Chapter 1 - Contrasting Type I and Type II Diabetes

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The first thing that you absolutely have to understand about type II diabetes is that it’s very different from type I . Now that may seem overly obvious, but there are a tremendous number of people who are considered medical experts whose understanding of this concept is dangerously incomplete. Consequently, and unfortunately, the information that they give us is erroneous and can actually cause the type II diabetic real and measurable harm, unnecessary suffering and even early death!

To help you understand these important differences, let’s start by defining some of the basic things type I and type II diabetes have in common, then, we’ll clearly delineate the differences so that you’ll have the understanding you’ll need to determine for yourself how valid any particular “expert’s” opinions and recommendations are.

Both type I and type II diabetics share some common symptoms: polydypsia, polyphasia, and polyuria – meaning constant thirst, constant hunger and a frequent need to urinate, respectively. These symptoms don’t just happen at random, on their own. There are specific body processes going on that make these symptoms occur.

Insulin, a substance manufactured and secreted by the pancreas, carries glucose, also known as blood sugar, out of the blood stream and into our cells. In type I diabetes, there’s not enough of this

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