Viscoelastic or Viscoplastic Glucose Theory (VGT 40): Applying VGT to Study the Relationship for Two Input Biomarkers, Finger-Piercing Glucose (m2) vs. a Combination of Blood Pressure and Heart Rate (m3), Using Viscoelastic Perturbation Model to Predict the Finger-Piercing Glucose over an 8+ Year Period from Y2014 to Y2022 Based on the GH-Method: Math-Physical Medicine (No. 621)
Abstract
Gerald C Hsu
Since 2012, the author has been collecting his body weight (m1) and finger-piercing glucose values (m2) each day. In addition, he accumulates medical conditions data including combined data of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate or HR (m3), and blood lipids (m4) along with lifestyle details of diet, exercise, sleep, stress, water intake and daily routine details. Based on the collected big data, he further organized them into two main groups. The first group is medical conditions (MC) with 4 categories: weight, glucose, BP, and blood lipids. The second group is lifestyle details (LD) with 6 categories: food & diet, exercise, water intake, sleep, stress, and daily routines. He collects his daily data and then calculates a unique combined score for each MC and LD with their 10 categories. The combined scores for the 2 groups, 10 categories, and 500+ elements constitute an overall “metabolism index (MI) model”. This MI model includes the root causes of 6 lifestyle inputs and 4 symptoms of disease including the rudimentary chronic diseases: obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia. As we know, lifestyle details cause rudimentary chronic diseases which further influence more complicated diseases, such as heart problems (CVD & CHD), chronic kidney disease (CKD), stroke, diabetic retinopathy (DR), neuropathy, hypothyroidism, and others. However, in addition to the lifestyle-induced chronic disease and complications, environmental factors, such as radiation, air and water pollution, food poison and pollution, toxic chemicals, and hormonal therapy, can contribute to the causes for a variety of cancer. Some genetic conditions and lifetime unhealthy habits, such as smoking, alcohol consumption, illicit drug use would account for approximately 15% to 25% of the root cause for rudimentary chronic diseases, complications, and cancer. All of the above-described diseases fall into the “symptoms” category which are the “root-causes” due to poor and unhealthy lifestyles.