Now available on AUDIO CD
Click Here to order AUDIO CD

Click Here to order NOW
Click Here to watch testimonials
Click Here to read testimonials
Click Here to read more
Click Here to find a store near you.

Click Here to order Bad Sugar DVDs
 

Sign up to receive our
FREE Newsletters

Monthly e-newsletter about lifestyle, wellness and preventing diseases
Updates about upcoming events pertaining to the show
Latest information about Ms. Tanyi's speaking engagement schedule
Email:  

Contact Information

R. Tanyi, LLC

TV Show Department
PO Box 1185
Loma Linda, CA, 92354

tel:  (909) 495-3559
fax: (909) 799-9093 info@preventivecareweekly.com
 

Now available on AUDIO CD
Click Here to order AUDIO CD

Click Here to order NOW
Click Here to watch testimonials
Click Here to read testimonials
Click Here to read more
Click Here to find a store near you.

Click Here to order Bad Sugar DVDs

 

Educational Materials

Researchers Shed Light on Hypoglycemic Unawareness

Update provided by JDRF
New York, NY, July 19, 2006 — JDRF-funded researchers have identified a potential mechanism that may shed light on why some people with diabetes lose the ability to recognize and correct hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). Gaining a better understanding of why this happens could lead to the development of treatments for this very serious complication, which can cause a loss of consciousness, and even death.

In most people, the brain is able to sense warning signs when blood sugar is getting too low and react by triggering the release of hormones that bring sugar up to normal levels. But in many people with diabetes this natural mechanism becomes muted.  The phenomenon, known as hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure, makes people with diabetes who have frequent blood sugar dips unaware of impending low blood sugar and unable to take proper steps (such as eating) to prevent further episodes.

Now researchers at the JDRF Yale Center for the Study of Hypoglycemia may be closer to understanding what leads to the silencing of hypoglycemic warnings. In the study, Dr. Rory McCrimmon and colleagues found that when a protein in the brain, urocortin I, is produced at abnormally high levels, it may contribute to the inability to produce a normal response to lows.

The researchers demonstrated in rats that a key glucose-sensing region of the brain loses sensitivity after being exposed to urocortin I. This loss of sensitivity persists for at least 24 hours.

The discovery, reported in the Journal of Clinical Investigation ( Vol. 116, No. 6, p. 1723, 2006 ), is an important step toward clinical strategies that will allow diabetes patients to sense when blood sugar has dropped too low by blocking urocortin I's effect in the brain. 

In a commentary accompanying the article, Philip Cryer of the Washington University School of Medicine noted that hypoglycemia caused inadvertently by insulin treatment is the “limiting factor” in good glucose control. He added that the problem will likely be solved in the short term by an artificial pancreas until the regeneration or replacement of “glucose-responsive, insulin-secreting cells becomes feasible for widespread use.”

Click here to comment on this article in our Community Forum


About Our Documentaries  |  About "Bad Sugar"  |   "Bad Sugar" DVD Catalog    |   "Bad Sugar" Trailer and Promo Videos
TV Coverage Areas  |  Event Schedule  |  Premier Night Pictures  |  Promotional Materials  |  Become A Member
Sponsorship  |  Donations and Gifts Given  |  Participate In Our Show   |  Order DVD Online  |   Community Forum
About Our Company  |   Mission Statement  |  Ruth Brief Biography  |  Press Releases  |  In The Media
Leave Feedback   |   Booking Information  |  Advertisers  |  Contact Our Experts  | Educational Center
Contact Us   |  Privacy Policy / Terms of Use   |   Disclaimer