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<blockquote data-quote="Walking Girl" data-source="post: 2119805" data-attributes="member: 510059"><p>I don’t see the study saying sugar is not a problem. What I read is you can get glucose under control, but if you still don’t metabolize fat efficiency, then inflammation is still present and thus so is IR and the resulting “disease progression.”</p><p></p><p>I think it’s been identified for quite some time that lipid levels somehow play a role in IR, we just don’t know much yet about which lipids, and the mechanism by which they cause problems.</p><p></p><p>It would be one piece of the puzzle for me. My lipids all went from “borderline” to “ideal” very quickly and my IR, measured by HOMA IR vanished. Last rest TC: 123 (3.2), LDL 52 (1.37), HDL 57 (1.5) and trigs 70 (.80). All unmedicated, btw.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334869038_Fatty_Acid_Metabolites_Combine_with_Reduced_b_Oxidation_to_Activate_Th17_Inflammation_in_Human_Type_2_Diabetes" target="_blank">https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334869038_Fatty_Acid_Metabolites_Combine_with_Reduced_b_Oxidation_to_Activate_Th17_Inflammation_in_Human_Type_2_Diabetes</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Walking Girl, post: 2119805, member: 510059"] I don’t see the study saying sugar is not a problem. What I read is you can get glucose under control, but if you still don’t metabolize fat efficiency, then inflammation is still present and thus so is IR and the resulting “disease progression.” I think it’s been identified for quite some time that lipid levels somehow play a role in IR, we just don’t know much yet about which lipids, and the mechanism by which they cause problems. It would be one piece of the puzzle for me. My lipids all went from “borderline” to “ideal” very quickly and my IR, measured by HOMA IR vanished. Last rest TC: 123 (3.2), LDL 52 (1.37), HDL 57 (1.5) and trigs 70 (.80). All unmedicated, btw. [URL]https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334869038_Fatty_Acid_Metabolites_Combine_with_Reduced_b_Oxidation_to_Activate_Th17_Inflammation_in_Human_Type_2_Diabetes[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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