might think that 108 means 108 mg/dl, not 107 or
109. But in fact all meters made for home use have at least a 10-15% error
under ideal conditions. Thus you should interpret "108" as "probably between
100 and 120". (Similar considerations apply if you measure in units of
mmol/L.) This is a random error and will not be consistent from one
determination to the next. You cannot expect to get exactly the same reading
from two checks done one after the other, nor from two meters using the same
blood sample.

This is generally considered acceptable because variations in this range will
not make a major difference in treatment decisions. For example, the
difference between 100 and 120 may make no difference in how you treat
yourself, or at most might make a difference of one unit of insulin. With
present technology, more accurate meters would be much more expensive. This
expense is only justified in research work, where such accuracy might detect
small trends which could go undetected with less accurate measurements.

This discussion applies to ideal conditions. The error may be increased by
poor or missing calibration, temperatures outside the intended range,
outdated strips, improper technique, poor timing, insufficient sample size,
contamination, and probably other factors. Contamination is especially
serious since it can happen so easily and is likely to result in an overdose
of insulin. Glucose is found in fruits, juices, sodas, and many other foods.
Even a smidgen can seriously alter a reading.

When comparing meter readings with lab results, also note that plasma readings
are 15% higher than whole blood, and that capillary blood gives different
readings from venous blood.

Visually read strips are slightly less accurate than meters, with an error
rate around 20-25%.

For some meters, strips are available from manufacturers other than the meter
manufacturer. Some m.h.d. readers have compared the strips side-by-side and
found those from one manufacturer to read consistently lower than the strips
from another. The differences are not likely to make a significant difference
in your treatment, but are large enough to be noticeable and possibly
confusing. For this reason it is not a good idea to change strip
manufacturers without comparing the readings from one with the readings from
the other.

I've seen no such direct comparison of meters, but the possibility exists that
some meters might read consistently lower than others. Be careful when
changing meters.

By "error rate" I mean twice the standard deviation from the mean. An error
rate of 15% says that about 95% of the readings will be within 15% of the
actual value.

------------------------------

Subject: Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!

The cost of blood glucose measurement strips is a complex interaction
of R&D costs, manufacturing costs, marketing strategy, insurance
practices, and undoubtedly other factors. You can ask on the net if you
want; you'll get lots of comments but no answers.

There are a few of ways of reducing the cost of blood glucose
monitoring.

One is to seek out the best price for the strips; large stores such as
FEDCO often have good prices, as do some mail order suppliers (see mail
order section).

A second way is to choose a meter with lower cost strips. Your health
care team may be familiar with and prefer a particular meter, but it's
not likely that they considered cost in making their choice. If you
insist that you need a lower cost system, they should be willing to
work with you. All meters now on the market are adequately accurate for
home use.

A third way is to use visually read strips (Chemstrip bG and a couple of
lesser known brands) and cut them in half or even in thirds. Do the
cutting carefully with a pair of strong, *clean* scissors, and get the
strips back into the vial as quickly as possible. Some manufacturers
claim this procedure will cause problems, but those who have used the
technique report that it works well. Visually read strips are slightly
less accurate than meters. However, as of 1998, prices on visually read
strips are relatively high, and you will have to consider whether the
projected savings are worth the time to cut strips and the loss of the
convenience which meters give.

Do *not* cut strips when using them in meters. The results will be
totally incorrect.

Most discussion on m.h.d of the cost of blood glucose measurement strips
has centered on the US. I'm not sure why, though a good guess is that
differences in health care systems and national policies make this
issue more critical to the individual patient in the US. There is no
dearth of non-US participants on m.h.d.

------------------------------

Subject: What do meters cost?

The flip side of expensive blood glucose measurement strips is that
the manufacturers virtually (and sometimes literally) give away the
meters to hook you on their strips. Don't pay full price for a
meter; look for discounts, rebates, and giveaways. For example, as
of this writing I'm looking at a catalog that shows a Glucometer 3
for US$45, with a US$30 manufacturer's rebate *and* a US$30 trade-in
allowance if you already have a competing meter -- which means you
make US$15. There are similar deals on other meters.

But make sure you consider the cost of strips as well as the cost of
meters, and find out which your insurance will pay for. The most
fully featured meters, such as the One Touch II, don't have such
widely advertised deals, though you can probably find ways of
getting them at discount.

If you have insurance that pays for strips but not for the meter,
you should not have to pay anything for the meter. If it's worth the
time to you, call the meter manufacturers' customer service
departments or the mail order outfits (see "Where can I mail order
XYZ?" in part 4, Sources). They will find a way to get you the meter
for free.

As with strips, this discussion of costs applies to the US, and
there has been little discussion of meter costs outside the US on
m.h.d., probably because fewer tradeoffs are available in most
countries.

An Australian correspondent notes a much narrower choice and higher
cost of meters there, but subsidized (pardon, subsidised)
measurement strips.

In Britain, strips are covered by the National Health Service, but
meters may be expensive. However I've also heard of a limited-time
One Touch program providing a full refund for the meter if you
submit the strip wrappers. Likely other companies will compete.

Elsewhere? Please post. It's likely that the situation is continuing
to change rapidly, so if the cost of the meter is painful for you,
investigate other options before paying full price -- wherever you
live.

------------------------------

Subject: Comparing blood glucose meters

Here are three ways of getting a list of the specs for most currently
available meters.

1) Call Hospital Center Pharmacy in Boston, 1-800-824-2401 (US only).
They have a chart which they will gladly send you.

2) The ADA publishes a Buyer's Guide to Diabetes Products once a
year in the Resource Guide, a supplement to the January isue of
Diabetes Forecast. As of January 2000, the latest is the Resource
Guide 2000. The meters section lists meters and features in a table.
The ADA does not recommend one meter over another, but does include
some tips on choosing a meter.

3) The ADA has this same Buyer's Guide information online at

  http://diabetes.org/diabetesforecast/2000BuyersGuide/default.asp

This URL will change in future years.

The caveat is that you must be patient. The table is a huge scanned
graphic rather than text. It will take about ten minutes to download
all the graphics on the page on a good 28.8 modem connection, and
possibly much longer.

------------------------------

Subject: How can I download data from my meter?

