I'm not sure I understand the point you are trying to make here?
You specifically singled out "Type 2 diabetes in an otherwise healthy person controlling their blood sugar well through effective dieting and a healthy lifestyle (who is not overweight...which I would remind people is NOT the cause of every diabetics condition)." as Not being connected to increased rates of cancer through any research.
Isn't that the whole point ? the vast majority of those who join here will not qualify - because if they were an otherwise healthy person who is not obese and who is in control of their blood sugars - then why would they join in the first place?
It seems that there are many, many people who have been diabetic for decades without a trace of cancer or heart disease, and who are robustly healthy apart from the need to be careful as regards their food choices and may need insulin injections because of diabetes either as T1 or T2 diabetics. Isn't that the message this site gives ? i.e. contrary to what you many have been told on diagnosis, there is hope.
Isn't the message to everyone who joins that actually whatever point you are starting it, whatever your level of control or your degree of obesity , when you start contributing to your own health by embracing a different lifestyle including helping to manage your own blood sugars ( for which we can contribute a lot of experiences ) and exercising then the chances are you are contributing to improving your own health and longevity for all manner of reasons of which diabetes is just one, whether that is in addition to your medication , or instead of your medication depending on your personal circumstances.
At the same time you have joined a site where people are prepared to look at research done and pronouncement made by various "authorities" on the subject and debate whether whatever is being said might have merit just like this thread.
The cause of higher rates of cancer in diabetics? Who says? In fact WHO data does not support this statement, so can we please stop scaremongering until there is definitive evidence. Diabetics run a similar risk to any other in the general population.
We do have medications that may be linked to causing cancer, as well as CVD, AKI, and all manner of associated health issues, but not the common cold (link so far not established) I have greater risk to life when I walk round the corner to go to the shop. Food poisoning, air pollution, my fellow humans, blue ice from the heavens, a lightning bolt from the blue.
It makes sense to reduce risk where we can but in the long run the end result will greet us one day. To label D as being a major carcinogen where there is no evidence is unhelpful. We have enough morbidity risks to deal with as it is.
So far I have 6 close members of my family who have had the C diagnosis before the age of 60. but not one of them was or has since become Diabetic.
OMG. Now you are suggesting to cure an acid diet by consuming nothing but fruit, which is highly acidic. Where do you get these ideas from?Zand, you might find this interesting.....
I know my body is VERY acidic - and is now beginning to shed the acidity. I get about the lymph being clogged and how fruits, which are astringent, could help to cleanse it.
Interestingly, although I plan to go all fruit for a while (not permanently, just for detox purposes), I am still eating some veg and nuts (and indulged in some chocolate and peanuts this evening...), whilst my evening meal of sweet potato and veg, chia pudding with nuts and the peanuts and chocolate whopped my BG right up even with insulin (and it is very reluctant to come back down), my blood sugar after eating fruit during the day (cherries, banana, apple and pomegranate) ended up elevated no higher than my FBG this morning - with no insulin at all.....
The only time I need no insulin is when I am water-fasting. Then, over a period of days my BG will lower to normal. I think from tomorrow I will go out all fruit and see what happens. I am probably best not checking my BG levels during the day as it may panic me initially, but as today's experience showed me, any elevation there may have been was levelled back out eventually. To see that it had lowered without insulin was quite amazing.
There is bound to be some fluctuation as my body cleans itself out. Detox symptoms too, like the loose bowels I am currently experiencing. I think you and I are probably in a similar place, having tried many different ways to deal with this over the years. I have just felt as though, despite all my efforts, my body has been getting more and more toxic and acidic - which is almost certainly driving the insulin resistance to a great degree. As Mark James Gordon mentions in the video, fat is an acid buffer and I have long believed that, too.
LCHF just made my acidic system worse. It may work for some, but it didn't work for me - and it's taken me 9 years to realise it.......
I completely agree. I am so glad you have said this. Evidently, if I try something vaguely similar in what appear in retrospect to have been the wrong words I get attacked for it! I cannot tell you how hacked off I am right now. I hope if I just stop posting altogether...people like yourself keep challenging the nonsense.
I have read a lot about acidity and it's not acidic foods that cause acidity in the body, it's quite the opposite, I seem to remember friends cutting out cheese, but it's very many years since I looked at the acid diet, long before I was diabetic. I won't say never, but not yet (which was what I said back then). I remember reading a book about diabetes (when I knew I was heading that way but not yet diagnosed) and it said that citrus fruits were important to reduce existing IR. I dismissed this as rubbish at the time but it would seem to fit with the acid diet too. Anyhow this stuff isn't for me today. Thanks @AliB for reminding me of it though.OMG. Now you are suggesting to cure an acid diet by consuming nothing but fruit, which is highly acidic. Where do you get these ideas from?
High fructose intake is one thing that is supposed to create IR in T2D, and although the science is not complete on this, it is recognized that our bodies are not very good at metabolising fructose, so it goes directly to the liver where it becomes stored as adipose fat. We do not burn fructose, it is only useful to us as lipid fat. and needs converting before we can burn it. This is what i understand Metabolic Syndrome to be.
