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Hypoglycemia

Hypoglycemia is low blood sugar.


  • The life of the flesh is in the blood. - 72
  • Healthy people are better able to survive and tend to live longer. - 720
  • Too much sugar can make you fat.
    Sugar is a natural preservative.
    Sugar beets supply half the American sugar, with the rest coming from sugar cane. - 606
  • Harvested sugarcane is more than 50 percent water. The average sugarcane stalk weighs about 3 pounds, and contains about 0.3 pounds (0.14 kilograms) of sugar. - 607
  • The sugar cane must be crushed within 24 hours of being cut. - 608
  • Sugar processors add lime to the cane juice to coagulate the impurities. The juice is then neutralised with sulphur dioxide to settle out impurities. Sugar producers also add sodium hydrogen sulphate at the final stages of boiling. This releases sulphur dioxide into the juice and lightens the color of the final product. (Note: A high sulphur content often remains in the final product.)

    People who are sensitive to sulfur may have an allergic reaction to the "pure white sugar". - 609
  Key words: Blood, Blood-Glucose, Blood-Sugar, Chronic-Disease, Endocrine, Health, Hypoglycemia, Sugar  

  Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's)  

Question: What is blood?
  Answer: Blood is a body fluid that is pumped by the heart, and circulates through the arteries and veins. - 66

Question: What is the purpose of blood?
  Answer: Blood carries oxygen and nutrients to and waste materials away from all body tissues. - 67

Question: What is health?
  Answer: Health is freedom from physical injury, disease and pain. - 201


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How Blood Works
 How Blood Works

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National Institutes of Health
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Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Interagency Coordinating Committee
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Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
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National Council on Disability
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  Comments and Quotes  

I have a question about the many cultured milk products that now contain added nonfat milk ( I suppose to provide more body or a thicker texture ). I am having a difficult time finding products that have not been "adulterated" in this manner, especially with store brands, which are more affordable for me, There are at present no warning labels indicating the presence of lactose in this type of product. I also am not sure if the "pure" cultured milk products may still contain a small amount of lactose (even tiny amounts affect me). I would like to be able to use these foods for the calcium benefit. Could you give me any information on this? Is lactose content (as opposed to "milk products") going to be included in the new labeling guidelines for 2006? I am especially concerned about this because my mother has severe osteoporosis and I want to follow a preventative diet. - Cathleen Rooks - 141


Many people think the terms food allergy and food intolerance mean the same thing; however, they do not. A food intolerance is an adverse food-induced reaction that does not involve the immune system. Lactose intolerance is an example. A person with lactose intolerance lacks an enzyme that is needed to digest milk sugar. When the person eats milk products, symptoms such as gas, bloating, and abdominal pain may occur. A food allergy occurs when the immune system reacts to a certain food. The most common form of an immune system reaction occurs when the body creates IgE antibodies to food protein. When these IgE antibodies react with the food, histamine and other chemicals (called mediators) are released from various cells within the body. These mediators cause hives, asthma, or other symptoms of an allergic reaction. Milk-allergic individuals can safely consume pure lactose, but must avoid nonfat milk and all other products that contain milk protein. The new labeling law will require that any food containing milk protein be labeled as a milk allergen. Milk sugar (lactose) would not fall under this law unless it also contained some milk protein. - Debbie Scherrer - 142


There's a point at which the treatment cannot bring about a cure. - Dr. Gene Rudd - 168




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