ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2008

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Help for Diabetes
by author Patrick Quaile

Supplements can help diabetics regulate blood sugar levels. In particular, vanadyl sulphate and chromium are effective individually or in formulas that also include herbal extracts and micronutrients. Research supports their use to effectively maintain optimal blood sugar levels and protect again diabetic neuropathy (numbness).

Now available are combinations of the minerals vanadyl sulphate and chromium polynicotinate with herbal extracts formulated to reduce blood sugar levels and insulin resistance and promote insulin production.

Vanadyl Sulphate

Studies in animals with and without diabetes suggest that vanadium may have an insulin-like effect, reducing blood sugar levels. Based on these findings, preliminary studies involving humans have been conducted with promising results. Doctors at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital found that vanadyl sulphate promotes insulin action by three mechanisms:

  • directly mimicking insulin action,
  • enhancing insulin sensitivity, and
  • prolonging insulin biological response.

In Japan, researchers reported success with animal studies involving diabetic rats and vanadyl sulphate. When administered in high doses, vanadyl sulphate was shown to decrease blood glucose level by 67 percent within two days, remaining low for at least 12 weeks without affecting low plasma insulin levels. However, no meaningful double-blind placebo-controlled human studies on vanadium, as a sole treatment for diabetes, have yet been reported.

Chromium Polynicotinate

Chromium supplements have been shown to effectively maintain insulin function by activating insulin receptor cells. Chromium serves as an assistant to insulin (technically, a cofactor) to “open the door” to the cell membrane, thus allowing glucose to enter the cell.

In 2004 French researchers reviewed the use of chromium and other minerals in preventing diabetic complications. Results showed that dietary supplementation with micro-nutrients may be used to complement classical therapies. They stated, however, that supplementation would be more effective when a deficiency in these micronutrients exists.

According to supplementwatch.com, more than 90 percent of North American diets fail to provide the recommended amount of chromium, so supplementation with chromium may indeed be necessary.

Herbal Extracts

Plants and plant extracts have long been used in the treatment of diabetes. The herbs used differ from culture to culture, all with varying therapeutic effects.

Italian researchers at the University of Bologna reported, in 2004, the results of a survey they conducted among 685 herbalists. The survey asked about the herbal remedies and dietary supplements they recommend as a “natural” treatment to control glycemia. Italian herbalists reported some of the most frequently suggested herbal remedies for glycemia were gymnema, fenugreek, bilberry, garlic, dandelion, and bitter melon.

Among the most frequently recommended dietary supplements were vanadium and chromium. Researchers concluded that the majority of the products recommended by Italian herbalists may be efficacious in reducing glycemia but more investigation is needed.

Although vanadyl sulphate, chromium, and herbal extracts may help with symptoms of diabetes, caution in their use is important. Because diabetes is a very serious disease, please seek professional advice before supplementing.

Patrick Quaile is a health researcher with 22 years of experience in the health food industry.

