increasingly cynical said:Low BGs are of course not a problem with 'diabetes' (by definition), they are a problem with the medication which is given for 'diabetes'
:?
increasingly cynical said:Really interesting replies! i wonder what proportion of (non-type 1 I would guess) diabetes could actually be controlled by relatively pleasant stuff like taking up a sport, drinking red wine with your meal, avoiding excess carbs... hmmm...
:wink:
Trinkwasser said:increasingly cynical said:Really interesting replies! i wonder what proportion of (non-type 1 I would guess) diabetes could actually be controlled by relatively pleasant stuff like taking up a sport, drinking red wine with your meal, avoiding excess carbs... hmmm...
:wink:
In my experience quite a lot. The key is catching it early before too much damage has occurred (in theory by the time you reach a Type 2 diagnosis half your beta cells have gone.)
I know a few people who have remained med free for anything from a decade to 25 years, the key being tight BG control which almost inevitably means low carb, and balancing that against the exertion (one is a major league bike rider) and the wine etc.
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