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Body Temperature ... Diabetes ... Hypothalamus? * A man who became a type 1 diabetic immediately after a head injury ... shared that he has difficulty with regulating body temperature. He does not want to live in a hot climate ... as he gets too hot. So he lives in Alaska ... in Valdez which has a moderate temperature year round. Not too hot in summer, not too very cold in winter, either. So was it damage to the hypothalamus that caused his diabetes and caused his body temp ailment/s??? I'm thinking that maybe so. Those with diabetes from exposure to 2-butoxyethanol might have these concerns, too ? I have type 2 diabetes that showed up in my 50s ... & as with many baby boomers who are coming down with diabetes, in my case, I suspect it was from my dad serving in WWII on a Navy war ship & getting the bomb fumes in his eyes ... lots of soldiers have to have had the same issues .. I find that I wake up at night because I am too warm. It's probably less than 70 degrees ... so why am I feeling too warm? With this chemical
exposure I do observe ... that there are unexplained fevers ... there is
also abnormally low body temp, too. Hormones high or low! One
man came down with a serious flu (Dec, 1997) and had the
signs of CFIDS ... this chemical's poisoning, I'm sure. His body
temp was 95.6 consistently. He ended dying in the same month ...
leukemia of the lymph nodes, kidney failure, liver failure, heart
issues. None of these seemed to be present just 3 months prior.
I do suspect exposure to 2-butoxyethanol caused his flu
I suspect this chemical caused the death of Pres FDR at age 62 in 1945. Its pattern is there .. that's for sure
What regulates the pituitary gland?
The pituitary gland,
or hypophysis, is an endocrine
gland about
the size of a pea
that sits in the small, bony cavity (sella
turcica) at
the base of the brain.
The pituitary gland
secretes hormones
regulating a wide variety of bodily activities, including
trophic hormones
that stimulate other endocrine glands. For a while, this led
scientists to call it the master gland, but now
we know that it is in fact regulated by hormones released from the hypothalamus.
The pituitary gland is
physically attached to the brain
by the pituitary, or hypophyseal stalk connected
with the median
eminence.
The pituitary gland
helps control the following body processes:
Maybe it's the
Hypothalamus that regulates blood sugar, also?
The hypothalamus
(from Greek α½`ποθαλαμος = under the thalamus; is a region
of the mammalian
brain
located below the thalamus,
forming the major portion of the ventral region of the diencephalon
and functioning to regulate certain metabolic
processes and other autonomic
activities. The hypothalamus links the nervous
system to
the
endocrine system
via the pituitary
gland, also
known as the "master gland," by synthesizing and secreting neurohormones,
often called releasing hormones, as needed that control the
secretion of hormones
from the anterior
pituitary gland
— among them, gonadotropin-releasing
hormone (GnRH).
The neurons
that secrete GnRH are linked to the limbic
system,
which is primarily involved in the control of emotions
and sexual
activity. The hypothalamus also
controls body
temperature,
hunger,
thirst,
and
circadian cycles.
Source of this
info http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
Also discuss
here
2-butoxyethanol overexposure 'looks like the flu' |
I am Concerned about Nations Having to Deal with War *
Did Pres FDR 'get the bomb fumes' in his eyes? *
Do those with CFIDS, 'gulf war syndrome' vets and Vietnam vets 'look alike?' *
What Group of people could prove the harm of this chemical? *
8-11-06