Tirdun
Muse
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2006
- Messages
- 637
HEALT-02: A combination of amino acids and vegetable enzymes will be introduced to help diabetes.
I guess complaining about the vague word "help" as well as the enormous range of words like "amino acid" and "enzyme" would be redundant.
There are no breakthrough papers on diabetes in 1997 in Pubmed.
The words vegetable and enzyme only appear ONCE in any of these diabetes medical publications in the 1990s, and here is the excerpt:
Diabetes Care, Vol 14, Issue 12 1115-1125, Copyright © 1991 by American Diabetes Association
G Riccardi and AA Rivellese
Institute of Internal Medicine and Metabolic Diseases, Second Medical School, University of Naples, Italy.
The fiber content and physical form of the food can influence the accessibility of nutrients by digestive enzymes, thus delaying digestion and absorption. The identification of these foods with a low-glycemic response would help enlarge the list of foods particularly suitable for diabetic patients.
Other Research
Pubmed and the ADA describe numerous types of research into diabetes, including something called Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE). There's research going back quite a ways, but here's one from 1986
and 1980.
Current State of Diabetes Care
If there was a breakthrough in 1997, surely we'd still be hearing about it today:
Help = Prevention
The ADA (diabetes.org) says that diet, exercise and awareness are keys to preventing Diabetes. Amidst the food information, there is nothing describing what "enzymes" might do if ingested.
Help = Treatment
There is no mention of anything vegetable or amino related when it comes to treatment. The standard treatments are diet/exercise, medication and insulin depending on the type (I/II) and severity.
Help = Vaccine
There is none, and nothing in Pubmed to suggest one in 1997 or any other date.
Help = Cure
There is none, and nothing in Pubmed to suggest one in 1997 or any other date.
Diagnosis Prevelance
Here is a chart showing the prevelance of diabetes diagnosis in the USA. There is no statistical change in or after 1997, the rate steadily keeps going up.
My conclusion would be WRONG.
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