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Diabetes Discussion
Type 2 Diabetes
Is progression/decline inevitable?
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<blockquote data-quote="xyzzy" data-source="post: 460886" data-attributes="member: 40343"><p>If you control your bgs to as close to non diabetic levels as you can and do not overstress your pancreas I can't see why your hba1c shouldn't be significantly worse year by year than a non diabetics ie your bgs degrade in line with the non diabetic population</p><p></p><p>IMHO the Newcastle diet is no better or worse at removing insulin resistance than any other regime that may take longer but achieves the same insulin resistance reducing effects. Like other diets I don't believe ND can repair beta cell loss so even if you remove all your insulin resistance you may still have diabetes to some extent or other.</p><p></p><p>In any event hba1c rises with age in everybody. As a rough guide I read somewhere that by the time you get to 50ish it's 0.01% for every year older than 20. So at age 55 an average non diabetics hba1c would be 5.35%</p><p></p><p>Sent from the <a href="http://www.diabetes.co.uk/app/?utm_source=sig&utm_medium=txt&utm_campaign=appsig" target="_blank">Diabetes Forum App</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="xyzzy, post: 460886, member: 40343"] If you control your bgs to as close to non diabetic levels as you can and do not overstress your pancreas I can't see why your hba1c shouldn't be significantly worse year by year than a non diabetics ie your bgs degrade in line with the non diabetic population IMHO the Newcastle diet is no better or worse at removing insulin resistance than any other regime that may take longer but achieves the same insulin resistance reducing effects. Like other diets I don't believe ND can repair beta cell loss so even if you remove all your insulin resistance you may still have diabetes to some extent or other. In any event hba1c rises with age in everybody. As a rough guide I read somewhere that by the time you get to 50ish it's 0.01% for every year older than 20. So at age 55 an average non diabetics hba1c would be 5.35% Sent from the [url=http://www.diabetes.co.uk/app/?utm_source=sig&utm_medium=txt&utm_campaign=appsig]Diabetes Forum App[/url] [/QUOTE]
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