As shown by the chart above the pancreas will do an amazing job increasing insulin levels to overcome resistance and maintaining normal glucose level, sometimes for decades, or even forever in some people. But, every organ has it‘s limits. Once it’s reached flat out production if that’s not enough to overcome ever increasing resistance then it become “not enough” despite being at maximum and having high numerical levels. That’s not a faulty pancreas. It’s a job that’s unmanageable. So the insuffciency is relative to the situation, rather than like a type 1 who actually has less than normal or even no insulin production in absolute terms. As such I really dislike the references to type 2 starting out with insufficient insulin (even though after many years of high production it can begin to fail) as that tends to cause the underlying problem of increasing IR to be ignored unless the context of absolute and relative are includedT 2 has two elements - Insulin Resistance and a pancreas that cannot produce and secrete enough insulin to overcome this resistance to insulin.
When I had my second extended oral glucose tolerance test, the cannula fitted took blood samples which were sent off to a special laboratory for some tests, the one you refer to, was one of them whereas my glucose and insulin were tested as the eOGTT went on.Hi everyone. I'm a newbie to posting although I have followed the site for nearly a year. I've found everything I've read so interesting and helpful, particularly this thread, and learnt so much. I'm a woman in my 70s and have never been overweight. I had an HbA1c in May 2022 of 50 - my first one ever despite my family history being on my medical records. I thought I was only getting a cholesterol check. Two weeks later it was retested at 45. Since then I have gone low carb and finger prick tested, but my levels have remained firmly pre-diabetic at 46, 47 and 45 (July 2024). At least I now know the score.
I have a long family history of diabetes - my mother, my grandmother, my great-grandmother (who had a leg amputated), and my daugnter who is also now pre-diabetic and had gestational diabetes in 2015 with her second pregnancy. Has anyone here come across MIDD or Maternally Induced Diabetes and Deafness? I have worn hearing aids for some years. Is this it? My GP has never heard of it. My sister in Australia has a HbA1c of 41 and has already been prescribed metformin as a 'preventative measure' because of our family history - not a route I'm keen to follow.
I had a private Kraft Test (not cheap but worth it to me) in April 2023 which tests for glucose tolerance and insulin response side by side, and which showed I have a very poor insulin response, as though my pancreas is slowly wearing out, so maybe that is the weak link in my family history. I don't understand why more insulin testing doesn't take place as a general rule as surely it is a key piece of information in the jigsaw that is diabetes.
I identify completely with the phrase 'high blood sugar is a sympton, pancreas malfunction is the cause'! I shall keep on with my low carb diet and finger prick testing and just hope I can stay below that 48 figure. My GP has given me a prescription for the testing strips, sort of in return for my agreement to go back on statins. I stopped taking them for six months but it had made no difference to my BG levels.
Good luck on your journeys, everyone, and thank you for all your posts. I shall keep reading and learning.
It’s not semantics at all imo. If someone is producing 3 times the average amount of insulin for instance I’d say their pancreas was working pretty well. If other things have gone wrong in the body, in this case the IR, how can you blame the pancreas for not compensating enough if that would take such an enormous amount of extra work? That’s not to say a faulty pancreas cannot be part of the problem (and may even mean a type 3c diagnosis is more appropriate if the cause was externally induced) but it’s certainly not a requirement of type 2 according to everything I’ve read. I’d be interested if you have any articles etc supporting your view though (once you’re time adjusted etc)I understand what you are saying @HSSS but I disagree with you. I agree with you on in fact every organ has its limits, but one can say that about any number of medical issues. It is just semantics on whether it’s faulty or overwhelmed or not producing enough, its failing because it cannot produce enough insulin to do the job it’s meant to do. If your pancreas cannot maintain a healthy blood sugar level, given a relatively normal diet then your pancreas is not operating as it should. The fact remains that Type Diabetes is an issue with the pancreas. Insulin resistance is definitely a component in classic T2 without question , but it is the inability of your pancreas to produce enough insulin to maintain ’normal’ blood sugars. please correct me if I’m missing your point. I’m jet lagged by 8 hours.
I understand what you are saying @HSSS , but there are none-diabetics with IR producing well over 1700pmol/ls of c-peptides and have normal blood sugars. There pancreas is capable of producing masses amounts of insulin because they have a tight, probably a large beta mass and very healthy islets of the Langerhans. Then you have diabetics producing 1000 - 1200 pmol/s with very high blood sugars. They have a pancreas that is incapable of producing enough insulin to compensate for their IR.It’s not semantics at all imo. If someone is producing 3 times the average amount of insulin for instance I’d say their pancreas was working pretty well. If other things have gone wrong in the body, in this case the IR, how can you blame the pancreas for not compensating enough if that would take such an enormous amount of extra work? That’s not to say a faulty pancreas cannot be part of the problem (and may even mean a type 3c diagnosis is more appropriate if the cause was externally induced) but it’s certainly not a requirement of type 2 according to everything I’ve read. I’d be interested if you have any articles etc supporting your view though (once you’re time adjusted etc)
Just to muddy waters a tad here.This all boils down to whether you think that it's the Pancreas's job to compensate for a diet that we're not evolved to cope with.
There are massive differences in individual people and their pancreas capacity, and for that matter, the effect of the elevated insulin and resultant insulin resistance that follows, - there are plenty of people who remain relatively insulin sensitive and just put more and more weight on, but their blood glucose remains fine.
There are plenty of people who just tip into Colon Cancer (my father in law being one) and there are plenty of people that tip into Alzheimer's - but it's not all on account of the relative capacity of the Pancreas, it follows from the insulin resistance due to elevated insulin over decades.
Compensating for insulin resistance doesn't seem to me to be a strategy that's working (after all, that's really what most of the medical profession does with metformin until it also cannot compensate enough, then insulin and so on)
... slight edit as it seemed too aggressive.
I guess I'm just thinking about the majority of cases. @Melgar - you are unique in many ways, but for the vast majority of T2DM cases, in all the literature I can find, there doesn't need to be anything wrong with the Pancreas. If there is, then for sure, it will have an effect - but even an edge case capacity Pancreas may hold your blood sugar down (for a while, or maybe even forever) - you still have a dangerously high level of insulin and insulin resistance which drives so many other chronic conditions.
Maybe because the latter have higher IR? Maybe those that maintain normal blood glucose despite high IR or that can produce mega amounts of insulin are the outliers? Are all tests done the same way eg fasted or in response to glucose? Maybe some do in fact have pancreatic limitations. That’s not the same as it being a requirement of type 2 though. If your theory is right why have so many pancreas’ been damaged in the last generation compared to previous ones?I understand what you are saying @HSSS , but there are none-diabetics with IR producing well over 1700pmol/ls of c-peptides and have normal blood sugars. There pancreas is capable of producing masses amounts of insulin because they have a tight, probably a large beta mass and very healthy islets of the Langerhans. Then you have diabetics producing 1000 - 1200 pmol/s with very high blood sugars. They have a pancreas that is incapable of producing enough insulin to compensate for their IR.
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