NewdestinyX
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 205
Hey gang,
I was on a long bike ride over the weekend and I think I had an 'epiphany' about our shared disease and I wanted to run it by the rest of you and compare our reading and notes. For the longest time the majority of the science I've read and what was simple logic (to me) made clear that with or without a genetic component to the onset of T2 - obesity was in this equation - big time. So much so that for the 80% group of us who present at diagnosis overweight or obese - there is the possibility to push the D into total remission. I personally know from message boards 3 such people and 1 in my personal life that have 'reversed' (never cured) their T2 in the sense that they can eat 'any quantity' of carb they want without any major spiking but also, more importantly, a return to fasting levels under 5mmoL by the 1.5 to 2hr mark which became possible ONLY after returning to a normal healthy BMI for their body type -(i.e. lost all the weight they needed to).
But even as I was arduously (and rather annoyingly to some) purporting and supporting with lots of science the idea that obesity is in the 'onset trigger list' for 80% of T2's -- the fact that there were 20% of us who were/are 'skinny T2's' -- close or nearly perfect BMIs (Body Mass Index) STILL taunted at my conclusions above.
Today something hit me - an 'order of events', if you will - an aetiology of the events leading up to the onset of T2.. Now to give vredit where it's due - several very helpful and well informed folks at other forums offered aspects of what I'm about to 'pitch' here -- so this isn't all original in ANY way.. But ------
WHAT IF ----- the 'nature' of the onset of T2 diabetes, IN ALL OF US -- STARTS as a genetically predisposed (or environmentally induced) breakdown in communication between the liver and pancreas that we ALL share in common -- skinny and large alike.. So essentially-THAT'S the 'DISEASE's' NATURE -- a breakdown in communication in pancreatic/liver signalling systems.. From all forms of MODY to LADA to T2 itself (not T1 of course).
Then:
1) - for skinny diabetics - the breakdown is so harsh and rapid from its onset - that extra weight just isn't a complicating issue. The handwriting's on the wall in terms of becoming full blown D. For many of these people exercise and diet change can indeed control BG and possible slow the progression but most in this group will end up on insulin to control. (last statement is both conjecture and from data I've gathered)
2) for the overweight diabetic - VERY early in the process a bad circular problem started. A person can be overweight or even good BMI at this early stage but:
a) the liver/pancreas comm breakdown leads to hyperinsulinemia as the liver can't tell the pancreas to SHUT OFF dumping insulin and people want to eat ALL the time, endlessly hungry, because of this extra insulin in the system. The insulin in the body at this early stage is still pretty efficient so if this next group of folks is sedentary or just not active or have hormonal imbalances with certain other disease or if near/in menopause - then the body's own insulin does it's #2 job of storing the extra carbs as fat (job #1 of insulin is convert glucose to energy in the muscles)
b) the increased fat stored then -- starts to build up around the pancreas and liver making the communication even harder...
c) Then fat storage starts to build up around the belly - again this is all due to hyperinsulinemia (too much insulin STATYING in the bloodstream) which then in turn clogs the muscle receptors and the BG gets trapped in the blood making the pancreas spit out more and more insulin - killing the depleting nearly 60% of the beta cells - leading to full blown T2.
-------end theory-------------
In the above scenario it would explain why both skinny and overweight people can end up as full blown diabetics. And dispel the 'overly simplistic' view that "we ate our way to T2 diabetes". There is the smallest tidbit of truth is such a statement but it's often simplistically charged about us and is uniformed by a bigger picture - not the least of which is the genetic component too. In the above scenario - obesity is a complicating factor to the onset AND a 'symptom' rather than a primary cause.
It could also explain why catching T2 as early as possible can give both the skinny and fuller T2 a better chance at controlling with diet modification only. Since the less insulin required of the pancreas the better. But also couple explain why each person I've known that's 'put their D into remission' were 'obese at dx' AND 'caught it early'. The obesity for this 80% group of folks 'quickly' becomes the cementer of the movement to 'full blown T2' and the removal of which can improve the communication problem between liver and pancreas which I'm coming to believe is the 'smoking gun' in T2.
Thanks for allowing me to pontificate. Use the thesis for target practice, please. I know I learn that way.
