Re: Thiamine lowers blood glucose in early T2DM by quite alot



Ellen K. <firstinitiallastname@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
<randy@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ce6ef7dc-4aa1-4871-9260-08717a7efe3b@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Ellen Wrote:
It looks like these studies are all saying thiamine helps tumor cells
*proliferate*, which I think is different than causing tumors to
*appear*.- Hide quoted text -

I didn't say otherwise.

I just wanted to clarify. Many abstracts are dense with scientific jargon
and easily misunderstood as a result.

Here's what I said:
Quote:
"My only caution is that there is some data that shows thiamine can
fuel cancer growth"

Since it's accepted that many might have cancer cells do we want to
fuel its growth?
I'm stating this as a caution, cause I'm truely excited about Trig's
finding.

One of the papers suggested that the low rate of certain cancers in
3rd world countries is due to dietary anti- thiamine substances in the
diet

I read it as more of a question than a statement, suggesting that research
be done on this.


Remember your taking a vitamin 10,000% increase from the RDA.

Randy


150 vs 1.5 isn't a 10,000% increase, it's an increase of about 99%.
The math is (150-1.5) / 1.5.

You forgot to multiply by 100 to turn it into a percentage :-) An
increase of 99% is roughly doubling something.

--
Chris Malcolm
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Thiamine lowers blood glucose in early T2DM by quite alot
    ... Since it's accepted that many might have cancer cells do we want to ... I'm stating this as a caution, cause I'm truely excited about Trig's ... 3rd world countries is due to dietary anti- thiamine substances in the ...
    (alt.support.diabetes)
  • Re: Thiamine lowers blood glucose in early T2DM by quite alot
    ... "My only caution is that there is some data that shows thiamine can ... Since it's accepted that many might have cancer cells do we want to ... I'm stating this as a caution, cause I'm truely excited about Trig's ...
    (alt.support.diabetes)