I have just begun taking "Eleotin" since last month in mid-July. I would like to tell others about this herbal supplement which is a medicine to help cure and heal the diabetes condition by changing the shape of the beta cells back to normal. There are several websites that advertise and sell the "food medicine" as it is also called. One is www.eleotin.ca.
Eleotin has been researched and discovered first at the Julia MacFarlane Diabetes Center at the University of Calgary in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The Center has been working on its development for the last 20 years. In the last several years they say that 70,000 persons have been helped to improve, heal and for all practical purposes have been cured of their Diabetes. It works both for Type II and Type I, but moreso on Type II. One of the side benefits is that it many cases causes gradual weight loss.


Anyone who believes this stuff should remember the statement often attributed to PT Barnum: "There's a sucker born every minute."
Have you heard or seen any research on this product?
I read some of it on the link that he provided, and to me it looks there is a possibility of someone that is just starting to have type II diabetes and sugar levels are not too far out of wack working with diet and exercise alone could maybe benefit.
I do think that humans have gotten poor micro-nutrition with so much processed foods. We don't balance our diets as well as we do all the animals we feed on the farm. It also seems that when we try to study the benefit of vitamin E, we only look at one form, and we also don't look at the other vitamins and minerals that support Vitamin E, and therefore will assume vitamin E won't work when there is not a response.
I completely agree that the first treatment for T2DM should be diet and exercise.
My concern is the statement that this product will "help cure and heal the diabetes condition by changing the shape of the beta cells back to normal." If it would cure diabetes, the makers should be asking for a Nobel prize in medicine, not asking for your hard-earned dollars for another of millions of supplements that are hawked as the best thing since sliced bread.
I can understand your concern with the statement. I'm also not sure if there is a good way to measure or quantify what is really changing. Also, if it is a natural combination that has been used for 1000's of years, can you get a nobel prize for common knowledge in another part of the world?
My farm background and feeding cattle and hogs has always led me to believe that we don't understand a lot about human's use of vitamins, minerals, and how different levels of physical activity and foods interact with each other. In the United States, we have lots of preservatives and flavor enhancers added to foods to increase shelf life and keep food from spoiling. Long term effects and exposure are hard to tell, and even people trying to keep diaries have a hard time being accurate.
My thoughts are that we are not getting proper micronutrients, and also that we are a lot less physically active today than 50 years ago. There is no doubt that most people have to high a carbohydrate diet. I think too many have thought fat the major problem, assuming fat from food converts to fat in humans. That isn't true, plus the levels of sodium in most processed foods is enormous.
Do you have a good source of a multi-vitamin and or fish oil? Living in Nebraska, while it would be nice to eat more fish, it is harder to get in the stores than good beef, pork, and chicken.
I used Eleotin for a year and half. I take no diabetic drugs at all and my blood sugar tests in the eighties every day. If I am a sucker, I am a happy one at that.