cold ethyl
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,210
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
It's my impression that 'they' have said long time that weight loss is an effective way of reducing the progression of diabetes but it's been very vague. It's just that Prof Taylor has been able to quantify it , show the mechanisms by which it may work and demonstrate that in some people a very rapid weight loss can, at least for a time, set diabetes progression into reverse.
If someone was told emphatically that weight loss on this sort of scale /time frame could potentially reverse a very serious condition* and were given a means to achieve it then it might well have a different outcome to a doctor just suggesting that losing a few pounds may help.
(though we have to wait for the trials to really know how effective it is in a bigger population and how durable the changes are)
*though I suspect many don't realise the potential consequences of diabetes.
In a US diabetes prevention trial they found that those who lost 10% of their weight in the six months after a prediabetes diagnosis were far less likely to develop diabetes in the next three years than those that didn't http://www.futurity.org/speedy-weight-loss-may-put-brakes-on-diabetes/
I think what he might say here is that maybe you do have more weight to lose....he said that for some people diabetes can happen at what the BMI curve thinks of as acceptable levels - so your BMI may be gone on the chart but you could be over your personal fat threshold and hence still have fat in liver and pancreas. I have set myself a target weight that is at upper end of what I was in my early twenties. I may have to go even lower to get into non diabetic range. Will just have to see.
Thanks. My BMI is 21 and I have a big frame with broad shoulders. I am as light now as I was as a slim teenager, and my collar bone looks like a skeleton! I daren't lose any more, so if I am over my personal threshold with fat it may have to stay.unless there is another way of getting rid of it.
It's all very interesting, but @Bluetit1802, if your HbA1c was mine, how would you be living differently? That's not a challenge, aside from asking literally that question.
Of course, I like my numbers as they are, but I'm not in any big rush to replicate @Andrew Colvin ' s activity where Bread & Butter Pudding or the like are concerned.
Go girl!
I couldn't get into a size 10 even when I weighed around 6 stone all those years ago.
I still remained a size12.
The new figure is the best part ....I find ...No matter what my HbA1c drops to, I will still regard myself as a diabetic with a disease that might progress. I may have an odd treat, I may eat hubby's meat and spud pie once a week without feeling guilty and testing myself a million times afterwards, but I will never go back to the mounds of bread and spuds I used to eat, and I will never go back to Cornflakes for breakfast, I just do not feel the need any more. I enjoy my current diet, I enjoy my new figure and size 10 clothes, I enjoy how I feel in myself. I'm not going back.
No matter what my HbA1c drops to, I will still regard myself as a diabetic with a disease that might progress. I may have an odd treat, I may eat hubby's meat and spud pie once a week without feeling guilty and testing myself a million times afterwards, but I will never go back to the mounds of bread and spuds I used to eat, and I will never go back to Cornflakes for breakfast, I just do not feel the need any more. I enjoy my current diet, I enjoy my new figure and size 10 clothes, I enjoy how I feel in myself. I'm not going back.
yes you really have to shop around ...that is why us girls need so much time in the shops .....No standard size in all shops ...perhaps we are lucky that we have so much to,choose from ....but these days ...I don't enjoy shopping as much ...has this changed with diet. I wonder ....I rather think they have changed the sizing since then to make us think we are slimmer than we actually are. A size 10 now is what a size 12 used to be.
It's all very interesting, but @Bluetit1802, if your HbA1c was mine, how would you be living differently? That's not a challenge, aside from asking literally that question.
Of course, I like my numbers as they are, but I'm not in any big rush to replicate @Andrew Colvin ' s activity where Bread & Butter Pudding or the like are concerned.
At least I can look at myself in a mirror and not need 2 of them like beforeLOL yes, I see what you mean. At least I can look at myself in the mirror (fully dressed that is) and be proud of myself.
That was the purpose of my question.
You have returned yourself to levels so close to non-diabetic, it probably makes no material difference, with a more comfortable (including figure/fashion choices etc.) lifestyle, so diabetes/reversed diabetes or however we might choose to refer to it are just labels.
@cold ethyl , my carb levels vary these days as I no longer chase a lower target, nor do I have an upper limit. I am eating to my personal comfort zones, influenced by the numbers my meter shows me from time to time. But, for completeness, I am almost always below 100gr, and never have overtly sugary foods. I never really had desserts, and I was never bothered by chocolate. I know, 100%, that I haven't had a single sliver of chocolate, or cake, since before diagnosis, and it doesn't bother me one iota. I have been fortunate, always to have been able to tolerate modest quantities of rice and bread, and I now have the odd portion of cottage pie or baked potato; albeit not whoppers.
I have never asserted to be cured/reversed or anything else; nor am I suggesting you think I have. I don't like labels, so nor do I refer to myself as diabetic, except on here, and very occasionally when my OH would get a bit frustrated by my diet in the early days. If asked, by anyone, "Are you diabetic?", my answer would be, "Yes", but that has actually only happened to me once - several months ago.
what I took home was that weight loss of around 20% is a good target and that the protocol works in part because people who try it believe in it so stick to it..
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