- Messages
- 10,137
- Location
- New Zealand
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
- Dislikes
- hypos and forum bugs
Do you mean 1177 pmols/L "C- Peptide tested November 2020 1177 pmols/mol (still capable of producing insulin one year after diagnosis) and several HbA1C tests since 2020 from 21.9 mmol/mol down to my last recent one 5.3 mmol/mol October 2022.
The 1177pmol/mol result is directly copied from the Nottingham Queens Medical Centre Department of Diabetes & Endocrinology. It's got nothing to do with what I mean, It's what it states on the medical document the diabetic department gave me. It also says "He may be going through the honey moon phase." I've already stated I am still producing enough insulin without me having to inject insulin. I could have posted the whole document, but I do not see why I should do that for a few doubters that would rather assume and guess my past medical history.Do you mean 1177 pmols/L "
That's quite a high level for a T1, the Edinburgh study of 860 long standing T1s had 13% producing more than 200pmols/L. So while it works for you I'm skeptical as to how many T1s would have levels that high.
The original diet (pre insulin) for diabetics was essentially a ketogenic diet, as I understand it, and gave some people a few extra years, but they still died.
A keto diet reduces but doesn't completely eliminate the need for insulin, so logically it's only going to work for T1s with sufficient insulin.
C- Peptide tested November 2020 1177 pmols/mol (still capable of producing insulin one year after diagnosis) and several HbA1C tests since 2020 from 21.9 mmol/mol down to my last recent one 5.3 mmol/mol October 2022.
It would seem the answer is no as so far no one has replied in the affirmative.Are there any other type 1 diabetics on here that are still able to produce their own exogenous insulin and have gone into remission?
The honeymoon period can vary from person to person. I can last for any number of days, weeks, months and years. Did you not know that? The fact is that she was in remission no matter how long the period of time it took. I've been in remission since 26th July 2021. It totally debunks the myth that type 1 diabetics can not go into remission. Instead of me having to repeat myself over and over again just scroll back and read the posts. The In Response post said "I am convinced my honeymoon lasted at least 8 years."That article makes no mention of the duration of honeymoon/remission and comments how extremely rare zero insulin use is (even for just a short period of time). Does it last a month, a year, 5 years or a lifetime? An extremely important point we keep coming back to.
When you are not injecting insulin or without taking any other diabetes medication and are below the 6.5% blood glucose range for at least 3 months you are in remission whether you're type 2 or a type 1. I've been under that range since july last year. My last HbA1c. October 2022 WAS 5.3.The Honeymoon period is not the same as remission.
You are playing with words here.When you are not injecting insulin or without taking any other diabetes medication and are below the 6.5% blood glucose range for at least 3 months you are in remission whether you're type 2 or a type 1. I've been under that range since july last year. My last HbA1c. October 2022 WAS 5.3.
Spontaneous complete remission of type 1 diabetes mellitus in an adult – review and case report
Spontaneous complete remission of T1DM is a rare phenomenon compared to spontaneous partial remission. Complete remission is however more common in adult population compared to paediatric population. As an attempt to increase remission rates and beta cell function in patients with newly diagnosed T1DM, many intervention trials are underway. Currently there is no single promising agent that is universally recommended to improve remission rates.
The paleolithic ketogenic diet improved my remission rate. It took me 4 months to slowly reduce my insulin, first my bolus and then my basal. It wasn't spontaneous.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4612476/
Some of us do know about this but we're being silenced and by the way, I'm not playing with words. Scientists HAVE discovered a way for type 1's to get into remission, I've been following their protocol for the past 18 months and that's how I've done it.You are playing with words here.
Your posts appear to say 'Hey, scientists have discovered a way for T1s to get remission, why does no-one know about this?'
Well...they do, and have done for years. It's called the honeymoon period, nothing new there. It's not remission, it's simply getting through the honeymoon on reduced carbs so there's less chance of hypos due to the pancreas waking up every so often and adding insulin to the body when the person has already calculated their bolus. It's a good way to handle the honeymoon period, I've seen posts here about it for at least 10 years. Some posters are glad when it's over as the 'working when I please pancreas' can be a pain in the ****.
One day the honeymoon will be over.
Some of us do know about this but we're being silenced and by the way, I'm not playing with words. Scientists HAVE discovered a way for type 1's to get into remission, I've been following their protocol for the past 18 months and that's how I've done it.
Brilliant scientific success! Type 1 diabetes has been overcome. There is only one question left: will Hungarian or French researchers take credit for this groundbreaking discovery?
Before we get started, here is a brief explanation of the title and of its practical implications. Click here, to read this article on our new website! THE CASE The diet which is radically different from the current recommendations of diabetologists canwww.paleomedicina.com
You say it's simply getting through the honeymoon on "REDUCED CARBS"? I don't eat carbs and I don't add any insulin either, so what are you on about? and I haven't had one hypo since the 11th March 2021. Don't knock it if you haven't tried it. Have you ever attempted to go on a high saturated animal fat, moderate protein, zero carbs for 18 months or more without any cheat days?You are playing with words here.
Your posts appear to say 'Hey, scientists have discovered a way for T1s to get remission, why does no-one know about this?'
Well...they do, and have done for years. It's called the honeymoon period, nothing new there. It's not remission, it's simply getting through the honeymoon on reduced carbs so there's less chance of hypos due to the pancreas waking up every so often and adding insulin to the body when the person has already calculated their bolus. It's a good way to handle the honeymoon period, I've seen posts here about it for at least 10 years. Some posters are glad when it's over as the 'working when I please pancreas' can be a pain in the ****.
One day the honeymoon will be over.
I haven't paid for any of their advice. I just joined their PKD group and winged it. I got all the information that I needed from thereI've just looked at the website of those doctors... you have to pay for their advice?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?