This is an interesting one too! 

The part of the video relevant to this discussion starts at around 1hr 4mins into the lecture and the paper he references is well worth reading: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4082845/This is an interesting one too!
That is why only some type 2s put it in good remission @KevinPotts or reverse their diabetes. I feel you are a prime example of a person with empty 'bad/wrong' fat cells. If I am right they could eradicate your empty bad fat cells leaving you cured. I sincerely believe that.I feel diabetes type 2 is the creation of the wrong 'fat' cells and how those cells reject insulin.
Insulin resistance is due to those fat cells not being processed, everytime as only the right 'fat' cell can be accessed.
The more wrong cells, the more insulin resistant. Has dr fung or anyone explored the wrong fat cell theory?
I'm sorry if I'm dum but this theory feels right to me.
Carb intolerance causes the wrong fat cell but in reducing carbs it reduces the amount of wrong fat cells being made.
Total conversion only possible when more good fat cells more than bad fat cells which need killing off in the body asap.
Low bad fat cells will cure type 2 diabetes.
Empty bad fat cells still confuse insulin.
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That is why only some type 2s put it in good remission @KevinPotts or reverse their diabetes. I feel you are a prime example of a person with empty 'bad/wrong' fat cells. If I am right they could eradicate your empty bad fat cells leaving you cured. I sincerely believe that.
I hope one day I'm proven right and you are one of the first to be cured. Your efforts lately are commendable.
Do you also agree?
Do you think this theory explains your body and system?
Just had a thought. Overweight people (people with more fat cells) need to produce more Insulin. Deemed insulin resistant because they are producing more insulin but its not enough for the fat cells. Empty fat cells might be why diabetes cannot process the insulin. Maybe only fat cells with something in them can be converted to energy. Or carb making fat in cells cannot be processed?We can definitely grow more fat cells. But it only happens when our original fat cells are full. So it takes a level of obesity before the body says 'yikes, my existing fat stores are full, I had better make more cells to cope.'
This is one of the reasons why it is so much more difficult for obese people to slim down and stay slim than for slightly overweight people to slim down and stay slim.
Once your body has created these extra fat cells, they are likely to be there for a very long time. They don't pop out of existence if we lose weight. And the body keeps them functioning, so expects to have fat stores in them... What effectively happens, is that once you have created extra fat cells, then your body re-sets its 'normal' fat storage levels higher, and will fight to maintain that level.
So losing weight below that level becomes more challenging, because our own body is trying to bounce us back up to the 'normal' it likes. This is one of the reasons why rebound weight gain is so common.
I absolutely totally agree. I thought as much myself.Briefly (and it a while since I checked) I think it went something like:
Followed by a study into why this unexpected thing happened.
- Before bariatric surgery, need to shrink the liver. [So you can find the stomach.]
- Crash diet - very low calorie - seems to do this
- Hang on - some people reversing T2 before the surgery
So it appears that a crash VLC diet targets the liver above general body fat. So in turn this means that this may be more effective than a slow reduction (if your viscera doggedly hang onto their layer of fat). Then again RT now says that the total loss is more important than the speed of loss. Go figure.
Yes increase sensitivity but not cure diabetes.From my fairly extensive reading and studying over the last 5 months it seems that the prevailing consensus is that many of us with T2 can improve their insulin sensitivity (some very significantly, some less so) primarily via a regime of lowering carbs, exercise and for some IF![]()
Just had a thought. Overweight people (people with more fat cells) need to produce more Insulin. Deemed insulin resistant because they are producing more insulin but its not enough for the fat cells. Empty fat cells might be why diabetes cannot process the insulin. Maybe only fat cells with something in them can be converted to energy. Or carb making fat in cells cannot be processed?
Which backs up my theory of good fat eaten in lchf diet can replace bad fat in cells.
But what empties or kills carb fat not good fat?
Ultimately I believe its the cell which needs killing off not its contents per say.
Fat cells around the pancreas was named as the culprit some months ago. I'll take that further and say its the fat cells which need killing off and not recreated thereafter to cure diabetes.
Good fat cells keep diabetes at bay. That is why some people obese are diabetc and others arent. Maybe?
Just had a thought. Overweight people (people with more fat cells) need to produce more Insulin. Deemed insulin resistant because they are producing more insulin but its not enough for the fat cells. Empty fat cells might be why diabetes cannot process the insulin. Maybe only fat cells with something in them can be converted to energy. Or carb making fat in cells cannot be processed?
Which backs up my theory of good fat eaten in lchf diet can replace bad fat in cells.
But what empties or kills carb fat not good fat?
Ultimately I believe its the cell which needs killing off not its contents per say.
Fat cells around the pancreas was named as the culprit some months ago. I'll take that further and say its the fat cells which need killing off and not recreated thereafter to cure diabetes.
Good fat cells keep diabetes at bay. That is why some people obese are diabetc and others arent. Maybe?
What I take from that is lchf and IF are just treating the symptoms not the cause. Like insulin injections for some type 2s who are still producing their own.I thought I remembered a topic with this title - Dr Fung has just published a blogpost with the exact same title
https://intensivedietarymanagement.com/the-central-paradox-t2d-23/
I thought I remembered a topic with this title - Dr Fung has just published a blogpost with the exact same title
https://intensivedietarymanagement.com/the-central-paradox-t2d-23/
What I take from that is lchf and IF are just treating the symptoms not the cause. Like insulin injections for some type 2s who are still producing their own.
I have regulated high bgs when I forget to take my insulin. I have no first response and then my body caps my high bgs to 14 -15mmol/l max. Why is my high bgs being capped?
Is that what circulating insulin is waiting for. Emergency resource incase of needing a cap to protect the brain and other organs from ketosis. Type 1s produce no insulin but type 2s do. Is that insulin being stored for an emergency/shock/stress mechanism? Does the fight or flight theory hold the answer?