There are times when I think your science is extremely suspect. @zand please do some more research on this before you do this.
Edit to add: when we eat food it goes to the stomach where is gets bathed in strong HCL which is an acid. So an acid diet actually pales into insignificance. Then what does our body do with the glucose we metabolise? It converts it into what is basically acetic acid. This is the Citric Cycle. So whats all this c**p about acidity being a problem, As your post started - my body is very acidic. Yup it sure is and its healthy.
And for those of us who have tried everything they can think of and still have weight issues? Should they just give up?
And for those of us who have tried everything they can think of and still have weight issues? Keep doing what they have been doing?
And for those of us who have tried everything they can think of and still have weight issues? Or try something new?
Currently checking my intestinal flora to see if there's an answer there.
Honestly, I give up. Evidently no-one quite understands that I am simply saying surveys (often driven by agendas we do not have access to) that imply diabetics are going to get cancer is like saying rabbits are going to get shot in the head. There are other factors. I actually think we are largely in agreement whether you see that or not. If you do not agree with me...are you saying that I don't have aright to express my view on a "pronouncement" made by one of these "authorities"? Perhaps I have worded this incorrectly as you are not the only person to find what I have said derogatory to diabetics trying to find away when actually I am 100% behind them. You ask "Isn't that the whole point ?" - YES IT IS! I am honestly starting to think I should just keep out of it and let people say whatever they want.
I am pleased to read this posting here. I think your new approach is probably a better way to go, and safer too. I have no answer to the weight problems that many suffer from, but in my case LCHF reduced my weight down to what seems to be my target weight of 10.5 stones, and it is hardly varying at all now. I find that at this weight I can sit in the bath ok without feeling that my padding is lacking on my glutineous maximus. I can now see my toes, and the other important little bits, which is something I could not do before LCHF. I can even touch my toes!!!!!!! So my journey has worked well for me, and I do not want to lose any more weight.I have read a lot about acidity and it's not acidic foods that cause acidity in the body, it's quite the opposite, I seem to remember friends cutting out cheese, but it's very many years since I looked at the acid diet, long before I was diabetic. I won't say never, but not yet (which was what I said back then). I remember reading a book about diabetes (when I knew I was heading that way but not yet diagnosed) and it said that citrus fruits were important to reduce existing IR. I dismissed this as rubbish at the time but it would seem to fit with the acid diet too. Anyhow this stuff isn't for me today. Thanks @AliB for reminding me of it though.
@Oldvatr Thanks for your concern. I am modifying my plans now. I mistakenly thought that weight loss was the most important thing for me. After a few days of low fat eating I realise it's not. Mental health is my first priority. It's easy to forget about that when you are feeling well. A couple of weeks ago I halved my dose of anti-depressants and I am finding it too hard to go HCLF right now. I am feeling very low and I need more fats and my 99% choc evenings to balance my serotonin levels and lift my mood. So I am changing back to LCHF, but with more plant based foods and as little animal fats as I can cope with. I still intend to carry out my experiment, but will delay it for a while and use this modified version of LCHF as a stepping stone along the way.
So where do you start with this? I know that I gained weight much more quickly after I had 5 courses of antibiotics close together, but apart from having probiotics I'm not sure what to do about it now.
I remember reading a book about diabetes (when I knew I was heading that way but not yet diagnosed) and it said that citrus fruits were important to reduce existing IR. I dismissed this as rubbish at the time but it would seem to fit with the acid diet too.
There is an FDA advisory that grapefruit should be avoided if you are using statins - there can be a serious reaction between them.Some time after I was diagnosd, someone who was very into alkalising gave me a book called something like "the ph miracle diet for diabetes" - I instinctively mistrust anything looking at medical problems with the word "miracle" in the title so I dipped into it it but never implimented it - one thing I remember is that under the theory, the sharpest fruits taste wise (lemons, limes, grapefruit ) were the most alkalising, and the sweetest ones the most acidifying
Really need to get these speakers fixed so I can watch the videos! Thanks for putting them up here.I think it is likely that a lower carb whole food plant based diet could reverse Type 2 for some, just as a low calorie, vegetarian, vegan and LCHF diets can also (along with Intermittent Fasting); my rationale is that I do not believe advocates of these methods are lying and there is enough proof in the data provided; so for example 2 protocols I have not used being the Vegan (raw)and low calorie , clearly show reversal of diabetes in numeric terms. Had LCHF and exercise not worked for me I would happily have tried the aforementioned.
I think we can agree that any diet that gets rid of processed food is a significant step in the right direction.
I have tried to understand why some protocols work for a majority but maybe not circa 20% who try them, and think this is down to various variables such as visceral and subcutaneous fat, metabolic rate, age, insulin resistance, muscle mass, genetics, mental state (stress, motivation), food tastes, economics, food education / preparation abilities, portion size, nutrient deficiencies and many more. A big contributor of whether a wfpb diet (or any other protocol) could reverse Type 2 I think is gut bacteria, take a look at these if you have time (around an hour):
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