Patch said:Yes it does, doesn't it...
I see you had a Gastric Bypass (and not a gastric band). Isn't that where they cut away your stomach completely and connect straight through to the intestine?
I agree entirely, there are loads of "experts" who disagree about weight loss surgery curing type 2 Diabetes but the surgeons who perform the surgery and the endocrinology consultants believe in it 100%, I havnt had 1 diabetes tablet since the day before surgery and as yet havnt had one reading about 5mutango said:I am mildly aggressive in resisting claims that surgery does not "cure" Type 2 diabetes.
It reduces your blood sugars into the normal range, wuthout you having to moderate what you eat, such that no test yet devisd by medical science could tell you were diabetic, whatever they fed you.
I'm not meaning to pick a fight with anyone but how in the lord's name is that not a cure?
As a young T2 I mildly resent the notion that diabetes cannot be cured or reversed. Particularly when u consider the guff about "pre-diabetes". So am I meant to believe that, if my reading is 7.9, my condition is reversible, but it it's 8.0 it's not? Like some MAGIC switch is pressed at 8.0? Look , if you've shed all signs of a disease, and you can behave how you want without it reappearing, then fact - you're cured.
"Bariatric surgery should only be considered as a last resort if serious attempts to lose weight have been unsuccessful and if the person is obese.
“Bariatric surgery can lead to dramatic weight loss, which in turn may result in a reduction in people taking their Type 2 diabetes medication and even in some people needing no medication at all.
"This does not mean, however, that Type 2 diabetes has been cured. These people will still need to eat a healthy balanced diet and be physically active to manage their diabetes.”
Hanadr said:The "disappearance" of T2 diabetes following bariatric surgery has been reported quite frequently.
However. if you don't have the surgery and eat in the manner that post op patients have to, will that have the same effect? I suspect so.
there you go Patch http://clinicaltrialsfeeds.org/clinical ... CT01251016What they SGOULD be looking for, is a way to the effects of the surgery without cutting you up. If hormones are produced/stopped after surgery, they should find out which hormones are stopped/produced, and find a way to simulate that without surgery.
They're looking through the wrong end of the microscope!
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