As I have pointed out before,
infections increase blood glucose levels drastically. I have noticed through careful observation that my infections are
rather chronic and can be present for a long time before they show any major
symptoms. I have occasionally had
flair-ups of mouth sores, inflammation and joint pain in various parts of my body. I have for a long time suspected latent
infections to be the cause. My
infections seem to be curable with heavy duty antibiotics, and the antibiotics
lower my blood glucose load, thus requiring an immediate drop in the amount of
insulin that I use. Overall, I rarely
use antibiotics.
Perhaps you have noticed more
signs of hypoglycemia than usual when taking antibiotics? In some cases, people are allergic to
Penicillin. Could some of these allergic reactions simply be the symptoms of
hypoglycemia? Some signs of
hypoglycemia include: sweating,
dizziness, palpitation, tremor, agitation, hunger, restlessness, headache,
seizures, confusion, disorientation, anxiety, fear, death, etc.
I have observed rapid hypoglycemic
action when using antibiotics. What I
observed was not mentioned on the antibiotics warning labels. The labels did warn of “False positive urine
glucose test results on urine test strips.”
I have observed this phenomenon myself.
I have to accept the warning as fact, but it may not be “false” after
all. If the antibiotics kill bacteria
(which caused the glucose load), and thus rapidly cause hypoglycemia, then
where does the glucose load end up? The blood is purged of the excess glucose. Since the blood purge does not occur with
insulin by storing it into fat, it may end up in the urine, resulting in a high
urine glucose level when using antibiotics.
Only after the diet and healthy
lifestyle issues have been fully tackled should antibiotics be considered as
the next step to curing diabetes.
Antibiotics are already being over prescribed, when a better diet and a
healthy lifestyle would be a better prescription for the prevention and curing
of disease. There are real dangers to
using, misusing, and overusing antibiotics though they may be necessary to cure
diabetes, it should be a seldom if not a one time event. Antibiotics should be treated with the
utmost respect, and only used when prescribed by qualified medical
professionals with consultation and under supervision.
Antibiotics do not kill all of a
particular infection, what survives will grow back later (with the proper
conditions) and be resistant to antibiotics.
To use antibiotics without
permanently correcting the diet and lifestyle issues will only guarantee that
the diabetic condition will come back and be much worse later. Uncontrolled blood glucose will bring it
back. I have explained all this in the relationship between sugars,
carbohydrates, blood glucose, and infections.