I do that pretty often with medical maladies - tons of research, explore treatment options, pick the best (or cobble a couple together). Confound the doctors, since I have a better track record with my own body than they do. Not quite enough time for the thorough research on this one, since I'm nearing the point at which trying a VLCD would be insane. But mimicking the bariatric surgery makes some sense - and for the short period I'll be following it, I'm pretty sure it won't do any long term damage.Sounds like you are writing a new chapter, it will be good no matter how it plays out.
I want to see if I can further reverse my diabetes.
Looking forward to your weekly reports.
If nothing else, I'll confirm my suspicion that my diabetes isn't weight related. But I would be very happy to be proven wrong.
Oh but Roy Taylor very much means that diabetes is connected to weight. The problem is what the excess weight consists of. Type 2 diabetics, has lots of visceral fat, fat in the liver and fat in the pancreas compared to non-diabetics. I you want I can give you lots of examples.
And everyone has this personal weight limit, and if above that limit, your body will get diabetes, if it has the genes for it that is.
So when you say that Roy Taylor is wrong for saying that a 10% or 15% is enough, then you are quite right, because the amount of weight needed to be lost will be unique for every diabetic, Some will need to lose 30 percent others 50! Others maybe only 10.. Bmi is a good example, normal bmi is between 18.5 and 24.9. With my height that mean I can have a weight of either 65kg or 88 kg, span of 23 kg! That is insane, so weightloss is absolutely essential and the main cause of diabetes.
I would argue that Professor Taylor's description of the weight link with diabetes is over simplifying what is actually the key. The key id the Personal Fat Threshold (PFT), not the number on the scales. My personal hypothesis is that I could actually gain weight on the scales, provided that was muscle. Provided I gained muscle weight, and my internal organs didn't accumulate any fat in the process, I'd be OK.
The 10-15% weight loss Professor speaks of, is I believe a common amount of weight loss, and I seem to recall he used a phrase something like "It seems like 15% is about what it takes", so I don't believe he would encourage thinking 15% is any kind of silver bullet figure.
@Neohdiver - Good luck with this phase, I hope you achieve your personal objective.
Oh but Roy Taylor very much means that diabetes is connected to weight. The problem is what the excess weight consists of. Type 2 diabetics, has lots of visceral fat, fat in the liver and fat in the pancreas compared to non-diabetics. I you want I can give you lots of examples.
And everyone has this personal weight limit, and if above that limit, your body will get diabetes, if it has the genes for it that is.
So when you say that Roy Taylor is wrong for saying that a 10% or 15% is enough, then you are quite right, because the amount of weight needed to be lost will be unique for every diabetic, Some will need to lose 30 percent others 50! Others maybe only 10.. Bmi is a good example, normal bmi is between 18.5 and 24.9. With my height that mean I can have a weight of either 65kg or 88 kg, span of 23 kg! That is insane, so weightloss is absolutely essential and the main cause of diabetes.
10% is the guideline. The context in which I've read/heard him say it is that far more weight loss may be necessary than the 10% that has been previously suggested, and he suggested 15%. But I'm now near the sum of both (24%). So even if he meant it as an "about" figure - I'm well beyond "about."I
The 10-15% weight loss Professor speaks of, is I believe a common amount of weight loss, and I seem to recall he used a phrase something like "It seems like 15% is about what it takes", so I don't believe he would encourage thinking 15% is any kind of silver bullet figure.
What do you mean by "most of the studies"?It will be interesting, as most of the studies seem to have been done on a high proportion of carbs.
Modified to low carb, it seems to be lacking the similar end result.
It would be interesting to scan the pancreas and liver of some of those, and see if the visceral fat has been removed, or it the pancreas has not restarted to produce insulin.
Professor Taylor does appear to have moved slightly from results produced his studies, and more into some speculative responses.
I know what Taylor means, and the theory about personal fat level. I just don't believe his assessment is necessarily accurate for all T2 diabetics. I also don't believe that his diet worked because of the weight loss it induced (as he now says), rather than the manner in which it was induced (his initial theory). I'm not rejecting the possibility that for some people with diabetes weight loss alone, by any means, may be sufficient to induce remission - only the notion that it is a universal solution for all recently diagnosed T2 diabetics.
As to your statements about T2 diabetics, I agree as a broad generalization, but not as an accurate assessment of everyone with T2 diabetes, based on not only my family history - but other families in which many people with low-normal to normal weight who are very active have diabetes. Diabetes, in those circumstances, also appears to be much more strongly genetically linked than in the general population - in my case it is 100% of the descendants of one individual who are 59 or older - regardless of weight or activity level. My spouse's family has a similar patter (although it is closer o 50% and also impacts people much earlier). There is way too much we don't know yet about diabetes - and my strong suspicion is that we will learn that even T2 diabetes is a collection of metabolic disorders that present in a way that we give them all the same label. We've started to recognize that, to some extent, already - look at all of the categories of diabetes that were formerly all identified as T2. I expect that to continue - and that we will identify others who likely make up the 5% who did not respond to the bariatric surgery in the same way as the 95% in whom diabetes was reversed.
It's not hereditary, in the same way that eye color is hereditary - but it is genetically linked. Here's some of the research going on: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=GWAS+and+type+2+diabetes The kind of genetic component it has typically requires genetic predisposition + environmental trigger for the disease to be expressed, and the environmental trigger may be very different for different individuals - which is why I just don't buy a personal fat threshold as applicable in all cases (or as in an un-triggering event in connection with remission)I would completely agree with you that the cause of any one person's diabetes isn't necessarily the same as mine, yours or anyone else's. In fact, you may have read me post that I believe it is a portfolio condition, with many, many influencing factors.
One point I would throw into the melting pot is, with reference to the genetic elements. I don't believe there is, as yet, any gene (mutated, missing or otherwise) identified which is significantly and materially linked with diabetes. Who is to say that our individual element in the equation isn't quite simply that for at least a decent proportion of those people, in particular those who are slim all their lives, including at diagnosis, that their genes just "gift them" a low Personal Fat Threshold. I mean that in the same way that 70% of obese individuals will not be T2 diabetic.
The Newcastle Diet is interesting, but after eating a paleo style, whole foods, plant based diet for a year, I can't imagine doing anything other than adding intermittent fasting. That said, I lost 26 pounds, gained 8 back, and am now losing weight again. I'm now at 143 pounds and have decided to get serious about losing weight again, easier done in the non-winter months for me - (I weighed 95 pounds in high school, and not through dieting; I had an incredible metabolism). I want to see if I can further reverse my diabetes.
Looking forward to your weekly reports.
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