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How Carbohydrates Ruin Your Health and
Wealth, and What You Can Do To Reverse the Onslaught of
Metabolic Syndrome.
2nd edition;
Softcover: 340 pages; Language: Russian;
ISBN: 0-9706796-2-9
People with
diabetes are told that there‘s no problem with consuming table
sugar ("...do not need to be restricted...") because it‘s
no different from all the other carbohydrates in their diet.
According to the American Diabetic Association, table sugar,
(a.k.a. sucrose) is perfectly fine in the diabetics‘ diet:
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"As sucrose does not increase glycemia
to a greater extent than isocaloric amounts of starch,
sucrose and sucrose-containing foods do not need to be
restricted by people with diabetes."
Diabetes
Care 26:S51-S61, 2003
American Diabetes Association, Inc. |
Translated from
doctor-speak into layman‘s language, it means: “Since table
sugar doesn‘t increase blood glucose levels any more than the
same amount of carbohydrates in vegetables, grains, legumes and
fruits, table sugar and food with added sugar do not need to be
restricted by people with diabetes.”
Indeed: once carbohydrates get digested—be it
bread, pasta, rice, or sugar—the blood absorbs nothing but
glucose, fructose, and galactose, the three basic “sugar”
molecules that feed the body with energy. The only difference is
that the table sugar absorbs into the blood faster than the
bread, the bread faster than the rice, and the rice faster than
the pasta. Everything else remains the same. So the message is:
eat, baby, eat— just don‘t forget to take a pill or some insulin
to counteract the glucose‘s effect on the impaired body.
That‘s despite one unquestionable fact: if you
suffer from the predominant (95%) type II diabetes, the moment
you stop consuming foods that convert into glucose, your blood
sugar plummets—and, technically, you no longer suffer from
diabetes. So the smartest, the simplest, and the most direct way
to get rid of diabetes and related complications is to
substantially reduce carbohydrates.
The results of the conventional approach isn‘t
pretty: over 25 million Americans suffer from diabetes
(one-third of them undiagnosed), and another 30 million are
considered prediabetics — some
of the diabetes' symptoms are already present, but not yet bad
enough to justify being treated.
This book is partially based on the author's own
experience with severe diabetes, which wasn‘t properly diagnosed
because, as so often happens in younger patients, his “fasting
blood sugar” wasn‘t high enough to diagnose diabetes despite
all of the obvious signs—weight gain, polyuria (frequent
urination), dry mouth, nerve damage, and other, less obvious
symptoms.
Why the book-length treatment for a problem
that fixes itself simply by reducing the carbs? Well, as with
everything else in life, success is in the details. There‘s much
more to disorders of carbohydrate metabolism than carbs.

Simulated cover in English. Slide the mouse pointer
over to see actual Russian-language overlay.
Author's note:
If you already have diabetes, or prediabetes, or
metabolic syndrome, or are overweight, then read Fiber Menace
and follow its nutritional advice to get a leg up to full
recovery.
It isn't anything like the Atkins Diet or South Beach,
because it's (a) age and health adjusted and balanced, (b) it
will not make your doctor faint, (c) and it's free of the
diet-breaking side effects, particular to these low-carb diets.
You'll soon notice that your HbA1C and triglycerides are
returning to normal, that your atherogenic index (the ratio of “bad” cholesterol to “good") has hit a sweet spot, that you are
losing weight, that you no longer need to take drugs, that you
mouth isn't as dry, that your blood pressure isn't as elevated,
that you aren't as fatigued, that you aren't making 3-4 trips to
the bathroom throughout the night, and that you are no longer
experiencing the brunt of other primary and secondary symptoms
of diabetes.
Good luck! Konstantin
Monastyrsky |