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Type 2 Diabetes
600 calories to "reverse" Type2
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<blockquote data-quote="CMichael" data-source="post: 204276" data-attributes="member: 30859"><p>'It's just that before this study ANY REVERSAL of ANY KIND has never been seen. In this study - the 'non return' of the fat around the liver and pancreas and the steadyness of the HBA1c even after weight gain happened is 'new''</p><p></p><p>I'm not quite sure what you mean by this NewdestinyX? There are lots of people on this forum and elsewhere who are controlling their HbA1c at normal levels by diet and exercise? Which is as much of a reversal as seems to have been achieved here? They aren't having the fat around their organs measured in the detail this study went into, so we can't know whether theirs disappeared and stayed off too. Perhaps that is the research that needs to be done next - looking much more closely at the metabolic processes of people who have lost weight through less drastic means and have kept it off for longer than this short-term study.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CMichael, post: 204276, member: 30859"] 'It's just that before this study ANY REVERSAL of ANY KIND has never been seen. In this study - the 'non return' of the fat around the liver and pancreas and the steadyness of the HBA1c even after weight gain happened is 'new'' I'm not quite sure what you mean by this NewdestinyX? There are lots of people on this forum and elsewhere who are controlling their HbA1c at normal levels by diet and exercise? Which is as much of a reversal as seems to have been achieved here? They aren't having the fat around their organs measured in the detail this study went into, so we can't know whether theirs disappeared and stayed off too. Perhaps that is the research that needs to be done next - looking much more closely at the metabolic processes of people who have lost weight through less drastic means and have kept it off for longer than this short-term study. [/QUOTE]
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600 calories to "reverse" Type2
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