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<blockquote data-quote="Member496333" data-source="post: 2146470"><p>That still doesn’t tell you much about the person’s insulin profiling. Only that they’re currently [probably] not consuming much carbohydrate. They could still have crazy high fasting insulin and pathological resistance, just as they would have done in the years prior to hyperglycaemia and a later diagnosis of diabetes.</p><p></p><p>Nothing can be assumed. It's perfectly possible to have normal glucose and sky-high insulin simultaneously. In fact this is partly why we're in the mess we're in - because doctors assume normal blood glucose equals no metabolic dysfunction. There is no substitute for insulin testing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Member496333, post: 2146470"] That still doesn’t tell you much about the person’s insulin profiling. Only that they’re currently [probably] not consuming much carbohydrate. They could still have crazy high fasting insulin and pathological resistance, just as they would have done in the years prior to hyperglycaemia and a later diagnosis of diabetes. Nothing can be assumed. It's perfectly possible to have normal glucose and sky-high insulin simultaneously. In fact this is partly why we're in the mess we're in - because doctors assume normal blood glucose equals no metabolic dysfunction. There is no substitute for insulin testing. [/QUOTE]
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