I was on a long bike ride over the weekend and I think I had an 'epiphany' about our shared disease and I wanted to run it by the rest of you and compare our reading and notes. For the longest time the majority of the science I've read and what was simple logic (to me) made clear that with or without a genetic component to the onset of T2 - obesity was in this equation - big time. So much so that for the 80% group of us who present at diagnosis overweight or obese - there is the possibility to push the D into total remission. I personally know from message boards 3 such people and 1 in my personal life that have 'reversed' (never cured) their T2 in the sense that they can eat 'any quantity' of carb they want without any major spiking but also, more importantly, a return to fasting levels under 5mmoL by the 1.5 to 2hr mark which became possible ONLY after returning to a normal healthy BMI for their body type -(i.e. lost all the weight they needed to).
But even as I was arduously (and rather annoyingly to some) purporting and supporting with lots of science the idea that obesity is in the 'onset trigger list' for 80% of T2's -- the fact that there were 20% of us who were/are 'skinny T2's' -- close or nearly perfect BMIs (Body Mass Index) STILL taunted at my conclusions above.
Today something hit me - an 'order of events', if you will - an aetiology of the events leading up to the onset of T2.. Now to give vredit where it's due - several very helpful and well informed folks at other forums offered aspects of what I'm about to 'pitch' here -- so this isn't all original in ANY way.. But ------
WHAT IF ----- the 'nature' of the onset of T2 diabetes, IN ALL OF US -- STARTS as a genetically predisposed (or environmentally induced) breakdown in communication between the liver and pancreas that we ALL share in common -- skinny and large alike.. So essentially-THAT'S the 'DISEASE's' NATURE -- a breakdown in communication in pancreatic/liver signalling systems.. From all forms of MODY to LADA to T2 itself (not T1 of course).
Then:
1) - for skinny diabetics - the breakdown is so harsh and rapid from its onset - that extra weight just isn't a complicating issue. The handwriting's on the wall in terms of becoming full blown D. For many of these people exercise and diet change can indeed control BG and possible slow the progression but most in this group will end up on insulin to control. (last statement is both conjecture and from data I've gathered)
2) for the overweight diabetic - VERY early in the process a bad circular problem started. A person can be overweight or even good BMI at this early stage but:
a) the liver/pancreas comm breakdown leads to hyperinsulinemia as the liver can't tell the pancreas to SHUT OFF dumping insulin and people want to eat ALL the time, endlessly hungry, because of this extra insulin in the system. The insulin in the body at this early stage is still pretty efficient so if this next group of folks is sedentary or just not active or have hormonal imbalances with certain other disease or if near/in menopause - then the body's own insulin does it's #2 job of storing the extra carbs as fat (job #1 of insulin is convert glucose to energy in the muscles)
b) the increased fat stored then -- starts to build up around the pancreas and liver making the communication even harder...
c) Then fat storage starts to build up around the belly - again this is all due to hyperinsulinemia (too much insulin STATYING in the bloodstream) which then in turn clogs the muscle receptors and the BG gets trapped in the blood making the pancreas spit out more and more insulin - killing the depleting nearly 60% of the beta cells - leading to full blown T2.
-------end theory-------------
In the above scenario it would explain why both skinny and overweight people can end up as full blown diabetics. And dispel the 'overly simplistic' view that "we ate our way to T2 diabetes". There is the smallest tidbit of truth is such a statement but it's often simplistically charged about us and is uniformed by a bigger picture - not the least of which is the genetic component too. In the above scenario - obesity is a complicating factor to the onset AND a 'symptom' rather than a primary cause.
It could also explain why catching T2 as early as possible can give both the skinny and fuller T2 a better chance at controlling with diet modification only. Since the less insulin required of the pancreas the better. But also couple explain why each person I've known that's 'put their D into remission' were 'obese at dx' AND 'caught it early'. The obesity for this 80% group of folks 'quickly' becomes the cementer of the movement to 'full blown T2' and the removal of which can improve the communication problem between liver and pancreas which I'm coming to believe is the 'smoking gun' in T2.
Thanks for allowing me to pontificate. Use the thesis for target practice, please. I know I learn that way.