Red Blood Cells Tell the Diabetes
Story
Majid Ali, M.D.
Red blood cells tell the diabetes story—for
prevention and reversal—more simply and elegantly
than any medical textbook or a doctor. Of course,
red blood cells can tell their diabetes story only
to those who are willing to listen to them. We
cannot understand the "cell-speak" if we keep
repeating that diabetes is a sugar problem. Sugar is
not red blood cells nor is diabetes red blood cells.
Nor can we communicate will cells if our focus is on
excess insulin (hyperinsulinism) and the inability
of insulin to work (insulin resistance).
Picture Tell the Diabetes Stories
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Red Blood Cells Tell the Diabetes
Story?
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What Does a Red Blood Cell Tell -
About Diabetes
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Blood Platelets Tell About
Diabetes Story
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What Do Blood Corpuscles Tell About
Diabetes -The Taurine Story
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Blood Pictures Tell the
Blood Story - AA Oxidopathy
Red Blood Cells of
a Healthy Person
(upper picture)
Early Stress on
Red Blood Cells
(lower picture)

Red Blood Cells in a Micro-clot
In Uncontrolled Diabetes
(upper Picture)
Red Blood Cell Clot
Breaking Up
upper Picture)

Micro-plaque Formation In Uncontrolled
Diabetes
(both pictures)

Articles in My Insulin-Diabetes Library
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Diabetes Pandemic
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Subtypes of
Diabetes Type 2
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The Oxyegn Model of Diabetes
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The Oxygen
Model of Obesity
k Insulin
Evolutionary
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Seven Stages of
Insulin Toxicity
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Less Insulin, More Life
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Evidence for Insulin Toxicity
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If Mice Can Reverse
Diabetes, Why Can't People?
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Dysox Explains
the Exercise-Weight-Loss Disconnect
kkk
Advanced Damage to Red Blood Cells

Figure 7 (top) illustrates severely damaged
erythrocytes in a 52-year-old man with persistent atrial fibrillation.
Close examination shows some zones of congealing surrounding many
damaged red blood cells. Figure 8 (bottom) illustrates a zone of plasma
congealing unaccompanied by any cellular elements of the blood
(seemingly a "spontaneous" phenomenon) in a diabetic with IHD. In our
view, such congealing represents accelerated oxidative stress on plasma.
Needle-like and Amorphous Microclots
And "Dirty" Field of AA Oxidopathy

Figure 9 (top) shows some needle-like and amorphous
granular microclots in a patient with unstable angina. Figure 10 (bottom)
shows a "dirty" blood smear of a man with severe peripheral vascular disease
and extensive bilateral leg ulcerations, showing zones of plasma congealing
and lumpiness, platelet clumping, and some other zones of plasma congealing
unaccompanied by any blood corpuscular elements, representing diffuse
changes of AA oxidopathy.
A Large Platelet Clot And a Meshwork of Clots

Figure 11 (top) shows a microclot formed by a large
aggregate of platelets and congealed plasma in a patient five days after
angioplasty. Figure 12 (bottom) shows another field from the same smear and
illustrates how microclots in oxidative coagulopathy grow in size when
oxidative stress persists.
Microplaque Formation In AA Oxidopathy

Figure 13 (top) and figure 14 (bottom) show two
microplaques in a patient who had received three unsuccessful angioplasties
for advanced IHD. Photomicrographs were taken the day after a major
nosebleed. Note the compaction of necrotic debris and blood elements in
microplaques as contrasted with loose structure of microclots in figure 11.
Platelets and a Damaged Leukocyte

Figure
Picture Tell the Diabetes Stories
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How Blood Cells Tell the Diabetes
Story?
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What Does a Red Blood Cell Tell -
About Diabetes
k
What Do Blood Platelet Tell About
Diabetes
k
What Do Blood Corpuscles Tell About
Diabetes -The Taurine Story
k
Blood Pictures Tell the
Blood Story - AA Oxidopathy
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