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How Dr Varma hunts diabetes - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Of course, the warning includes managing your diet and doing required exercise. If not, the consequences include surgical removal of limbs, heart and vision problems, etc. Diabetes is a killer.

Today, I put aside “our serious crime problem,” party politics, the judiciary, and even St Lucia’s Allen Chastanet (“Tropical Trump”) to bring diabetes to public attention. After all, your health comes first.

A new well-patented and informative 218-page book, Alternative Medicines for Diabetes Management, Advances in Pharmacognosy and Medicinal Chemistry, by associate professor Dr Varma Rambaran and research assistant Nalini K Singh (University of TT) brings a wealth of scientific information not only about pharmaceutical drugs but also about ayurvedic medicine, that is, the use of herbs, fruits and vegetables for medicinal purposes.

Rambaran, popularly called Dr Varma, holds a doctorate in inorganic chemistry and has utilised international research co-operation to validate his research. Using medicinal data also from China and India, he notes the lack of scientific information has led to “a bias against the use of herbal medicines by insinuating that the claims being made are more witchcraft than science.”

His patented pioneering research shows that the chemical vanadium has a “similar mechanism as insulin” but where there is “insulin resistance,” vanadium compound can helpfully initiate or prolong glucose uptake.

This book has considerable merit in terms of academic, commercial and cultural value. Tackling the dreaded disease of Type 2 diabetes, and with an extensive list of reputable references and glossary, Rambaran skilfully uses “international research efforts to bring folklore into scientific inquiry.”

The book illustrates this country has an abundance of such ayurvedic medicines – from tamarind, ochro, garlic, soursop, neem, lemon, grapefruit, gourd, turmeric, fever grass, lantana, mango, timarie, carailli to saijan and tulsi. For each of the long list of insulin-reduction medicines, the authors provide the chemical structure in support of their respective family groupings. And shortcomings as well.

Diabetes mellitus (DM), the authors say, is ranked as “one of the top four non-communicable diseases in the world.” East Indians, our doctors note, are quite susceptible to this disease.

Explaining the book’s goal, Rambaran and Singh state: “We were concerned about the uncontrolled rise in cases of DM throughout the world and the lack of availability of many prescription drugs due to economic factors. We believe that knowledge (backed by science) of alternative forms of therapy for this disease would be welcomed by those who are unable to procure such medication.”

For the general public, they further explain: “DM’s diagnosis as a metabolic disease arises from either the pancreas’s inability to produce sufficient quantities of insulin or the desensitisation of the human insulin receptor glycoprotein).” They note how the “ongoing rivalry between the usage of pharmaceutical medicines versus herbal remedie

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