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<blockquote data-quote="Oldvatr" data-source="post: 2170713" data-attributes="member: 196898"><p>Sorry to quote the other lot but this may be relevant. The damage caused by high blood sugars is often permanent.</p><p><a href="https://www.diabetes.org.uk/Guide-to-diabetes/Complications/Nerves_Neuropathy?gclid=CjwKCAiAws7uBRAkEiwAMlbZjlgAVgEyF6PJYb2kuH8rl4J06mOxWBnkESXlmypqyu61UnCfhem3mRoCJW0QAvD_BwE" target="_blank">https://www.diabetes.org.uk/Guide-to-diabetes/Complications/Nerves_Neuropathy?gclid=CjwKCAiAws7uBRAkEiwAMlbZjlgAVgEyF6PJYb2kuH8rl4J06mOxWBnkESXlmypqyu61UnCfhem3mRoCJW0QAvD_BwE</a></p><p></p><p>There has been research which links sdLDL damage being caused by collisions between glucose molecules and lipids in the blood stream and that further to this the damaged remnants are not cleard as normal used LDL (which is normally cleared by the HDL), and so forms plaque in the arteries. The Triglyceride value in a lipid panel is an indication of the amount of damage risk but is not per se a measure of plaque damage. It is an indication of the remnant particles floating around the blood, and which may attach to plaque deposits in time. It is these remnants that msdr the NHS blsme LDL as the bad guy when in fact it seems to be damaged LDL that is to blame.</p><p>So the longer we allow high glucose levels to happen, then the worse the damage becomes, and the body does not hve a simple mechanism for removing these damaged remnants, The kidneys do their best, but by this time the remnants are in effect alien to our bodies, and so get dealt wth by the endocrine system treating them as inflammation like a virus, which is why diabetes is related strongly with the immune system.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Oldvatr, post: 2170713, member: 196898"] Sorry to quote the other lot but this may be relevant. The damage caused by high blood sugars is often permanent. [URL]https://www.diabetes.org.uk/Guide-to-diabetes/Complications/Nerves_Neuropathy?gclid=CjwKCAiAws7uBRAkEiwAMlbZjlgAVgEyF6PJYb2kuH8rl4J06mOxWBnkESXlmypqyu61UnCfhem3mRoCJW0QAvD_BwE[/URL] There has been research which links sdLDL damage being caused by collisions between glucose molecules and lipids in the blood stream and that further to this the damaged remnants are not cleard as normal used LDL (which is normally cleared by the HDL), and so forms plaque in the arteries. The Triglyceride value in a lipid panel is an indication of the amount of damage risk but is not per se a measure of plaque damage. It is an indication of the remnant particles floating around the blood, and which may attach to plaque deposits in time. It is these remnants that msdr the NHS blsme LDL as the bad guy when in fact it seems to be damaged LDL that is to blame. So the longer we allow high glucose levels to happen, then the worse the damage becomes, and the body does not hve a simple mechanism for removing these damaged remnants, The kidneys do their best, but by this time the remnants are in effect alien to our bodies, and so get dealt wth by the endocrine system treating them as inflammation like a virus, which is why diabetes is related strongly with the immune system. [/QUOTE]
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