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Joseph Kraft and hidden diabetes
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<blockquote data-quote="LucySW" data-source="post: 942379" data-attributes="member: 113749"><p>Yes absolutely, I think that's the real point. </p><p></p><p>Perhaps we should change our picture and see T1 and T2 diabetes as the late stages of the disease of insulin abnormality. The very late, finally visible stages. And insulin resistance as a stage in this process that people go thru to varying times and intensity. </p><p></p><p>One question would then be, when do you get appreciable vascular damage / when does damage become important and structural ... </p><p></p><p>Actually I suppose T1 doesn't fit that picture. But then you get Kraft's other point in the book, that once T1s are taking exogenous insulin, they can become insulin resistant too ... </p><p>- "My question is what "Randomly referred for OGTT" means"</p><p></p><p>Perhaps Ivor Cummins can ask him? As he interviewed him last month.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LucySW, post: 942379, member: 113749"] Yes absolutely, I think that's the real point. Perhaps we should change our picture and see T1 and T2 diabetes as the late stages of the disease of insulin abnormality. The very late, finally visible stages. And insulin resistance as a stage in this process that people go thru to varying times and intensity. One question would then be, when do you get appreciable vascular damage / when does damage become important and structural ... Actually I suppose T1 doesn't fit that picture. But then you get Kraft's other point in the book, that once T1s are taking exogenous insulin, they can become insulin resistant too ... - "My question is what "Randomly referred for OGTT" means" Perhaps Ivor Cummins can ask him? As he interviewed him last month. [/QUOTE]
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