Thank youI just want to know.
If I ever reverse it, I would like to just simply have a meal of indulgence for celebrations but I'm still worried that it'll ultimately cause a high blood sugar right after
Quite simply this person has not reversed their diabetes, they have found a way to control it without medication and well done to them. I personally follow a LCHF way of eating and being insulin dependant have noticed the benefits.
Quite simply this person has not reversed their diabetes, they have found a way to control it without medication and well done to them. I personally follow a LCHF way of eating and being insulin dependant have noticed the benefits.
I see, I just want to know. I really just want to eat a certain meal from my favorite restaurant, but I'm worried that the starches in it will shoot up my BG. Ahaha. Maybe that's just me and the munchies right now.
I'm referring to the headline on the website, not myself. Of course I know that insulin is medication. The point is that this Edinburgh guy's diabetes has not been reversed, merely controlled. My own experience is that I have reduced my dosage of insulin by following a LFHC way of eating ( I hesitate to say diet, because that infers it is temporary when this needs to be a permanent change)t on
If you haven't reversed it, and control it on LCHF, what's wrong with that?
Seems the best option if that's what you can do?
If you're on insulin though, do you not count that as medication?
I'm referring to the headline on the website, not myself. Of course I know that insulin is medication. The point is that this Edinburgh guy's diabetes has not been reversed, merely controlled. My own experience is that I have reduced my dosage of insulin by following a LFHC way of eating ( I hesitate to say diet, because that infers it is temporary when this needs to be a permanent change)
I see, I just want to know. I really just want to eat a certain meal from my favorite restaurant, but I'm worried that the starches in it will shoot up my BG. Ahaha. Maybe that's just me and the munchies right now.
I reversed my type 2. Even a nondiabetic's blood sugar can spike if they consume a large amount of carbs at one sitting. However, if you've reversed your diabetes by losing weight then you can eat some carbs and your blood glucose will return to normal after a couple of hours or so. If you gain back enough weight the diabetes will come back. Not everyone can reverse their diabetes, of course.
Well, it's reversed as long as it's reversed. If it comes back it's no longer reversed. But until it comes back, it's reversed. I don't think reversal means you can't get it again if you do the things that caused it in the first place. If you no longer have insulin resistance or elevated blood glucose, then you no longer have type 2 diabetes. In the end, it doesn't really matter what you call it if I have normal blood glucose levels, does it? Especially since there's zero possibility that I'll go back to a high carb diet.That is true but "reverse" (and yes, that terminology might apply to me as well insofar as my numbers are concerned but not the word I'd use) suggests you can return to what you once did with regard to lifestyle, weight, food and sugars.
You simply cannot. At least in my opinion
Well, it's reversed as long as it's reversed. If it comes back it's no longer reversed. But until it comes back, it's reversed. I don't think reversal means you can't get it again if you do the things that caused it in the first place. If you no longer have insulin resistance or elevated blood glucose, then you no longer have type 2 diabetes. In the end, it doesn't really matter what you call it if I have normal blood glucose levels, does it? Especially since there's zero possibility that I'll go back to a high carb diet.
I'd like to think that you are wrong here Mike. While I know that is the line of many in the medical profession there are people like Professor Taylor and quite a few on here who would disagreebut you'll never reverse it (until a cure is discovered)
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