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Diabetes Discussion
Gestational Diabetes
All women with the "hunter" gene get gestational diabetes.
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<blockquote data-quote="yetta2mymom" data-source="post: 1564403" data-attributes="member: 279057"><p>Hi</p><p></p><p>Late reactive hypoglycemia is usually the hypoglycemia of "hunter" gene people (me). It took me 50 years to go against the medical advice and start my low carb diet. It has taken years for me to start to be nearly normal (fatigue). I have not heard 1 case of gestational diabetes which does not fit my "hunter" gene hypothesis (waiting). In case you don't get it people with the "hunter" gene are usually producing hormones which produce insulin resistance. The placenta is also producing these hormones. In normal times the women stops the hormones when her blood sugar starts to get to high. Then she produces some insulin but checks to see if she is still too insulin resistant (boy the body is wonderful) when her body gives the all clear she produces enough insulin to sop up the sugar. All humans put out the hormones sometime during the insulin release to prevent too low blood sugar. People with reactive hypoglycemia do not start the hormones. The hormones are also produced (started in the "hunter" case) in a sugar emergency. If you eat enough sugar to raise your blood sugar enough to stop the hormones but not so much that the body determines it has to wait until the hormones have cleared you will get your major insulin reaction while you are still slightly insulin resistant. In that case you will not restart the hormones. The body doesn't like that and tries to start the hormones. For me the body is finally successful but I end up with major fatigue. When the "hunter" gene women are pregnant they can't stop the hormones without stopping the hormones for the baby. If the baby was not insulin resistant it will die so the women becomes diabetic as the hormones continue to be produced.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yetta2mymom, post: 1564403, member: 279057"] Hi Late reactive hypoglycemia is usually the hypoglycemia of "hunter" gene people (me). It took me 50 years to go against the medical advice and start my low carb diet. It has taken years for me to start to be nearly normal (fatigue). I have not heard 1 case of gestational diabetes which does not fit my "hunter" gene hypothesis (waiting). In case you don't get it people with the "hunter" gene are usually producing hormones which produce insulin resistance. The placenta is also producing these hormones. In normal times the women stops the hormones when her blood sugar starts to get to high. Then she produces some insulin but checks to see if she is still too insulin resistant (boy the body is wonderful) when her body gives the all clear she produces enough insulin to sop up the sugar. All humans put out the hormones sometime during the insulin release to prevent too low blood sugar. People with reactive hypoglycemia do not start the hormones. The hormones are also produced (started in the "hunter" case) in a sugar emergency. If you eat enough sugar to raise your blood sugar enough to stop the hormones but not so much that the body determines it has to wait until the hormones have cleared you will get your major insulin reaction while you are still slightly insulin resistant. In that case you will not restart the hormones. The body doesn't like that and tries to start the hormones. For me the body is finally successful but I end up with major fatigue. When the "hunter" gene women are pregnant they can't stop the hormones without stopping the hormones for the baby. If the baby was not insulin resistant it will die so the women becomes diabetic as the hormones continue to be produced. [/QUOTE]
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Gestational Diabetes
All women with the "hunter" gene get gestational diabetes.
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