You have my sympathies, but there is a reason scientists bother with large studies - because one case study is completely irrelevant.
That is incorrect - if beta cells were holding static, you'd be lying in hospital in same state you were first diagnosed in. For you to have better BG than when you were diagnosed, you're beta cells would have to a have improved.
Which is of course exactly what you'd expect from a t1 diabetic going through honeymoon, but don't let that stop you from sending this case study to Stockholm - I'm sure you'll have your Nobel price in medicine by Christmas.
If you are still insulin-free in 5years, then we might have something to to talk about.
Ian, I see you are down as Type 1 ( LADA ) since Dec 2013, so that, surely is not the same as a 'type 1'
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When you are diagnosed you have already lost a great deal of your beta cell function.(see diagram below)
How much depends on where in the process that you are diagnosed. They know that there is a pre diabetes period even in children. The autoimmune response causes the bodies own immune system to kill off the beta cells as if they are invaders. Glucose levels rise and there is a period, longer or shorter (depending on how quickly the destructive process ) during which there is too much glucose in the blood This results in glucotoxicity which may itself kill off cells or at least stop them functioning properly.....
Sadly, once killed, even if we do regenerate a few cells and the juries out on if that is even possible after the age of about 30, it is very few.
Many people with LADA avoid insulin for a period of time..........Countries that tested at diagnosis tended to have people starting to use insulin at an earlier stage. http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/31/3/439.full.pdf
.......You said yourself that ur levels go up if u increase ur carbs so how could you possibly know u're beta cells are not being destroyed?
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If you have GAD antibodies, will they increase or decrease? I had a blood test for GAD antibodies 3 years ago and reading was 516. Just wondered if this is likely to change. I am getting tested again before next visit to endo, as well as C-peptide, but this was at my request. Any thoughts, anyone?
I don't think that's true. You wouldn't know if u're cells are being destroyed above the carb threshold that u have. You obv dropped below a point that ur beta cells can still maintain. It will only be when u don't have enough cells left for what u currently eat that u will know.Over the last 5 months with very little carb intake and weight change my BG levels have been very much constant (my average pre breakfast BG readings have been under 5 and my average 2hr after meal testings have been under 6).
Since diagnosis a year ago, and until the last 5 months, I was constantly reducing carbs (from probably around 200g to 36g) in order to keep BG constant (at around 6.0 fasting and 7.0 2hr after eating)
This makes me conclude that I have as many beta cells now as 5 months ago, but fewer than when I was first diagnosed. Thus at this moment in time, my bet a cells are no longer being destroyed, which I can put down to the fact that my BG levels are constantly low.
And thus, were I on my present diet, with low BG levels, before diagnosis I would not be diabetic...... Simply because I had, for sure, more beta cells then, than now.
I don't think that's true. You wouldn't know if u're cells are being destroyed above the carb threshold that u have.
They may well start rising at some point. But as I've dramatically reduced ur carbs u have no way of knowing if they're being destroyed or how quickly. They could have been slowly being destroyed ur whole life. To say type 1 can be prevented by diet is not plausible. Ur diet would never ever stop the antibodies killing off beta cells. Whether diet can slow it down, maybe, but they would still be destroying themBut surely I would know, if my carb intake and weight are both stable (which they are) and my BG levels are stable (which they are) my beta cell ability to make insulin must be stable, if they were degenerating my BG levels would rise or I would be loosing weight.
There is a lot of statistics that say it was successful 100 years ago. We know that the number of people that were diabetic 100 years ago was much less than now, and far more people 100 years ago were on low carb high fat diets, probably most people..... But I think more importantly than low carb is low blood sugar levels..... It just so happens that most of us find low carb reduces our BG levels. The real key being low (normal) blood sugar levels.Why do you think a low carb diet would be the answer now when it wasn't 100 years ago?
I don't buy in to the idea that t1 is preventable either. I suspect that in the case of 1.5 there are multiple things going on and that while it might be possible to reduce loss of beta cells attributable to high glucose levels, antibodies WILL win eventually.
As there are no studies it is hard to determine which mechanism is the most influential in the onset of LADA or early onset t1, and given when early onset t1 is diagnosed it is too late, you'd need a population study to find out.
They may well start rising at some point. But as I've dramatically reduced ur carbs u have no way of knowing if they're being destroyed or how quickly. They could have been slowly being destroyed ur whole life. To say type 1 can be prevented by diet is not plausible. Ur diet would never ever stop the antibodies killing off beta cells. Whether diet can slow it down, maybe, but they would still be destroying them
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