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Liver Dump
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<blockquote data-quote="Bluetit1802" data-source="post: 1863408" data-attributes="member: 94045"><p>From what I understand, liver dumps will only disappear/reduce when any insulin resistance disappears/reduces.</p><p>In non-diabetics the liver dumps but then the pancreas secretes insulin to clear the dumped glucose into the cells for energy. Perfect system. It keeps them alive and is a completely natural event.. </p><p></p><p>In those with insulin resistance, the liver dumps and the pancreas secretes insulin, but the insulin secreted from the pancreas cannot get the dumped glucose into the cells, so it stays in the blood stream.</p><p></p><p>The worse the insulin resistance, the higher the morning fasting levels will be.</p><p></p><p>Then of course, there are those T2s whose pancreas is wearing out, so insufficient insulin is produced, so again the dumped glucose cannot be cleared.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bluetit1802, post: 1863408, member: 94045"] From what I understand, liver dumps will only disappear/reduce when any insulin resistance disappears/reduces. In non-diabetics the liver dumps but then the pancreas secretes insulin to clear the dumped glucose into the cells for energy. Perfect system. It keeps them alive and is a completely natural event.. In those with insulin resistance, the liver dumps and the pancreas secretes insulin, but the insulin secreted from the pancreas cannot get the dumped glucose into the cells, so it stays in the blood stream. The worse the insulin resistance, the higher the morning fasting levels will be. Then of course, there are those T2s whose pancreas is wearing out, so insufficient insulin is produced, so again the dumped glucose cannot be cleared. [/QUOTE]
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