You can get a cable to hook the One Touch II and Profile meters to a PC
from the meter manufacturer, LifeScan. The cable includes some
electronics, not just a cable, so you probably don't want to make your
own -- but if you do, check out the schematics at either of these
sites:

    http://www.sci.fi/~keytech/otcable.html
    http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Haven/5371/indexe.html

In the US the cable is free (or nearly so -- some mhd readers report
being quoted a small fee). Elsewhere, LifeScan lets each international
office set its own policy on cable distribution, and some are charging
substantial fees. North American telephone numbers are:

    U.S.A.    1-800-227-8862
              +1 408 263 9789
    Canada    1-800-663-5521

LifeScan provides some software for downloading the data. The more
recent versions provide considerable additional analysis.

A wide variety of other software is available as of 1998. I can't keep
up with it. See Rick Mendosa's companion posting on software.

Most meter makers now offer some software to be used with their meters.
Third party software is more abundant for the One Touch meters because
LifeScan, unlike other makers, publishes the download protocol. You can
ask them to send you a copy of the specs, or download it from

   One Touch II:         ftp://vic.cc.purdue.edu/pub/lifescan.ot2
    One Touch Profile:    ftp://vic.cc.purdue.edu/pub/lifescan.pro

Since these are simple tty-oriented protocols, you can download the raw
data from your meter using a basic telecom program such as Kermit or
ZTerm.

I'll mention just one piece of software here. Vic Abell
<abe(AT)purdue.edu> has long provided a simple free DOS program to
download and analyze One Touch II and Profile data. Vic posts update
announcements to misc.health.diabetes and has been known to support his
program via the newsgroup. TOUCH2 interfaces to the RS-232 data port of
the One Touch, downloads the data on command, and provides a variety of
analytical displays. It's available in a couple of compressed forms via
anonymous ftp from vic.cc.purdue.edu in the /pub directory, or using a
web browser,

   ftp://vic.cc.purdue.edu/pub/

------------------------------

Subject: I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?

***The following information is incomplete, as another company has introduced
   a non-invasive meter for about $8000. It has been discussed in the
   newsgroup. Rumors of other non-invasive (and "non-evasive") meters abound.
   I won't be trying to keep this section up to date until the situation
   stabilizes. ***

There is at least one development project in hot pursuit of a bG monitor
which operates by shining light through flesh (through the thumbnail in one
case) and analyzing the light that passes through. Glucose doesn't affect
light much differently from many other substances in the body, so this is not
an easy task. Some field trials have been done, but the developers have a way
to go to reach acceptable accuracy. A successful product is far from
guaranteed, and may be several years away if it arrives at all.

One estimate is that such a meter might cost about US$1000. Assuming the
per-check cost is zero, this would pay for itself in 1-2 years for many
patients. Look for the insurance companies to throw up some roadblock to
achieving these savings, at least in the US.

------------------------------

Subject: What's HbA1c and what's it mean?

Hb = hemoglobin, the compound in the red blood cells that transports
oxygen. Hemoglobin occurs in several variants; the one which composes
about 90% of the total is known as hemoglobin A. A1c is a specific
subtype of hemoglobin A. The 1 is actually a subscript to the A, and
the c is a subscript to the 1. "Hemoglobin" is also spelled
"haemoglobin", depending on your geographic allegiance.

Glucose binds slowly to hemoglobin A, forming the A1c subtype. The
reverse reaction, or decomposition, proceeds relatively slowly, so any
buildup persists for roughly 4 weeks. Because of the reverse reaction,
the actual HbA1c level is strongly weighted toward the present. Some of
the HbA1c is also removed when erythrocytes (red blood cells) are
recycled after their normal lifetime of about 90-120 days. These
factors combine so that the HbA1c level represents the average bG level
of approximately the past 4 weeks, strongly weighted toward the most
recent 2 weeks. It is almost entirely insensitive to bG levels more
than 4 weeks previous.

In non-diabetic persons, the formation, decomposition and destruction of
HbA1c reach a steady state with about 3.0% to 6.5% of the hemoglobin
being the A1c subtype. Most diabetic individuals have a higher average
bG level than non-diabetics, resulting in a higher HbA1c level. The
actual HbA1c level can be used as an indicator of the average recent bG
level. This in turn indicates the possible level of glycation damage to
tissues, and thus of diabetic complications, if continued for years.

Interpreting HbA1c values can be tricky for several reasons. See the
following section for more details.

------------------------------

Subject: Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?

Interpreting HbA1c values is tricky for several reasons: differing lab
measurements, variation among individuals, and misapprehension of the
relevant timeframe.

First trick: several different lab measurements have been introduced
since 1980, measuring slightly different subtypes with different limits
for normal values and thus different interpretive scales.

A National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program began in 1996,
sponsored by the American Diabetes Association and others. See
reference 1. This program certifies HbA1c assays which conform to the
method used in the DCCT. However, as of 1998 other versions are still
in use in many places, both in the US and elsewhere. When you get a lab
result, be sure to look at what the lab considers to be the normal
range. Most discussion of HbA1c values in m.h.d appears to be based on
the DCCT, where the normal range is approximately 3.0-6.1%. Caveat
lector. (See part 5, Research, of this FAQ for more information on the
DCCT, the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.)

Second trick: HbA1c levels appear to vary by up to 1.0% among
individuals with the same average bG. See reference 2.

This is very recent research and its implications are not yet clear. The
actual reaction rates governing the formation of HbA1c may vary among
individuals. Some of the variation may be due to differences in
erythrocyte (red blood cell) survival times -- the rough 90-120 day
range noted earlier -- although other work limits this to a small part
of the total variation (see reference 5). Variations in the HbA1c
formation rate may or may not correlate with the rate of damage to
other tissues.

While we await further research, we can only say that differences of
1.0% from one individual to another may not be meaningful.

Although HbA1c varies among individuals with the same average bG, it is
very stable for any given individual. Thus a change of 1.0% in your own
HbA1c is definitely meaningful.

Third and final trick: most medical professionals have been given
incorrect information about the timeframe which HbA1c represents.
Even textbooks normally state the 90-120 day average, as does the
American Diabetes Association in its Position Statement on Tests of
Glycemia in Diabetes (see reference 1).

The longer estimate is based on the assumption that the conversion of
hemoglobin A to HbA1c is essentially irreversible. This was a
reasonable assumption before the reaction rates were actually measured.
See the following section for information about the research which
measured the reaction rates and simulated the consequences.

