scholarly journals H pylori eradication and strict diet regimen`s synergetic effect on glycemic state in type two diabetics on insulin therapy

Author(s):  
Ehab Kamal ◽  
Maha Saber ◽  
Eitedal Daoud ◽  
Mohamed AbdAllah ◽  
Hanan Ezelarab ◽  
...  
AYUSHDHARA ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 3453-3456
Author(s):  
Suyesh Partap Singh ◽  
Manish Grover ◽  
Ajeet Partap Singh

In India, 1 out of 10 couples suffers from infertility are owing to impaired spermatozoa production or its function, impaired sperm delivery, improper ejaculation, due to sedentary life styles and day to day stress nowadays. Male infertility can be defined as an inability to induce conception, due to defect in spermatozoic functions like low sperm count, unhealthy sperm production, low sperm motility and altered delivery of sperms due to altered physiology of male reproductive system. A 29-year-old married man was diagnosed with oligospermia, visited Shuddhi Ayurveda Clinics, Noida for his condition management and treated successfully with Ayurvedic drugs. This married couple was facing infertility issue from last 2-3 years. Patient was treated with Ayurvedic drugs and kept on strict diet monitoring for four months and results were counted in terms of improved total sperm count after treatment. Before treatment sperm count was 10 million per ml which got improved up to 90 million per ml after four months of Ayurvedic treatment with strict diet regimen. No any side effects were observed during the treatment period. Other morphological parameters of sperm were also found to be healthy and normal for fertility. From the results of this case report, Ayurvedic treatment is proved to be effective in the treatment of male infertility associated with oligospermia.


Author(s):  
Vsevolod Skvortsov

Insulin therapy is one of the most important methods of treating diabetes, and it is indispensable for type 1 diabetes. Thanks to insulin, diabetes has ceased to be a deadly disease, leading to death in a matter of months. For a number of years, until the discovery of insulin, diabetes was an almost incurable disease. Adherence to a strict diet with a restriction of carbohydrates was considered the only method of treatment, however, this diet led to the exhaustion of already weakened patients, and helped to prolong life for only a few years. Scientists from different countries unsuccessfully tried to solve this problem by conducting numerous experiments on animals, and only at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries the hope of success appeared. In 1889, the famous scientist Oskar Minkowski (1858-1931) found that diabetes would certainly develop as a result of the removal of the dog’s pancreas. Thus, it became clear that the pancreas produces not only digestive enzymes, but also some other specific substance that prevents the development of diabetes. It took years to isolate this substance, first called ayletin, and subsequently insulin, and finally, in 1922, a long-awaited breakthrough happened in this area. In 1923, the Nobel Prize in the nomination "Medicine and Physiology" was awarded to two scientists - Frederick Banting and John Macleod, and humanity received the long-awaited cure from diabetes thanks to their discovery.


Author(s):  
A. R. Crooker ◽  
W. G. Kraft ◽  
T. L. Beard ◽  
M. C. Myers

Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic, gram-negative bacterium found in the upper gastrointestinal tract of humans. There is strong evidence that H. pylori is important in the etiology of gastritis; the bacterium may also be a major predisposing cause of peptic ulceration. On the gastric mucosa, the organism exists as a spiral form with one to seven sheathed flagella at one (usually) or both poles. Short spirals were seen in the first successful culture of the organism in 1983. In 1984, Marshall and Warren reported a coccoid form in older cultures. Since that time, other workers have observed rod and coccal forms in vitro; coccoid forms predominate in cultures 3-7 days old. We sought to examine the growth cycle of H. pylori in prolonged culture and the mode of coccoid body formation.


Author(s):  
M. H. Chestnut ◽  
C. E. Catrenich

Helicobacter pylori is a non-invasive, Gram-negative spiral bacterium first identified in 1983, and subsequently implicated in the pathogenesis of gastroduodenal disease including gastritis and peptic ulcer disease. Cytotoxic activity, manifested by intracytoplasmic vacuolation of mammalian cells in vitro, was identified in 55% of H. pylori strains examined. The vacuoles increase in number and size during extended incubation, resulting in vacuolar and cellular degeneration after 24 h to 48 h. Vacuolation of gastric epithelial cells is also observed in vivo during infection by H. pylori. A high molecular weight, heat labile protein is believed to be responsible for vacuolation and to significantly contribute to the development of gastroduodenal disease in humans. The mechanism by which the cytotoxin exerts its effect is unknown, as is the intracellular origin of the vacuolar membrane and contents. Acridine orange is a membrane-permeant weak base that initially accumulates in low-pH compartments. We have used acridine orange accumulation in conjunction with confocal laser scanning microscopy of toxin-treated cells to begin probing the nature and origin of these vacuoles.


2000 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. H29-H29
Author(s):  
Vera D. Yoewono ◽  
E. Krinuhoni ◽  
W Marwoto ◽  
S.O. Sri Widodo

2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A81-A81
Author(s):  
J MARTIN ◽  
A POTTHOFF ◽  
M COMBERG ◽  
I SOBEKKLOCKE ◽  
S LEDIG ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A81-A81
Author(s):  
B NEU ◽  
R RAD ◽  
M NEUHOFER ◽  
C TRAUTWEIN ◽  
M GERHARD ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A55-A55
Author(s):  
N KIM ◽  
D WEEKS ◽  
J SHIN ◽  
D SCOTT ◽  
G SACHS
Keyword(s):  

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