Post
by ofonorow » Wed Dec 19, 2012 9:39 am
Thank you johnwen. Unfortunately, today was frustrating. Beside having a "broken" meter, probably low battery, (but no warning), showed me that cortisol (stress!) can affect this experiment!
So today I take my glass of water - and then realized I am an hour early (sigh.. circadian rhythms) and also realized that 4.4 g of sodium ascorbate doesn't equal 4.4 grams of ascorbic acid!? Stress.
The next base line reading 10 minutes later after the water is up about 20 points! I was going to go ahead anyway an hour early, but took another "baseline" - up +262 points. Nothing but the orignal glass of water ingested!!???
Dec 19
6:55 a.m 132 mg/dl Glass of water
7:05 a.m 154 mg/dl Little stressed (Cortisol?) Think about sodium ascorbate, wrong start time
7:15 a.m.394 mg/dl Tried again to baseline. ? Meter? Battery? Bad Strip?
So I decided to wait the hour to match yesterday, but things are still screwy... Had to change meters (I got another one because I didn't trust some of my own measurements way back...)
7:50 162 mg/dl (half glass of water)
8:00 404 mg/dl ??????????? Meter apparently bad. Started using my wife's meter.
8:00 180 mg/dl New Meter (Same batch test strips)
So old meter reports 404, but same blood on new meter 180 ??? (Did I mention stress).
So today's sodium ascorbate measurements are on the new meter (same batch of test strips)
Also since the ratio of ascorbate to sodium in sodium ascorbate is 838/108, I ran a calculation that I needed 4.953 g of sodium ascorbate to get 4.4 grams of ascorbate.)
8:00 180 mg/dl New Meter (Same batch test strips)
8:10 a.m 172 mg/dl 4.95 DSM Sodium Ascorbate
8:15 a.m. 124 mg/dl (-48 @ 5 min) -48
8:20 a.m. 165 mg/dl (-7 @ 10 min) +41
8:25 a.m. 188 mg/dl (+16 @ 15 min) +23
8:30 a.m. 152 mg/dl (-20 @ 20 min) -36
8:35 a.m. 192 mg/dl (+20 @ 25 min) +40
8:40 a.m 157 mg/dl (-15 @ 30 min) -35
8:55 a.m. 146 mg/dl (-26 @ 45 min)
9:10 a.m. 149 mg/dl (-23 @ 60 min)
Assuming that today's numbers have any meaning, it does seem to validate the Hickey/Roberts info that ascorbic acid is absorbed through the stomach lining, because with sodium ascorbate, we don't see anything like the spike I saw for ascorbic acid yesterday. Yesterday, AA peaked +67 @ 20 minutes. With sodium ascorbate the readings peaked at +20 @25 minutes.
So we don't know - yet - whether the meter can read sodium ascorbate, or how long it takes to get into the blood stream. I think we can say that sodium ascorbate does seem to have a "lower glycemic index" than ascorbic acid. Less insulin, which would indicate that for dieters trying to minimize insulin, sodium ascorbate might be the way to go. This assumes the meter can read sodium ascorbate. HOW DO WE PROVE THIS? MAYBE DOUBLING THE SODIUM ASCORBATE TO SEE IF THE READINGS DOUBLE?
I will still try to do Lypo-C - for what its worth. Fingers sore, so may wait a day or two and buy new batteries. (Make start making double readings on the same blood - using two meters. Only issue is cost of the strips. About a buck a piece.)
Note: The reader faulting during the (2) 400 mg/dl readings, is not be good for regular diabetics. The manual says there will be a low battery warning. (I note there is a plug for a AC/DC adapter - that would eliminate the battery issue.)
Owen R. Fonorow
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