See the following section for the references mentioned above.

------------------------------

Subject: Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?

In the early 1980s, Henrik Mortensen and colleagues at Glostrup
University Hospital, in Denmark, measured the reaction rates in vitro.
Their results showed the assumption of irreversibility to be untrue. In
fact the reverse reaction (HbA1c to HbA and glucose) proceeds at about
1/8 the rate of the forward reaction, which is very far from
irreversible. Mortensen et alia also built a biokinetic model based on
the measurements, and validated the model by comparing its predictions
to actual patients. See references 3-5.

Among other things, Mortensen's work shows that after a change in
average bG level, the HbA1c level restabilizes after about 4 weeks.
This has several consequences. Clinically, the most important are
these:

First, the HbA1c is an exponentially weighted average of blood glucose
levels from the preceding 4 weeks, with the most recent 2 weeks being
by far the most important.

Second, measuring HbA1c less often than monthly results in unmonitored
gaps between measurements. To use HbA1c as a continuous monitoring
tool, you need to check it at least once a month.

Third, it is worthwhile checking the HbA1c of newly diagnosed patients
as often as once a week to determine the effectiveness of the newly
imposed treatment.

Reference 1: American Diabetes Association, Tests of Glycemia in
Diabetes, Diabetes Care 23:S80-S82, January 2000 Supplement 1.
This specific issue is no longer available online, but the most recent
version is available at http://diabetes.org/cpr/.

Reference 2: Kilpatrick ES, Maylor PW, Keevil BG:  Biological Variation
of Glycated Hemoglobin. Diabetes Care 21:261-264, February 1998.
Abstract available on the web at
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/21/2/261.

Reference 3: Mortensen HB, Christophersen C: Glucosylation of human
haemoglobin a in red blood cells studied in vitro. Kinetics of the
formation and dissociation of haemoglobin A1c. Clinica Chimica Acta
134:317-326, 15 November 1983.

Reference 4: Mortensen HB, Volund A, Christophersen C: Glucosylation of
human haemoglobin A. Dynamic variation in HbA1c described by a
biokinetic model. Clinica Chimica Acta 136:75-81, 16 January 1984.

Reference 5: Mortensen HB, Volund A: Application of a biokinetic model
for prediction and assessment of glycated haemoglobins in diabetic
patients. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation
48:595-602, October 1988.

------------------------------

Subject: HbA1c by mail

You may find it cheaper and/or more convenient to have your HbA1c
measurements done by mail -- and you collect the sample by fingerstick.

Diabetes Technologies provides a "Accu-Base A1c (tm) Glycohemoglobin
Testing System". The cost is $19.95 per kit plus S/H (I think it's $3.85
per order), which includes the laboratory analysis. All needed supplies
are provided, including postage to the lab. They normally ask for a
doctor's prescription before sending the kit -- not because it's
required but because they want to make sure to keep the doctors in the
loop. Unhappy doctors are not good for their business.

The procedure is simple: they provide a capillary tube already attached
to a clip. Stick your finger (using a one-use lancet they provide, if
you wish) and touch the end of the tube to the drop until the tube is
full -- a fraction of a second to a few seconds. Drop the tube into a
small vial with fluid in it (pre-filled) and shake for a few seconds.
Fill out a little paperwork. Pack the vial in a Biopack, padding and
package, all provided and even prestamped. Drop it in the mail. You
provide: writing pen, blood, tissue for the excess blood.

The lab analyzes the sample using HPLC (high performance liquid
chromotography). This is the same as the major labs use. In other words,
SmithKline takes an entire vial of blood and uses one drop.

Diabetes Technologies is in Thomasville, GA. Their phone number is
888-872-2443.

Express-Med used to make a kit which I used once, but they no longer
sell it.

Becton-Dickinson (BD) was advertising a HbA1c kit in 1998. However, the
last time I spoke with someone there, they were only distributing it
through health care organizations (such as HMOs) and plans for
individual sales were indefinite.

A personal note: I have used the Diabetes Technologies kit, and a
predecessor supplied by Diabetes Support Systems, since 1996. Without
this service, I probably would have had at most one HbA1c measurement
per year due to the cost and the inconvenience of visiting the lab or
doctor's office -- and I really needed the tests at times. I plan to
continue using the service.

(As of the start of 2003 there are some other options. I need to update
this section.)

------------------------------

Subject: Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
           and Somogyi effect?

This section is written by Charles Coughran <ccoughran(AT)ucsd.edu>.

There are three main causes of high morning fasting bg. In decreasing order of
probability they are insufficient insulin, dawn phenomenon, and Somogyi
effect (aka rebound). Insufficient or waning insulin is simple. If the
effective duration of intermediate or long acting insulin ends sometime
during the night, the relative level of circulating insulin will be too low,
and your blood sugars will rise.

Dawn phenomenon refers to increased glucose production and insulin resistance
brought on by the release of counterregulatory hormones in the early morning
hours near waking. It happens in normal people as well as in diabetics; in
nondiabetics it shows up as measurably increased insulin secretion around
dawn. Dawn phenomenon is variable in strength both within the population and
over time in individuals. It can show up as either high fasting glucose
levels or an increased insulin requirement to cover breakfast compared to
equivalent meals at other times of day.

Somogyi effect refers to a rebound in bg after nocturnal hypoglycemia which
occurs during sleep with the patient not experiencing any symptoms. The
hypoglycemia triggers the release of counterregulatory hormones. Somogyi
effect appears to be less prevalent than previously thought. While it does
occur, some episodes of hyperglycemia following hypoglycemia are actually
waning insulin levels following an insulin peak with medium acting insulin.
This can be difficult to sort out.

The best way to sort it out is to test every couple of hours from bedtime to
morning.

    If your bg rises all, or much of the night, it is a lack of circulating
    insulin.

    If it is stable all night, but rises sharply sometime before you wake in
    the morning, it is dawn phenomenon.

    If your bg declines to the point of a hypoglycemic reaction, it is
    *possibly* Somogyi effect.

You may have to test on several nights to nail the problem. Once you have
figured out the problem you and your doctor can discuss changes in your
insulin regimen to correct it. The answer depends critically on your
particular circumstances.

Mayer Davidson, in _Diabetes Mellitus: Diagnosis and Treatment_ (p 252 in the
3rd edition) says that Somogyi effect rarely causes fasting hyperglycemia,
and cites studies.

