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BOOK REVIEWS


by Marilyn Helton

Greetings Readers, and welcome to the July issue of Book Reviews! I hope most of you have geared down to a more leisurely pace, and can indulge in some interesting summer reading.

Response to my survey about what you want to see reviewed in this column was ranged from veteran diabetics wanting more information on complications of the disease, to the newly diagnosed, seeking information on what foods to eat and how to cook them.

Almost all wanted more books on coping with the stress of living with diabetes, and more reading material having a motivational/spiritual focus. I've concluded that I should continue to review a variety of books on diabetes, with an emphasis on the newest ADA guidelines for nutrition, prevention and complications of the disease.

I'm extending my invitation for your continued reading requests, and I'm open to all suggestions. In the meantime, here's your summer buffet of "food for the mind."

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NUMB TOES AND OTHER WOES: MORE ON PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY, by John A. Senneff.

A sequel to John Senneff's Numb Toes and Aching Soles: Coping with Peripheral Neuropathy, ©1999, NUMB TOES AND OTHER WOES is jam-packed with new information for thousands of diabetics who suffer from peripheral neuropathy (PN), a debilitating nerve disorder.

The book begins with a wonderful tribute to John Senneff's work and achievement. In his preface, Richard D. Marks, Jr., MD (who also suffers from PN), states, "This new book will become my textbook and should be for every patient, caregiver or teacher of peripheral neuropathy." When you read Dr. Marks' poignant personal journey with PN, it will make you think long and hard about your own diabetes control and the possible consequences of a complication such as peripheral neuropathy.

In Numb Toes and Other Woes, Senneff narrows his focus to the many forms of treatments for providing pain relief. This detailed compendium of new information includes:

* Pain medications including antidepressants, anticonvulsants, antiarrhythmics, antispasmodics, and topicals.

* Current thinking on other medical therapies such as nerve blocks, H-Wave, PENS, TENS and ALTENS.

* Updated information on nutrient supplementation (vitamins and other natural substances can make a BIG difference!)

* Fresh insight on how exercise, magnets, acupuncture, hyperbaric oxygen, biofeedback, hypnosis and a host of other alternative and complementary strategies can work together to help relieve pain.

* And finally, how experimental therapies such a neurotrophic factors, gene therapy, stem cell technology, biologic mini-pumps and nerve disablement may offer significant treatment possibilities.
Numb Toes and Other Woes is a sobering yet inspiring new look at some of the unusual neuropathies and novel causes, drug causes, neuropathic pain, selection of a doctor and patient assistance, complementary and alternative strategies, as well as traditional medications and forms of pain relief. Highly recommended reading for all those suffering from peripheral neuropathy.

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DIABETES NUTRITION A to Z, WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT DIABETES NUTRITION-SIMPLY PUT, by Lea Ann Holzmeister, RD, CDE, and Patti B. Geil, MS, RD, FADA, CDE.

This book is the first reference available based on the American Diabetes Association's new 2001-2002 nutrition guidelines. Author Lee Ann Holzmeister was part of the team that established the new guidelines, bringing a variety of updated concepts about diabetes into the twenty-first century.

Topics focus on alcohol, carbohydrate counting (oh, how I wish everyone on the old "exchange" system could learn how to count carbs -- it really simplifies your nutritional life), diabetes medications, fast foods, food labels, gestational diabetes, the glycemic index (so very important in making your carbohydrate choices), herbals and supplements, "New Wave" nutrition, obesity, restaurant dining, travel, vegetarian diets, weight control, and more (there's more?).

Alphabetized listings provide the reader with quick and easy access to any subject, and the thorough, up-to-date information is a bonus for the newly diagnosed diabetic. If you're the type of reader who wants "more" on the subject, the resource lists, book titles and website references included at the end of most of the topics are extremely helpful.

I've reviewed hundreds of cookbooks and many, many books on diabetes for several years now, and Diabetes Nutrition A to Z is one of the most comprehensive sources of nutritional information presented in the simplest format. Whether you're looking for information on alcohol or vitamins, eye disease, nutrients, nerve damage or prevention tips, they're all packed into this 188-page book! Great for the newly diagnosed as well as those of us who thought we'd "read it all." Highly recommended.

