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Prof Taylor on the subject of Reversal.
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<blockquote data-quote="Mr_Pot" data-source="post: 2204518" data-attributes="member: 216415"><p>I don't understand your point.</p><p>There is apparently a big increase in the incidence of Type 2 diabetes in recent decades.</p><p>If, instead of eating the modern diet, people ate the diet typical in the 1930's (which had quite a lot of carbs) then the theory is that they wouldn't have developed diabetes due to the lack of processed food, seed oils or whatever.</p><p>My assertion was, that there must be some irreversible change, like beta cell decay, that occurs, or we should be able to successfully revert to the 1930's diet that wouldn't have given us the diabetes in the first place. This was in response to [USER=496333]@Jim Lahey[/USER] 's three steps:</p><p> 1. Overconsumption of excessive glucose leads to furious fat generation.</p><p> 2. Fat cells run out of capacity to cope (in some this may be obese, in others it may not).</p><p> 3. Diabetes.</p><p>And my comment that in addition to this there must be also be a permanent change if we are still susceptible to diabetes even if we now adopt a 1930's diet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mr_Pot, post: 2204518, member: 216415"] I don't understand your point. There is apparently a big increase in the incidence of Type 2 diabetes in recent decades. If, instead of eating the modern diet, people ate the diet typical in the 1930's (which had quite a lot of carbs) then the theory is that they wouldn't have developed diabetes due to the lack of processed food, seed oils or whatever. My assertion was, that there must be some irreversible change, like beta cell decay, that occurs, or we should be able to successfully revert to the 1930's diet that wouldn't have given us the diabetes in the first place. This was in response to [USER=496333]@Jim Lahey[/USER] 's three steps: 1. Overconsumption of excessive glucose leads to furious fat generation. 2. Fat cells run out of capacity to cope (in some this may be obese, in others it may not). 3. Diabetes. And my comment that in addition to this there must be also be a permanent change if we are still susceptible to diabetes even if we now adopt a 1930's diet. [/QUOTE]
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