------------------------------

Subject: Who did this?

Signature

Edward Reid <edward@paleo.org>
Tallahassee FL
--
Art works by Melynda Reid: http://paleo.org

Edward Reid - 31 Mar 2008 05:23 GMT
Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part4
Posting-Frequency: biweekly
Last-modified: 30 April 2003

Changes: see part 1 of the FAQ for a list of changes to all parts.

------------------------------

Subject: READ THIS FIRST

Copyright 1993-2005 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
of copyright law and convention requires the author's permission.

Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
Never substitute advice from the net for a physician's care. Diabetes is a
critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

------------------------------

Subject: Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
  READ THIS FIRST
  Table of Contents
GENERAL (found in part 1)
  Where's the FAQ?
  What's this newsgroup like?
  Abuse of the newsgroup
  The newsgroup charter
  Newsgroup posting guidelines
  What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
  What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
  What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
  What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
  Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
  How about discussing hypoglycemia?
  Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
  Exercise and insulin
BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
  How accurate is my meter?
  Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
  What do meters cost?
  Comparing blood glucose meters
  How can I download data from my meter?
  I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?
  What's HbA1c and what's it mean?
  Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?
  Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?
  HbA1c by mail
  Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
    and Somogyi effect?
TREATMENT (found in part 3)
  My diabetic father isn't taking care of himself. What can I do?
  Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
  So-and-so eats sugar! Isn't that poison for diabetics?
  Insulin nomenclature
  What is Humalog / LysPro / lispro / ultrafast insulin?
  Travelling with insulin
  Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
  Injectors: Pens
  Injectors: Jets
  Insulin pumps
  Type 1 cures -- beta cell implants
  Type 1 cures -- pancreas transplants
  Type 2 cures -- barely a dream
  What's a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
  Should I take a chromium supplement?
  I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
  Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
  Alcohol and diabetes
  Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
  Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
  Gastroparesis
  Extreme insulin resistance
  What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
  What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
  What's the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
  How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
  What's the bottom line on pycnogenol?
  Pycnogenol references
SOURCES (found in part 4)
  Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
  Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
  Online resources: commercial services
  Online resources: FTP
  Online resources: World Wide Web
  Online resources: other
  Where can I mail order XYZ?
  How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
  How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
  How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
  How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
  What about diabetes organizations outside North America?
  How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
  Could you recommend some good reading?
  Could you recommend some good magazines?
RESEARCH (found in part 5)
  What is the DCCT? What are the results?
  More details about the DCCT
  DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
  Is aspartame dangerous?
IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
  Who did this?

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups

On the Usenet, the misc.health.diabetes newsgroup carries most of the
messages related to diabetes. Volume runs about 200-250 articles/day. Suppose
you obtained this FAQ by some method other than by reading m.h.d and you want
to participate. If you already have access to Usenet news, just subscribe to
misc.health.diabetes; the exact method depends on the software used at your
site, so you should inquire locally for details. If you do not have access to
Usenet news, inquire locally about obtaining such access. The key words are
"I want to participate in the Usenet newsgroup misc.health.diabetes". Usenet
is available at most colleges and universities, many companies, all of the
large commercial services (including Delphi, Netcom, America Online,
Compuserve, Prodigy), many smaller local services, most Freenet systems,
and many locally run BBSs. Some of these have selective news feeds, and you
will have to ask them to get misc.health.diabetes before you can subscribe
via their system.

m.h.d is not gatewayed to any mailing list, and to my knowledge is not
archived anywhere as such. However, DejaNews has all of Usenet from March
1995 to present online and available to the public, and plans to extend the
scope farther into the past. You can create a filter specifying only the
newsgroup you want, and then search for key words. See

   http://www.dejanews.com

Another newsgroup, alt.support.diabetes.kids, has a much smaller volume of
articles, about 2-3 per day. Being in the alt.* hierarchy of newsgroups, its
propagation is somewhat restricted compared to misc.health.diabetes. To
obtain access, follow the same instructions as for m.h.d, above.

Other Usenet newsgroups which might be relevant are

    rec.food and its subgroups
    the sci.med hierarchy
    the alt.support hierarchy, especially alt.support.diet
    bit.listserv.transplant (only available at sites that carry bit.* --
                             see the description below of the TRNSPLNT list)

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists

Several public electronic mailing lists have diabetes-related content. The
main alternative to a newsgroup is the DIABETIC list, which carries about
60-80 messages/day. Its charter is to be "a support and information group for
diabetics". The overall flavor and atmosphere are different from the m.h.d
newsgroup, so if you find that you are uncomfortable with one, try the other.
If you subscribe to the DIABETIC list, be prepared for the large volume of
messages. If you have not dealt with this volume of email before, it will be
quite disconcerting to see so many messages appear in your personal mailbox,
and I advise that you consider one of the following methods to avoid being
overwhelmed:

    -- set up a mailbox (aka userid, account, screen name) separate from
       your normal personal mailbox in which to receive the mailing list.
       You will have to ask locally whether this is possible on your system.
       You may also be able to use your mail program to filter mailing list
       messages into a separate mailbox.

    -- convert to the digest as soon as you have subscribed. The digest
       option collects messages into large postings called digests (a misuse
       of the word, as all messages are included in their entirety). This
       digest is sent daily, or when its size passes a limit (currently 2000
       lines). Convert to digest form by sending a message addressed to the
       listserv (see below) with a message body containing

           set diabetic mail digest

TYPE_ONE is a low to moderate volume mailing list for discussion of type 1
diabetes, intended primarily as a support group. It carries about 10
messages/day. There is no digest option. If you get any error messages from
"majordomo", be sure to write directly to the list owner,
jamyers(AT)netcom.com, as sometimes the software at netcom prevents him from
replying directly.

DIABETES-EHLB started as an Electronic HighLights Bulletin to distribute
information presented at the ADA conference in June 1996. It was carried
forward as a moderated mailing list. The moderator plans to try to keep
discussions focussed on specific topics.

TRNSPLNT is a low volume mailing list for discussion of organ transplants. It
carries about 10 messages/day. It is relevant to diabetes because
complications of diabetes often lead to kidney transplants. TRNSPLNT is
gatewayed with the newsgroup bit.listserv.transplant, which is available at
Usenet sites which carry the bit.* hierarchy of newsgroups.

