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Wed, 29 Dec 2004 23:09:03 EST |
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Extreme thirst and/or hunger is a commonly listed indication of diabetes or
pre-diabetes. In my own case, I was not a full blown diabetic, but was in the
pre-diabetic range, (although my doctor said my blood sugar was perfectly
normal!) and I had months of terrible dry mouth (but not thirst- it's not quite
the same thing) until I figured it out. When I got my blood sugars
consistently down into the 90's to low 100's range, the dry mouth vanished. Bernstein
(Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution) says he has seen patients develop
diabetic complications with sugars that run in the 120 range. Currently the cut-off
number for diagnosing diabetes is 2 fasting readings of 125 or higher.
HTH
Maddy Mason
Hudson Valley, NY
In a message dated 12/27/2004 4:00:14 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, Stardust
<[log in to unmask] writes:
I have a colleague who is always complaining about having dry mouth. She
has seen a number of doctor and no one can tell her what is causing this.
She's on the SAD, she has no desire to try the paleo diet, she's overweight,
she drinks a lot of water on a daily basis and looks bloated to me. The
worst part of it is that her fluid out-take is so minimal compared to her
in-take.
Any suggestions on what is causing Dry mouth?
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