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Benefits for Neuropathy
One of the most common complications of diabetes is diabetic neuropathy.
The high blood sugar levels in diabetics can cause damage to the arteries that
supply the nerves with blood and often damage to the sheath protecting the nerves.
This results in numbness, pins and needles, burning sensation and pain.
Diabetic
Neuropathy and Alpha Lipoic Acid
Though many studies had been conducted
overseas using ALA to treat diabetic patients, the Mayo Clinic recently conducted
a study with a Russian medical center to test ALA’s ability to help specifically
with diabetic neuropathy.
Half of the patients received five treatments
a week consisting of 600 mg of alpha lipoic acid in intravenous form, while the
others got a placebo. In just 2½ weeks, the alpha lipoic acid patients reported
-- and the researchers noted in examinations -- dramatic improvements in symptoms,
including a six-point drop in pain levels on a 10-point scale. "But it didn't
act only as a pain medication," says researcher and Mayo Clinic neurologist Peter
Dyck, MD. "Alpha lipoic acid seems to actually change the metabolism of the nerve
or blood supply to the nerve, and we noted some relief in symptoms."
His
study, reported in the March issue of Diabetes Care, involved 120 patients with
the most common form of diabetic neuropathy, which causes pain, numbness, and
a burning sensation and often leads to foot problems.
Recently, Dr. Dan
Ziegler and Dr. F. Arnold Gries at Heinrich Heine University in Dusselfdorf had
more exciting news to report about lipoic acid. They found that treatment with
lipoic acid actually stimulated the regeneration of nerve fibers in diabetics.
In less than three weeks of treatments, patients taking 600mg of lipoic acid daily
experienced a significant reduction in pain and numbness associated with neuropathy.
Antioxidant Home: Alpha Lipoic
Acid (ALA) |
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