DIABETES-NEWS is a one-way list provided by _Diabetes Interview_ magazine. It
provides a sample, one article per week, from the printed magazine. See the
section on "Could you recommend some good magazines?" for more information
about the printed magazine.

AUTOIMMUNE is a moderated, low volume list carrying technical information
about research on autoimmune disorders, including type 1 diabetes.

HYPO is a moderate volume mailing list for support and information on
hypoglycemia (as a medical condition as opposed to an insulin reaction).

To subscribe to the mailing list in the first column, send a message to the
email address in the second column (or to the alternate if given) containing
the command in the third column. Note that Firstname Lastname is your real
name, such as John Doe. The listserv software will use the email address in
your message header for your subscription. If you have trouble sending email
to the listserv, or if you receive no response, then you will need the help
of someone at your site.

  DIABETIC   listserv(AT)lehigh.edu     subscribe diabetic Firstname Lastname

  TYPE_ONE   listserv(AT)netcom.com     subscribe type_one

  DIABETES-EHLB
             listserv(AT)shrsys.hslc.org subscribe diabetes-ehlb Fstnm Lstnm

  TRNSPLNT   listserv(AT)wuvmd.bitnet   subscribe trnsplnt Firstname Lastname
             listserv(AT)wuvmd.wustl.edu

  DIABETES-NEWS
     diabetes-news-request(AT)lists.best.com    subscribe

  AUTOIMMUNE maiser(AT)ksg1.harvard.edu  Subscribe autoimmune_research

  HYPO       hypo-request(AT)iceblue.com.au  subscribe hypo

  NECROBIOSIS  necrobiosis-subscribe@yahoogroups.com [no command needed]
     web page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/necrobiosis

For up to date information and more diabetes-related mailing lists, see
Rick Mendosa's Online Diabetes Resources FAQ at

  http://www.mendosa.com/faq.htm

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: commercial services

Most of the information here comes from David Cohler <ar051(AT)lafn.org>, who
tried out all the online services and sent me his reviews. Thanks, David! I
don't have any information about commercial services in countries other than
the US.

CompuServe has a very active "Diabetes Forum." In many respects, it is the
single most comprehensive online resource for diabetics, featuring active
participation from several dozen countries, an extensive document library,
and an extensive software library. The moderators ("sysops") are quick to
pounce on misinformation and either correct it or delete it. No flaming
allowed. As of late 1995 the main drawback to CIS is price; even under a new
pricing policy, accessing the Diabetes Forum just 20 minutes a day could
result in charges of US$30 per month.

America Online has a diabetes support area. It is newer and smaller than
Compuserve's, but growing. The health forum has a number of information files
on diabetes which users can read and download. These files generally contain
good advice and some explanation, but not in-depth explanation.

Also on AOL, each Sunday evening at 8:30 Eastern Time (US) a diabetes support
group meets in a "private room" named "Diabetes". For more information, email
Jim Lewis <jblewis(AT)aol.com>.

Prodigy has a relatively small but active and very friendly support group
accessed by "jumping" to "Medical Support BB" and then selecting "diabetes"
as the bookmark configuration. The board is monitored by several CDEs.
Although there is some discussion of scientific research, etc., the
preponderance of posts concerns support for people having trouble with
self-management. This is an excellent place for newly-diagnosed diabetics who
still need a lot of basic information and emotional support. Moderated (no
flaming allowed).

Delphi has an active diabetes support forum, accessed by typing GO REL DIA.
Lisa Crawford <LISA_POOH(AT)delphi.com> is the host and forum manager.

Genie has a miniscule diabetes support area, configured as an RT ("Round
Table," Genie's term for BB). As of May 1995, traffic was at the rate of a
dozen posts per week.

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: FTP

Demon Internet Services, a UK service provider, donated FTP space for
diabetes-related materials due to the urging and coordination of Ian
Preece <ianp(AT)darktower.com>. This cooperative endeavor was launched
with an empty directory in June 1994.

FTP has taken a back seat to the WWW. However, this site is one of the
very few soliciting donations as a cooperative endeavour.

Using the World Wide Web will be the easiest access to ftp for most new
users:

  ftp://ftp.demon.co.uk/pub/diabetes/

You can also use a traditional FTP program.

To submit material, upload it to the "incoming" directory. After making
a submission, send email to Ian Preece <ianp(AT)darktower.com> telling him
about the file you have submitted.

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: World Wide Web

I list a few excellent starting points for diabetes information on the
web. The maintainers of these pages are putting a lot of effort into
providing good information and links to other sites, and I'm not going
to try to duplicate their work here.

One of the best starting points is Jeff Hitchcock's Children with
Diabetes. Don't judge Children with Diabetes by the title alone; it has
extensive links to diabetes information of all sorts and is by far the
most extensive compilation on diabetes that I've seen on the net.

   http://www.childrenwithdiabetes.com/

Rick Mendosa <mendosa(AT)cruzio.com> maintains a very extensive list of
online resources for diabetes, including many informational and
commercial web sites, and a list of BBSs. It is very likely the most
complete list available, and because it's simply a list, it is much
easier to read than sites with lots of complex internal links. Rick
also keeps one of the most thorough available lists of glycemic index
values for foods.

   http://www.mendosa.com

Another excellent compilation of links to diabetes-related web sites is
the Diabetes Monitor of the Midwest Diabetes Care Center. It's
maintained by William Quick and is exceptionally easy to navigate.

   http://www.diabetesmonitor.com

Yahoo has links on a huge variety of subjects, so if you want more than
just diabetes information you can shorten this URL:

   http://www.yahoo.com/Health/Diseases_and_Conditions/Diabetes

Ian Preece <ianp(AT)darktower.com> is maintaining a web site in
conjunction with the Demon FTP site described above:

   http://www.demon.co.uk/diabetic/

You can reach a WWW-formatted version of this FAQ via the URL

   http://www.faqs.org/faqs/diabetes/

or you can get the plain text by FTP from

   ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/diabetes/

The American Diabetes Association (ADA) has put its entire set of
Clinical Practice Recommendations online in full. For the most recent
version go to

   http://diabetes.org/cpr/

or start at the ADA home page and follow the link to "For Health Care
Professionals", then "Clinical Practice Recommendations".

