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Type 2 Diabetes
Newcastle Diet - Reversal Questions
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<blockquote data-quote="trotskyite" data-source="post: 846034" data-attributes="member: 67262"><p>A measurement of over 31.5cm (female) indicates your health is at risk by your waist size. <a href="http://www.heartfoundation.org.au/healthy-eating/Pages/waist-measurement.aspx" target="_blank">http://www.heartfoundation.org.au/healthy-eating/Pages/waist-measurement.aspx</a> </p><p>So I would say you are safe to lose a bit more according to the stats, of course you should ok everything with gp/dietitian. </p><p>What I (personally) would do is wait till you have got at or under 80cm waist then start eating a normal amount of carbs for 3 days and perform your own (or at gp?) ogtt. I say this as I have read that a t2 can pass an ogtt even with diabetes because when low carbing the pancreas can store insulin on its surface and release it all at once.</p><p></p><p>The measurements are based on your being of European origin for Asians etc they are lower.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="trotskyite, post: 846034, member: 67262"] A measurement of over 31.5cm (female) indicates your health is at risk by your waist size. [URL]http://www.heartfoundation.org.au/healthy-eating/Pages/waist-measurement.aspx[/URL] So I would say you are safe to lose a bit more according to the stats, of course you should ok everything with gp/dietitian. What I (personally) would do is wait till you have got at or under 80cm waist then start eating a normal amount of carbs for 3 days and perform your own (or at gp?) ogtt. I say this as I have read that a t2 can pass an ogtt even with diabetes because when low carbing the pancreas can store insulin on its surface and release it all at once. The measurements are based on your being of European origin for Asians etc they are lower. [/QUOTE]
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