Any others out there?
I wonder if a cure doesn't exist for my disease, much like many others, that isn't propagated because it's not profitable.
Any others out there?
I wonder if a cure doesn't exist for my disease, much like many others, that isn't propagated because it's not profitable.
Type II is a diet problem for most people, and most people with Type II are really suffering from insulin resistance that comes from over consumption of processed flours and other sugars over a number of years. Many of the things you hear of treating and even curing diabetes are directed at Type II. I have Type II.
Type I from what I have read is a genetic disorder where insulin is not produced. Could there be cures? I think it is possible, but I believe that would be something surgical or maybe even stem cell related treatment of the insulin producing cells in the pancreas.
I agree with your summary.
The body takes in food and by the time it gets to the small intestine much of it is in the form of long sugar molecules which are then split up into small glucose molecules which are circulated by the blood stream. The brain takes what energy it needs as a priority but other cells need to be "unlocked" by a key to accept the fuel.
That is where insulin comes in. It is the key. Cells are unlocked by the insulin and the glucose fuel is taken in and the mitochondrtia convert that fuel into another fuel used internally (ATP).
Glucose left over is stored temporarily in the liver where it can be retransmitted between meals. If there is still glucose left over it gets put into long-term storage as fat. If you get too much fat the body becomes insulin resistant so more and more insulin is required to get the fuel into the cells. It is almost like a self-destruct mechanism.
Why does the body have such a dangerous mechanism built in? I think it is connected to hibernation! When it comes to winter, bears stuff themselves with food. They become insulin resistant so need to eat even more food to get the same amount of fuel into their cells. They can put on ten pounds in a day!
They eventually go to sleep and ketosis trips in, it is really an emergency mechanism, and provides glucose while they sleep. They wake up in spring and continue as normal. If we could crack that part then maybe we could fix Type 2 diabetes. It certainly puts ketosis, as in "keto diet" and intermittent fasting into perspective.
Type 1 is where the body does not actually produce any insulin in the first place so insulin injections are required to keep alive.
(Sorry, I have been reading up on the subject recently!)
Yeah, type 2 is definitely curable. Keto diet or carnivore cures it.
I’ve heard of type 1’s on carnivore needing very little insulin.
My own insulin requirements were cut by more than half after going carnivore.
How could it be genetic if it barely ever existed years in the past. People used to take iodine regularly if they lived inland. This is per Hubbies gramma from Oklahoma.
I take iodine every day now. It does help lower blood sugar, but it isn't a cure for Type II. I don't think it does anything for Type I.
As I stated and people don't seem to get the two types of diabetes are totally different at the basic chemistry level. Type I; no insulin is produced. Type II; large amounts of insulin is produced but because of the over load of insulin caused by our diets the cells themselves become resistant to insulin, and will not let it enter the cell to store the glucose that then accumulates in the bloodstream doing all kinds of damage.
Those with Type I can't just automatically start producing insulin. What caused that lack of insulin production seems to follow a genetic path as the condition runs in families. That cause may be due to something that targeted their specific genome, but I have not seen that addressed.
Does it run in your family
Type II runs in my family, but not Type 1. Type one runs in my wife's family, and in the family of a friend of mine. My friends family had it in some of his siblings, but it seemed to have skipped him, but both his daughters have Type I. My wife has two cousins that both have Type I, as did their mother.
It's not genetic. Been proven to be vaccine linked, from certain TB vaccine regimens.
That is the first I have heard of that as a source.
I'm sure it's multi-factorial. But the correlation is very strong. You can find a lot of data through faustmanlab.org.