Since these are oriented toward health care professionals, they provide
a wealth of detailed recommendations for actual health care practice.

Donald Lehn <dalehn@facstaff.wisc.edu> was probably the first to put a
server with diabetes information on the web. Lehn's Diabetes
Knowledgebase has been offline since August 1995, and is apparently
gone for good.

------------------------------

Subject: Online resources: other

Most online resources previously available via other means are now
available via the web. Since these are thoroughly cataloged by the best
of the diabetes web sites (see previous section on "Online resource:
World Wide Web), I've dropped this coverage from the FAQ.

------------------------------

Subject: Where can I mail order XYZ?

XYZ is most often blood glucose measurement strips, especially for those
who don't live near discount pharmacies and must pay cash for their
supplies. Mail order prices are not always lower than local prices.
Remember that there is an advantage to going to a single pharmacist for
all your drugs, if that pharmacist is knowledgeable about interactions
and tracks all the drugs you use. Adjustments will be slower if you mail
order. Never mail order unless you are certain about what you need.

That said, here are two starting points.

_Diabetes Forecast_ has a long advertising section, part of which is for
suppliers. Nowadays most list their web addresses in the ads. In
addition, each issue of _Diabetes Forecast_ contains a column
summarizing recommendations for ordering health supplies by mail.

Jeff Hitchcock's Children with Diabetes web site has links to quite a
list on suppliers with information online at
http://www.childrenwithdiabetes.com/d_06_900.htm.

I have removed the list formerly kept here because it was years out of
date and done better elsewhere. This leaves no information for those
outside the US, as the above links are mostly focused on US sources. In
the past, this has been much more of an issue in the US. However, web
search engines might be a great help -- googling "diabetes supplies
Australia", without the quotes, yields nearly a million hits. Just be
careful to evaluate what you find.

------------------------------

Subject: How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?

The ADA has local offices in many cities. Check your local phone book first.

To contact the national organization, call 1-800-232-3472 or +1 703 549 1500.
This will reach all departments. Or write

   American Diabetes Association
   1660 Duke Street
   Alexandria, VA 22314
   USA

The ADA offers aid to diabetic patients, books, and journals ranging
from general to research. All can be ordered by phone. They maintain
lists of physicians with special interest and/or training in diabetes.
New patients and their families needing advice are encouraged to call.
They may be able to help in dealing with bureaucratic problems.

The ADA is on the web at http://diabetes.org. The web site has a great
deal of useful information. It includes lists of ADA publications and
ordering information. One section that is particularly useful is the
ADA's Clinical Practice Recommendations, which are all online in full at

   http://diabetes.org/cpr/

or start at the ADA home page and follow the link to "For Health Care
Professionals", then "Clinical Practice Recommendations".

------------------------------

Subject: How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?

Check your phone book for a local office, or call 1-800-533-2873.

The JDF also has a web site at http://www.jdfcure.com/.

The JDF's motto is "finding a cure for diabetes", though apparently they only
mean for type 1 diabetes. They are rather obnoxious in their rejection of the
value of support and treatment other than a total cure. Despite this position,
the JDF in fact does a great deal of excellent support work.

------------------------------

Subject: How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?

    The British Diabetic Association
    10 Queen Anne Street
    London W1M 0BD
    Telephone 0171 323 1531  (+44 171 323 1531)
     CARELINE 0171 636 6112  for information about diabetes

The BDA produces a bi-monthly magazine for members called "Balance".
Membership is UKP 12 a year.

------------------------------

Subject: How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?

The CDA has local offices in many cities. Check your local phone book first.

To contact the national organization, call +1 416 363 3373, or write

        Canadian Diabetes Association
        15 Toronto St, Suite 800
        Toronto, Ontario  M5C 2E3
        Canada

In Canada, call 1-800-847-SCAN.

The CDA is on the web at http://www.diabetes.ca.

The B.C. - Yukon Division of the CDA maintains an information center on the
Vancouver Freenet. It includes contact information for regional divisions of
the CDA. See the section "Online resources: other".

------------------------------

Subject: What about diabetes organizations outside North America?

I can't list them unless someone sends me the information.

Ian Preece <ianp(AT)darktower.com> has started a list, which now has
contact info for several European organizations, at

   http://www.demon.co.uk/diabetic/orgs.html

------------------------------

Subject: How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?

UNOS (United Network of Organ Sharing) has a variety of information
concerning organ transplants and transplant centers. Contact UNOS at
(800)24-DONOR or +1 804 330 8602, or PO Box 13770, Richmond VA 23225, USA.

UNOS has a WWW page at

  http://www.unos.org

Email contact is Joel Newman <newmanjd(AT)comm5.unos.org>.

------------------------------

Subject: Could you recommend some good reading?

You mean to curl up with on the sofa? Oh, diabetes ... OK.

My favorite book is Mayer Davidson's _Diabetes Mellitus: Diagnosis and
Treatment_, published by Churchill Livingstone. Though written as a
medical text, anyone willing to plow through an occasional dense
passage and keep a dictionary handy will have no trouble with it. (See
below about medical terminology.) Being written mostly by a single
person, it is much better focussed than the "committee" books which are
so common. And it's very cheap for medical books, US$42 in 1994.

Charles Coughran <csc(AT)coast.ucsd.edu> recommends _Management of
Diabetes Mellitus Perspectives of Care Across the Lifespan_, Debra
Haire-Joshu (editor), Mosby Year Book, 1992, ISBN 0-8016-2429-0. He
says it's as good as Davidson, readable, and aimed at a similar audience.

Coughran and Steve Kirchoefer <swkirch(AT)chrisco.nrl.navy.mil> recommend
_Joslin's Diabetes Manual_ by Krall and Beaser, Lea&Febiger 1988.
Though somewhat lacking in consistency due to the multitude of writers,
it's a useful practical book. The Joslin Institute is world renowned
for its support of diabetes research and treatment, and the price of
the book is reasonable.

Coughran further recommends _Joslin's Diabetes Mellitus_ (13th edition)
edited by Kahn and Weir, 1994. It's another book that suffers a lack of
consistency due to the multitude of writers, but it contains a wealth
of information. Lots of biochemistry and also sections on practical
day-to-day management. Oriented toward health care professionals. 1068
pages, $125.

