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Insulin resistance experts help

When a person has high ldls and low hdl it is normal where diet is concerned.
Diet influences cholesterol but hereditary high cholesterol shows both high not them reversed like yours.
Are you eating enough fat to provide good hdl? What fats are you using?
Exercise reduces cholesterol. What exercise do you do? Any walking?

What is your liver enzymes level in your routine blood tests?
 

Above I did put the liver test Asat and alat. Other I don t have. Is that what you mean.

I do not eat low fat at all. I eat butter olive oil avocado use cod liver.
Do not watch to eat low fats. So don t know why it is reversed. Also eat nuts in salade etc. Do not eat processed foods.

I do walk 12000 steps a day. Do dance 1 a week. I am active.

I do not but low fat product with high carbs in it. Use also greek fulltime fat yoghurt.
 
 

Thank you. I went to an endocrinoloog he did not find anything. But he also does not treat nor do an oggt test. Only when I get diabetis.

he did ask can I have insulinoma. He said no your sugar will then go extreem low. And you will get very sick. So he says I do t have it. But does not do something with blood test.
 

Try this post to help you understand what's happening in your body and how to improve it: https://www.virtahealth.com/reversediabetes
 
Blunt is also simple and easy to digest
 
Blunt is also simple and easy to digest

Thanks but I already did know that.

Decrease carbs----no weight loss----problem?? I do not know what you did read I other post but I already Mentioned I do intermitting g fasting 20 hours every day!
And did lower the carbs and 2 meal only.
 
(edited to add the following: this post was written in response to comments which have now been deleted by their author.)

Hi

I have just read through this thread from start to finish, and I have become increasingly uncomfortable with the amount of advice that has been dished out. Lots of pet theories, and thought experiments, and advice based on what appear to be brief internet searches and even Wikipedia.

Please remember that @Flair is living in another country, experiencing another healthcare system, is communicating in a second language, and is under the care of a healthcare team including an endocrinologist. She also does not have diabetes (as stated on her profile) so addressing her as if she does, is inappropriate. We shouldn’t be speculating with insufficient data. We certainly shouldn’t be speculating about additional illnesses in these circumstances.

I would like to remind everyone that diagnoses and medical advice are specifically against the forum rules, and some of the posts have come perilously close to that.

In particular, I have seen the idea that
‘This is not insulin resistance because IR would be a combination of high BG and high insulin’
mentioned a couple of times.
This is factually incorrect, and any advice based on it is likely to be both misleading and very unhelpful.

Conditions such as PCOS are strongly associated with insulin resistance whether raised blood glucose, T2 and excess weight are present or not.
And Kraft spent decades running insulin clamp tests and glucose tolerance tests on thousands of people, with the clear findings that insulin resistance predates raised blood glucose and T2 diagnosis, often by years.

I realise that everyone is trying to help Flair, but giving out information based on too little information and misunderstandings is not helpful.

Edited to add the first sentence.
 
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