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Type II: Essential Nutrient, Nutraceutical, and Functional Food considerations
Type II: Essential Nutrient, Nutraceutical, and Functional Food considerations
Integrated Healthcare Practitioner, issue 18
By:
Ronald Reichert, N.D., Director for Scientific Affairs, CCFM
Type 2 diabetes is a complicated metabolic disease that affects 24 million Americans (Marrero 2009). In Canada, it is one of the more rapidly developing disorders, with over 60,000 new cases diagnosed annually (Health Canada 2005). While current research encourages the use of prescription medications and lifestyle changes in the management of this disorder, emerging scientific evidence strongly suggests that nutraceuticals and functional foods have an important role to play in the both the primary management and adjunctive treatment of Type 2 diabetes.
TYPE 2 DIABETES AND MINERALS
ChromiumChromium is an essential trace element whose primary function is to enhance the effectiveness of insulin. It is also present in foodstuffs as trivalent chromium (Cr 3+). Trivalent chromium along with nicotinic acid and an oligopeptide (i.e. chromodulin), together form an organic compound called glucose tolerance factor (GTF), which in turn mediates the effects of insulin and supports transport of glucose across cellular membranes (Jamison 2003).
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Integrated Healthcare Practitioner
Ronald Reichert, N.D.
Director for Scientific Affairs, CCFM
Since earning his doctorate degree in Naturopathic Medicine from Bastyr University in 1989, Dr. Reichert has been in private practice and has also worked as an expert consultant to the natural health products industry. Dr. Reichert was the Naturopathic physician on staff for 3 years at the prestigious Tzu Chi Institute for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at Vancouver General Hospital.