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Type 2 Diabetes
Man who reversed his diabetes in 11 days
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<blockquote data-quote="janeecee" data-source="post: 414109" data-attributes="member: 45332"><p>It was the Newcastle Diet, and the definition of "reversal" is fasting levels of <6.0 and hba1c of <6.0 without medication, and not permanently normoglycaemic ie eating whatever you like and never going above normal blood sugar levels. The long term success of the diet depends on significant weight loss and keeping it off, assuming weight gain was a contributory factor in the development of diabetes. Ultimately, the Newcastle Diet is a crash diet with the usual caveats. </p><p></p><p>If you need to lose weight it probably won't matter how you lose it as it's about taking in fewer calories than you burn up, but in the long term you still need to work out a long term/permanent way of eating for health.</p><p></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="janeecee, post: 414109, member: 45332"] It was the Newcastle Diet, and the definition of "reversal" is fasting levels of <6.0 and hba1c of <6.0 without medication, and not permanently normoglycaemic ie eating whatever you like and never going above normal blood sugar levels. The long term success of the diet depends on significant weight loss and keeping it off, assuming weight gain was a contributory factor in the development of diabetes. Ultimately, the Newcastle Diet is a crash diet with the usual caveats. If you need to lose weight it probably won't matter how you lose it as it's about taking in fewer calories than you burn up, but in the long term you still need to work out a long term/permanent way of eating for health. 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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Man who reversed his diabetes in 11 days
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