Source: alive #274, August 2005

Back to top

See Related Content
Diabetes: An Aboriginal Epidemic
Statistics show high rates of diabetes mellitus (types I and II) among aboriginal peoples. However, it is not the diabetes, but the complications of the disease, which kill.
The Diabetes Debate
Over 10 million people in North America have been diagnosed with diabetes and another eight million don’t know they have it yet. That means that one out of 20 North Americans is afflicted with the diseas.
Caring for Your Diabetic Feet
Diabetes is the leading cause of foot amputations not related to injuries. Each year, thousands of diabetics have to learn to live without one of their precious limbs.
Diabetic Discipline–10 Basic Rules
1.Be aware of what you eat. Diabetics convert everything they eat, even fat and protein, into sugar. The more they eat, the more sugar they have in their systems. The answer is to curb eating indulgence. 2.Don’t overeat.
Sweet Conspiracy
Hungry, Jenny ate four teaspoons of peanut butter straight from the jar. Within minutes she became hyperactive. Sound familiar? In these four teaspoons of grocery store-bought peanut butter, Jenny just ate one whole teaspoon of sugar..
The 21st-Century Epidemic
Diabetes is one of the biggest drains of our society’s resources –both financial and human. The total economic toll of diabetes in Canada is an absolutely staggering excess of over $10 billion annually.
The Stress and Diabetes Link
Diabetes is a disease of civilization. It is a disease of unhealthy eating patterns, low levels of physical activity, and chronic emotional stress. Canada’s aboriginal people provide a dramatic example. A few decades ago, diabetes was virtually unknown among the Cree nation of northwestern Ontario.
Sweet Little Lies
Consumers have filed a $350 million class action against the world’s most-used chemical sweetener in a bid to expose aspartame’s deadly side effects.
Diabetes and Metabolism
Dr. Boyd Eaton, an expert in the diet of early man, believes that the less you eat like your ancestors, the more susceptible you’ll be to many of the diseases of modern civilization-heart disease, arthritis, cancer, and diabetes.
Dealing with Diabetes
In the past 30 years, the rates of those diagnosed with diabetes, in both the young and old, have increased at such an alarming pace that it is now considered a healthcare epidemic. The World Health Organization says the situation is serious worldwide, with more than 177 million people currently diagnosed with diabetes.
Fibre-Licious
The increasing age of our population puts more people at risk of diabetes, but poor diet and lack of exercise are also contributing factors. Greater understanding of the risk factors for this disease can prevent a diabetes diagnosis.
The News About Chromium
Chromium is an essential micronutrient required for proper insulin function, healthy blood-sugar levels, and carbohydrate, fat, and protein metabolism. However, many North Americans are deficient because of poor diets, that is, over-consumption of simple carbohydrates and refined sugars that are lacking in chromium.
Full of Beans
Blood sugar levels are easy to manage with a diet that focuses on whole foods and beans, which consistently appear on the low end of the glycemic index (a measure of how a given food will raise blood sugar when compared to pure glucose). Beans are an excellent source of protein, but they also contain protective fibre; for example, one cup (250 mL) of chickpeas provides 11 grams of fibre.
Sweet Talk
Medical researchers say we have more control over our blood sugar levels than we may realize. Scores of published studies support the use of a variety of nutritional and herbal supplements in combination with a high-fibre, nutritionally balanced diet as the best natural approach to blood sugar control.
Eating Our Way to a New Epidemic
A surge in obesity in North America and a sedentary lifestyle are two of the major factors contributing to this rising epidemic. People are literally poisoning themselves by eating excessive amounts of all the wrong foods. Products such as refined, sugared, processed and caffeinated carbohydrates are causing the blood sugar of many to become dangerously uncontrollable.
Diabetes Dilemma
Diabetes is now considered a public health problem of enormous proportions. The most effective treatment of diabetes requires the utilization of lifestyle, dietary, and nutritional supplement strategies. Controlling blood sugar levels and promoting good health with natural medicine are quite simple.
Unscramble the Number
Until relatively recently, experts incorrectly assumed that all simple carbohydrates digested quickly, causing a rapid rise in blood sugar, and that all starches digested slowly, causing a gradual rise in blood sugar. High blood sugar and insulin levels have been associated with insulin resistance, hypertension, strokes, and cardiovascular disease.
Pet Therapy
“He’s saved my life so many times,” my mom says to me. “He’s figured out when my blood sugars are low.” Living with diabetes, my mom often enters a state called hypoglycemic unawareness, in which she can’t recognize when her blood sugar levels become dangerously low—but her beloved Maltese Cross Paddy can.
Hanging Down Diabeties
This month’s Research Watch examines the growing body of research linking a mother’s weight before, during, and after pregnancy to the rising rates of type 2 diabetes.
Here We Go Round the Mulberry Leaf
Many people associate mulberry with the Mother Goose rhyme that goes: “Here we go round the mulberry bush,” yet this plant has a much longer history of use.

Back to top