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Diabetes Spectrum 16:133-134, 2003
© American Diabetes Association ®, Inc., 2003


Editorial

Controversies of the Sweet Urine Disease

Richard A. Guthrie, MD, FACE, FAAP, CDE

The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below.

Before the discovery of insulin, the primary controversy in diabetes was what kind of reductive diet to use—rice diet, rancid fat diet, vegetables "cooked three times in their own water," and so forth. All were restrictive and essentially treated diabetes by starvation. For type 2 diabetes, they probably worked out, in that they no doubt led to weight loss. (Perhaps we should try some of these again.)

With the advent of insulin, the problem of diabetes was thought to be solved, and indeed, those with type 1 diabetes did just fine, for a while. It didn’t take long, however, for those now living longer to begin to develop vascular and neurological complications. And thus began a new round of controversy.

This controversy, which began in the 1930s, raged on for the next 60 years and was often very heated. The issue, simply put, was whether the vascular and neurological problems associated with diabetes were a genetic concomitant of the disease (and thus inevitable and unalterable) or instead were associated with the metabolic abnormalities of diabetes, such as high blood glucose levels (and thus preventable). Which side one took on this issue had great ramifications regarding the method of diabetes management one’s practice adopted.

A classic debate on this topic took place in New York in the 1940s between Dr. Elliott Joslin and Dr. Edward Tolstoi. The debate, which was recorded and is available at the New York Hospital, Cornell University School of Medicine, was reenacted a few years ago.

In the late 1930s, Dr. Robert L. Jackson, then a pediatrician at the University . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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Copyright © 2003 by the American Diabetes Association.