Open Access
Why Are Diabetic Patients Still Having Hyperglycemia despite Diet Regulation, Antiglycemic Medication and Insulin?
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of diabetes and metabolic disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2475-5451
DOI - 10.33140/ijdmd.04.02.03
Subject(s) - medicine , diabetes mellitus , western medicine , traditional chinese medicine , insulin , traditional medicine , intensive care medicine , disease , alternative medicine , type 2 diabetes , endocrinology , pathology
Introduction: Diabetes and its complications were responsible for 8.8% of deaths worldwide in 2017. Although WesternMedicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) share the diabetes treatment goals of reducing symptoms and preventingcomplications, their approaches to conceptualizing, diagnosing, and treating the disease are very different.Purpose: The aim of this study is to demonstrate the different gaps in the Western Medicine treatment for diabetes that canbe explained by Traditional Chinese Medicine, from an energy imbalance point of view.Methods: Through a case report of a 26-year-old male patient diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in 2016, the author analyzestwo approaches, Western and Traditional Chinese Medicine. The patient’s received analysis of all their:• eating habits,• use of high-concentrated medications,• use of microwave ovens,• quantity and temperature of water intake, and• Quantity of sleep.All these items were analyzed according to Traditional Chinese Medicine. Despite treatment with diet along with the use ofantiglycemic medications and insulin, the patient’s glycemia was still high. Use of the Western Medicine approach achieveda 750 mg/dl reading after 2 years (in September 2018).Results: In January 2019, a month and a half after the beginning of the treatment with Traditional Chinese Medicine, thepatient's glycemia dropped to 150 to 250 mg/dl.Conclusion: A more holistic view of the human body has major importance. A deeper comprehension of the energy’s behavior,including its relation to pathologies, creates different possibilities of treatment. The suspension of sugar and high-carbohydratefoods in the diabetic patient’s diet is not sufficient to control the patient glycemia alone. Still the use of high-concentratedmedications can be a factor to maintain the hyperglycemic state. This shows that the integration of Western Medicine andTraditional Chinese Medicine is important to better control the glycemia in diabetes patients.