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THE OTHER DIABETES -- LIVING AND EATING WELL WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES, by Elizabeth Hiser, MS, RD.

Did you know that more often than not, type 2 diabetes is characterized by too much rather than too little insulin? We are insulin-resistant, where type 1s are insulin-deficient. When my own MD gave me a C-peptide test, I was astonished to find that I had a system fully capable of producing large amounts of insulin. In fact, nine out of ten cases in the US are type 2 (once called "adult-onset") diabetes, which typically starts out with high insulin levels.

By now, most of us know the drill: Excess calories and a sedentary lifestyle are major contributors to type 2 diabetes; insulin resistance is the hallmark of the disease; and losing excess weight combined with regular exercise is necessary to avoid the most lethal complication of type 2 diabetes -- early death from heart disease.

Elizabeth Hiser, a health writer and one of the founding editors of EATING WELL MAGAZINE (a favorite of mine which is now out of publication), offers the reader a consumer guide to type 2 diabetes by debunking "quick-fix" diets that don't work, and "just thinking about exercise" more than actually doing it (did someone call my name?)

In The Other Diabetes, Hiser reviews the latest findings on fats, fiber, carbohydrates, alcohol and supplements, as well as recommending the optimal plan for controlling diabetes through a Mediterranean-style eating pattern, which she calls the Good Fat Diet. This eating pattern is based on extensive research supporting the fact that a diet rich in the monounsaturated and omega-3 fats is ideal for controlling both diabetes and heart disease. I've recently switched to the newer, more simplified carbohydrate counting for controlling my own diabetes, and was pleased to see that Ms. Hiser has included a section on this method.

Given the author's background in nutrition, there are many excellent recipes which fill the second half of the book. The "Breakfast Cakes" recipe, which incorporate nuts, cereal, buttermilk, and fresh (an orange) and dried fruits (apricots) is just one of the recipes which we'll be sharing in the Cinnamon Hearts Spring Recipe Sampler.

"The Small Meals And Snacks" chapter is designed for busy people on-the-go. Quick-and-easy breakfast recipes, ideas for brown-bag lunches and a variety of snacks emphasize take-along food that is good for you and helps to keep you from becoming so hungry that you "lunge at the next glazed doughnut you happen by." "Salads And Vegetable Dishes, Meat-Free Entrees, Almost Vegetarian Entrees, Poultry and Seafood Entrees," and delicious "Treat Yourself" desserts round out the recipe sections of The Other Diabetes.

Treat yourself to this terrific book, readers. How can you go wrong with recipes from a very popular food magazine editor? Recommended summer reading.

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101 TIPS FOR AGING WELL WITH DIABETES, by David B. Kelley, MD, (c) 2001 by The American Diabetes Association.

Aging well and staying healthy is a challenge for everyone, and aging well and staying healthy when you have diabetes is even more challenging! 101 Tips For Aging Well With Diabetes is one of the newest books in the best-selling series of self-care books published by The American Diabetes Association. It's designed to answer the most common (and sometimes uncommon, yet essential) questions about how the maturing process can be affected by diabetes.

Written in a straightforward question and answer format, this uncomplicated book explores in detail such questions as:

* Am I alone with my diabetes?

* Why aren't my new diabetes pills lowering my blood glucose?

* What is causing my leg pain?

* Why has my wife's/husband's personality changed since she/he developed diabetes?

* Why would I learn to count carbs?

* Am I too old to exercise, and what kinds of exercise are best for me?

* How do I manage my diabetes when I am sick?

* What precautions do I need to take if I live in a nursing home?

An easy-to-reference book, 101 Tips For Aging Well With Diabetes gives maturing people who have diabetes the guidance to improve their lifestyles. Very good reading.

Marilyn Helton, a type 2 diabetic since 1993, is the publisher of Cinnamon Hearts: The Art of Living A Winning Diabetic Lifestyle, a positive-power online E-zine for diabetics and their families. Visit the Cinnamon Hearts Web site: www.cinnamonhearts.com


E-mail: webmaster@nfb.org
Posted: June 29, 20002