Terence Griffin <griffin(AT)cam.nist.gov> recommends _Therapy for
Diabetes Mellitus and Related Disorders_. It's a professional level book
compiled and published by the ADA, now in its second edition. See below
for ADA ordering information.

Steve Marschman <sc_marschman(AT)pnl.gov> recommends John Davidson's
_Clinical Diabetes Mellitus, A Problem-Oriented Approach_ (2nd
edition), published by Thieme Medical Publications, New York. Written
from a care-giver's perspective, it is an excellent technical resource
book with medical descriptions of diabetes mellitus, diagnosis,
treatment, complications, and concomitant problems. Price about US$150,
but often available used for much less. (As far as I know, the two
Davidsons, Mayer and John, are not related.)

The American Diabetes Association publishes a number of books with
basic diabetes information of various sorts -- self care, diet,
recipes, etc. Deb Martinson <llama(AT)drizzle.com> especially recommends
_The ADA Complete Guide to Diabetes_, about $6 in paperback and
published in 1996.  See the ADA's web site at

  http://www.diabetes.org

or use the phone numbers or address in the following section.

Any university library will have a large number of books on diabetes,
and they will be grouped together on the shelves. Go and browse. The
books mentioned above can be found in most university libraries.

The rest of what I have to talk about is periodicals. See the next
topic.

------------------------------

Subject: Could you recommend some good magazines?

_Diabetes Interview_ is a popular monthly tabloid with a variety of
news stories, interviews, and lots and lots of advertising. It's run by
a journalist, Scott King, and it shows. Authority, to this publication,
always lies in people they talk to. They don't appear to read
scientific or medical literature as the basis or support for stories.
They do publish research summaries, but these are at the newswire level
with no apparent critical reading. No critical commentary accompanies
interviews.

Publisher Scott King has pursued some valuable projects, such as
organizing letter-writing to Ann Landers after she tried to shove
dining-out diabetics into the closet -- Landers published King's own
excellent letter. He has certainly advanced the cause of open
discussion of diabetes in general. But _Diabetes Interview_ has been
sidetracked needlessly at times, such as by allocating seriously
inordinate abounts of space and attention to minor issues such as the
animal/human insulin debate. They also regularly run a paid
advertisement for an herbal product which claims to "restore pancreatic
function" -- probably an illegal claim in the US.

_Diabetes Interview_ offers a sample (one article per week) as an
electronic mailing list and many articles on their web site. See the
section on "Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists" for
information on the mailing list.

_Diabetes Interview_ subscription information: one year, US$20 in the
US, US$31 in CA and MX, $46 in other countries. Cancel after the first
issue if you don't like it

   Diabetes Interview
   3715 Balboa Street
   San Francisco, CA 94121
   http://www.diabetesworld.com
   phone: +1 415 387 4002
              US 800-234-1218

_Diabetes Self-Management_ is a bimonthly magazine containing generally
detailed articles oriented to helping patients with techniques and
skills -- diet, exercise, treatment, outlook, etc. They go into areas
not often covered, such as a recent series by Ann Williams on
low-vision tools and coping skills. The writers tend to have in-depth
knowledge of their fields and the information is well balanced. The
magazine emphasizes practical skills over basic knowledge, and spreads
itself a bit thin by trying to address itself to all diabetics. Those
who dislike Diabetes Forecast will find similar coverage in Diabetes
Self-Management but with more depth and aimed at a better educated
audience.

The _Diabetes Self-Management_ web site has full text of numerous
articles from back issues, about two articles from each issue.

_Diabetes Self-Management_ costs US$14/yr, or US$36/yr outside the US
and CA. To order, mail payment, call, or look on their website. They'll
send a free trial issue if you wish.

   Diabetes Self-Management
   P. O. Box 52890
   Boulder, CO 80322
   http://www.diabetes-self-mgmt.com/
   US phone: 800-234-0923

Everything else I have to recommend comes from the ADA (see section on
ADA).

Here's what the ADA says about its own publications:

    _Diabetes_ -- the world's most-cited journal of basic diabetes
    research brings you the latest findings from the world's top
    scientists.

    _Diabetes Care_ -- the premier journal of clinical diabetes research
    and treatment. _Diabetes Care_ keeps you current with original
    research reports, commentaries, and reviews.

    _Diabetes Reviews_ (in memoriam) -- the comprehensive but concise
    review articles in ADA's newest journal are a convenient way for
    the busy clinician to keep up-to-date on what's truly new in
    research. Sadly, Diabetes Reviews ceased publication at the end
    of 1999, a victim of the fact that medical libraries face a
    crisis of rising subscription costs but flat budgets. The seven
    volumes which were published are still an invaluable resource.

    _Diabetes Spectrum_ -- translates research into practice for nurses,
    dietitians, and other health-care professionals involved in patient
    education and counseling.

    _Clinical Diabetes_ -- For the primary-care physician as well as
    other health-care professionals, this newsletter offers articles
    and abstracts highlighting recent advances in diabetes treatment.

    _Diabetes Forecast_ -- ADA's magazine for patients and their
    families features advice on diet, exercise, and other lifestyle
    changes, plus the latest developments in new technology and
    research. It is a valuable tool for patient education.

Now for my own opinions.

_Diabetes Forecast_ is the mass market magazine, intended to be readable
by all literate diabetics. For US$24/year you can hardly go wrong. The
biggest problem with DF is that in the attempt to reach almost
everyone, it aims at a very low reading level -- perhaps eighth grade,
I'm not sure. This makes it tonally annoying and dilutes the
information content. Still, it contains useful information and is
excellent at promoting self-care and a positive self-image for persons
with diabetes.

_Diabetes Forecast_ is also one of the best places to look for
advertisements for diabetes-related products.

The remaining journals are of interest if you want to follow what is new
and under investigation in medical practice and research. The journals
vary in difficulty of reading. Though some knowledge of statistics and
chemistry helps, a general acquaintance with scientific method is
perhaps more important, and a smattering of familiarity with medical
terminology helps most. Luckily, medical terminology is basically
simple -- it mostly consists of putting together roots and affixes to
make specific terms. Learn a few dozen roots and you can make out most
of it. Try to have a dictionary at hand at first.

_Diabetes Care_ publishes papers on clinical research. I find many of
the papers to be interesting and applicable to my own management. With
the demise of _Diabetes Reviews_, DC plans to publish more review
articles as well.

