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<blockquote data-quote="cold ethyl" data-source="post: 633450" data-attributes="member: 107467"><p>Off the back of this went away and started reading up on Prof Taylor.s work. Interesting lecture he gave in 2012 in which if I am reading him correctly he talks about personal fat thresholds being paramount and of pancreatic inhibition rather than loss as a factor driving tyoe 2 diabetes. So weight loss can be seen as putting us below the threshold and waking Sleeping Beauty ( pancreas- my analogy not his- he is far more scientific!) I think as well what came out of the article is that it is weight loss that matters and for some folk a short sharp effort with the possible reward of "reversal" has an effect that just telling them to,lose weight doesn't. I think that what is encouraging is that we can all do this through losing weight if we need to, or changing our diet to avoid carbs which the likes of Robert Lustig suggest cause the kind of metabolic difficulties that lead to the fatty lovers and pancreas that Taylor is on about, even in those of a normal BMI.</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/documents/BantingDiabeticMed.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/documents/BantingDiabeticMed.pdf</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cold ethyl, post: 633450, member: 107467"] Off the back of this went away and started reading up on Prof Taylor.s work. Interesting lecture he gave in 2012 in which if I am reading him correctly he talks about personal fat thresholds being paramount and of pancreatic inhibition rather than loss as a factor driving tyoe 2 diabetes. So weight loss can be seen as putting us below the threshold and waking Sleeping Beauty ( pancreas- my analogy not his- he is far more scientific!) I think as well what came out of the article is that it is weight loss that matters and for some folk a short sharp effort with the possible reward of "reversal" has an effect that just telling them to,lose weight doesn't. I think that what is encouraging is that we can all do this through losing weight if we need to, or changing our diet to avoid carbs which the likes of Robert Lustig suggest cause the kind of metabolic difficulties that lead to the fatty lovers and pancreas that Taylor is on about, even in those of a normal BMI. [url]http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/documents/BantingDiabeticMed.pdf[/url] [/QUOTE]
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