Before
& After:
14 Patients Share Their Experiences /
Read It Online!
Get
Entire
Chapter
(85K) Tip:
To save without viewing, right-click and choose
Save Target As from pop-up menu |
Thomas G. Watkins is
a forty-year-old journalist. His diabetes was diagnosed
twenty-three years ago. For the past nine years he's
been following one of the treatment protocols described
in this book for people who require insulin.
"Following the instructions
of several diabetologists over a period of years,
I had the illness 'under control.' At least that's
what they told me. After all, I was taking two shots
a day, and adjusting my insulin doses depending on
urine test results, and later on blood sugar measurements.
I was also following the common recommendation that
carbohydrates fill at least 60 percent of my caloric
intake.
"But
something was not right; my life was not 'relatively
normal' enough. I was avoiding heavy exercise for
fear of my blood sugar dropping too low. My meal schedule
was inflexible. I still had to eat breakfast, lunch,
and dinner even when I wasn't hungry. Aware that recent
research seemed to associate high blood sugars with
an increased risk of long-term complications, I tried
to keep blood sugars normal, but wound up seesawing
daily between lows and highs. By the end of 1986,
I had ballooned to 189 pounds and was at a loss for
how to lose weight. My 'good control' regimen had
left me feeling out of control. Clearly, something
had to be done.
"In that year, I attended
a meeting of medical writers at which Dr. Bernstein
spoke. It became clear that his credentials were impressive.
He himself at that time had lived with the disease
for four decades and was nearly free of complications.
His approach had been formulated largely through self-experimentation.
His knowledge of the medical literature was encyclopedic.
Some of his proposals were heretical; he attacked
the usual dietary recommendation and challenged dogma
surrounding such basics as how insulin ought to be
injected. But it seemed like he was doing something
right. During his talk, I had to use the bathroom
twice; he didn't.
"I
decided to spend a day at his office to gather material
for an article to be published in the Medical
Tribune. There, his independence of thought became
clear. 'Brittle' diabetes [entailing an endless sequence
of wide blood sugar fluctuations] was a misnomer that
usually indicated an inadequate treatment plan or
poor training, more than any inherent physical deficit,
he said. Normal blood sugars round-the-clock were
not just an elusive goal, but were frequently achievable,
if the diabetic had been taught the proper techniques.
Beyond treatment goals, he armed his patients with
straightforward methods to attain them. His secret:
small doses of medication resulted in small mistakes
that were easily correctable.
"By then, my interest
had become more personal than journalistic. In early
1987, still wary, I decided to give it a try. The
first thing I noticed was that this doctor visit was
unlike any previous ones. Most had lasted about 15
minutes. This took 8 hours. Others said I had no complications;
Dr. Bernstein found several. Most said my blood sugars
were just fine; Dr. Bernstein recommended I make changes
to flatten them out and to lower my weight. Those
hours were spent detailing the intricacies involved
in controlling blood sugar. His whole approach blasted
the theory espoused by my first doctor—that I should
depend on him to dole out whatever information I needed.
Dr. Bernstein made it clear that for diabetics to
control their disease they needed to know as much
as their doctors did about the disease.
"Two arguments commonly
rendered against tight-control regimens are that they
increase the incidence of low blood sugar reactions
and that they cause subjects to gain weight. I have
found the opposite to be true: I shed about 9 pounds
within four months after my first visit, and, years
later, I have kept them off. And, once the guesswork
of how much to inject was replaced by simple calculations,
my blood sugar levels became more predictable.
"For the first time
since I was diagnosed, I felt truly in control. I
no longer am at the mercy of wide mood swings that
mirror wide swings in blood sugar. Though I remain
dependent on insulin and all the paraphernalia that
accompany its use, I feel more independent than ever.
I am comfortable traveling to isolated areas of the
world, spending an hour scuba diving, or hiking in
the wilderness, without fear of being sidetracked
by diabetes. Now, if I feel like skipping breakfast,
or lunch, or dinner, I do so without hesitation.
"I
no longer have delayed stomach-emptying, which can
cause very low blood sugars right after a meal followed
by high blood sugars many hours later. My cardiac
neuropathy, which is associated with an increased
risk for early death, has reversed. Though I eat more
fat and protein than before, my blood lipids have
improved and are now well within normal ranges. My
glycosylated hemoglobin measurements, used by life
insurance companies to detect diabetics among applicants,
would no longer give me away. Most important, I now
feel well.
"Many doctors will
not embrace Dr. Bernstein's work, for the simple reason
that Dr. Bernstein demands a commitment of time, energy,
and knowledge not only from patients, but from physicians.
Diabetics are the bread and butter of many practices.
For decades, the usual treatment scenario has been
a blood test, a short interview, a prescription for
a one-month supply of needles, a handshake, and a
bill. But that is changing. In the past few years,
evidence has been amassing in support of Dr. Bernstein's
modus operandi. No longer is the old high-carbohydrate
diet unquestioned; more and more doctors are espousing
a multiple-shot regimen controlled by the patients
themselves. Most important, though, tight control
is being associated with fewer of the diabetic complications
that can ravage every major organ system in the body.
Dr. Bernstein's scheme provided me with the tools
not only to obtain normal blood sugars, but to regain
a feeling of control I had not had since before I
was diagnosed."
Back
to Before & After