_Diabetes_ is the ADA's journal primarily for basic research. Some of
the articles are interesting, but they run much more toward
biochemistry and mechanisms of metabolism. As important as basic
research is, few of the reports say little of value directly to
patients.

_Diabetes Spectrum_ is oriented toward health care practitioners.
It consists of reprints of important articles (sometimes several on
a topic) and summaries of related articles, plus original
commentaries from other authors. As such, it provides a broad
overview of topics for readers who don't have time to track down
lots of separate original articles. If you only have time to read
one technical publication, _Diabetes Spectrum_ is perhaps the best
choice -- the only competitor for this place is _Clinical Diabetes_.

_Clinical Diabetes_ contains focussed articles written specifically
for health care practitioners. It's very readable and to to the
point, another good choice for those wanting higher level reading
but not research articles.

The ADA has price structures for regular members and professional
members. A basic regular membership with _Diabetes Forecast_ is
US$24/year (in the US, $41.93 in Canada, $39 in Mexico, $49 elsewhere,
all in US funds). The other ADA journals will set you back about
US$90-120/year apiece. A professional membership allows you to pick and
choose journals at the listed rates; if you plan to get either
_Diabetes_ or _Diabetes Care_ you should enter a professional
membership to get the best prices. Credentials are not required for a
professional membership.

The ADA takes checks, money orders, Visa, Mastercard and American
Excess. Unfortunately, orders of books from outside the USA incur an
additional $15 shipping charge.

You can get more ADA info online, including an online catalog for all
books and magazines, at

  http://www.diabetes.org

Phone numbers

   1-800-232-3472
   +1 703 549 1500
   +1 703 549 6995 fax

or write

   American Diabetes Association
   Subscription Services
   1660 Duke Street
   Alexandria, VA 22314
   USA

------------------------------

Subject: Who did this?

Signature

Edward Reid <edward@paleo.org>
Tallahassee FL
--
Art works by Melynda Reid: http://paleo.org

Edward Reid - 31 Mar 2008 05:23 GMT
Archive-name: diabetes/faq/part5
Posting-Frequency: biweekly
Last-modified: 14 July 2005

Changes: see part 1 of the FAQ for a list of changes to all parts.

------------------------------

Subject: READ THIS FIRST

Copyright 1993-2005 by Edward Reid. Re-use beyond the fair use provisions
of copyright law and convention requires the author's permission.

Advice given in m.h.d is *never* medical advice. That includes this FAQ.
Never substitute advice from the net for a physician's care. Diabetes is a
critical health topic and you should always consult your physician or
personally understand the ramifications before taking any therapeutic action
based on advice found here or elsewhere on the net.

------------------------------

Subject: Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION (found in all parts)
  READ THIS FIRST
  Table of Contents
GENERAL (found in part 1)
  Where's the FAQ?
  What's this newsgroup like?
  Abuse of the newsgroup
  The newsgroup charter
  Newsgroup posting guidelines
  What is glucose? What does "bG" mean?
  What are mmol/L? How do I convert between mmol/L and mg/dl?
  What is c-peptide? What do c-peptide levels mean?
  What's type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
  Is it OK to discuss diabetes insipidus here? What is it?
  How about discussing hypoglycemia?
  Helping with the diagnosis (DM or hypoglycemia) and waiting
  Exercise and insulin
BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING (found in part 2)
  How accurate is my meter?
  Ouch! The cost of blood glucose measurement strips hurts my wallet!
  What do meters cost?
  Comparing blood glucose meters
  How can I download data from my meter?
  I've heard of a non-invasive bG meter -- the Dream Beam?
  What's HbA1c and what's it mean?
  Why is interpreting HbA1c values tricky?
  Who determined the HbA1c reaction rates and the consequences?
  HbA1c by mail
  Why is my morning bg high? What are dawn phenomenon, rebound,
    and Somogyi effect?
TREATMENT (found in part 3)
  My diabetic father isn't taking care of himself. What can I do?
  Managing adolescence, including the adult forms
  So-and-so eats sugar! Isn't that poison for diabetics?
  Insulin nomenclature
  What is Humalog / LysPro / lispro / ultrafast insulin?
  Travelling with insulin
  Injectors: Syringe and lancet reuse and disposal
  Injectors: Pens
  Injectors: Jets
  Insulin pumps
  Type 1 cures -- beta cell implants
  Type 1 cures -- pancreas transplants
  Type 2 cures -- barely a dream
  What's a glycemic index? How can I get a GI table for foods?
  Should I take a chromium supplement?
  I beat my wife! (and other aspects of hypoglycemia) (not yet written)
  Does falling blood glucose feel like hypoglycemia?
  Alcohol and diabetes
  Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum
  Has anybody heard of frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)?
  Gastroparesis
  Extreme insulin resistance
  What is pycnogenol? Where and how is it sold?
  What claims do the sales pitches make for pycnogenol?
  What's the real published scientific knowledge about pycnogenol?
  How reliable is the literature cited by the pycnogenol ads?
  What's the bottom line on pycnogenol?
  Pycnogenol references
SOURCES (found in part 4)
  Online resources: diabetes-related newsgroups
  Online resources: diabetes-related mailing lists
  Online resources: commercial services
  Online resources: FTP
  Online resources: World Wide Web
  Online resources: other
  Where can I mail order XYZ?
  How can I contact the American Diabetes Association (ADA) ?
  How can I contact the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) ?
  How can I contact the British Diabetic Association (BDA) ?
  How can I contact the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) ?
  What about diabetes organizations outside North America?
  How can I contact the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)?
  Could you recommend some good reading?
  Could you recommend some good magazines?
RESEARCH (found in part 5)
  What is the DCCT? What are the results?
  More details about the DCCT
  DCCT philosophy: what did it really show?
  Is aspartame dangerous?
IN CLOSING  (found in all parts)
  Who did this?

------------------------------

Subject: What is the DCCT? What are the results?

The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial was a large multi-center
trial involving over 1400 volunteer patients with type 1 diabetes. It
began in 1983, ramped up to full speed by 1989, and ended early in 1993
when the investigators felt the results were clear. The volunteers were
all undergoing "standard" treatment when they were recruited, meaning
one or two injections per day. They were randomly assigned to two
groups. One group continued as before. The other group received
intensive treatment aimed at achieving blood glucose (bG) profiles as
clos