600 calorie diet reverses type 2 diabetes

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  • dik
    DK Veteran
    • Apr 2009
    • 955

    #1

    600 calorie diet reverses type 2 diabetes

    Crash course diet reverses Type 2 diabetes in a week

    Britain's 2.5 million people with Type 2 diabetes are offered new hope today as scientists show the disease can be reversed in as little as seven days by going on a crash-course diet.

    After just a week, pre-breakfast ('fasting') blood sugar levels had returned to normal, suggesting a resumption of correct pancreas function.
    After eight weeks, all had managed to reverse their diabetes. Three months on, seven remained free of it.
    Prof Taylor explained that too much fat "clogged up" the operation of the pancreas at a cellular level, preventing normal secretion of insulin which regulates blood sugar.
    When this fat was removed - by way of the diet - normal function resumed.
    He said: "This is a radical change in understanding Type 2 diabetes. It will change how we can explain it to people newly diagnosed with the condition.
    "While it has long been believed that someone with Type 2 diabetes will always have the disease, and that it will steadily get worse, we have shown that we can reverse the condition."
    Gordon Parmley, 67, from Stocksfield in Northumberland, one of the volunteers, said: "At the end of the trial, I was told my insulin levels were normal and after six years, I no longer needed my diabetes tablets.
    "Still today, 18 months on, I don?t take them. It?s astonishing really that a diet ? hard as it was ? could change my health so drastically."
    The idea of the crash diet came from the observation that gastric bypass patients often quickly stopped being Type 2 diabetics.
    Many thought this was because surgery affected gut hormones which had a knock-on impact on the pancreas.
    But Prof Taylor thought it might really be because the surgery severely constrained what patients could eat. He set up the diet experiment to test his 'fat' hypothesis.
    He said special MRI scans showed the proportion of fat in volunteers' pancreases dropped during the eight weeks, from eight to six per cent.
    "This study does not just show proof of principal, it shows proof of mechanism," he concluded.
    He believed the diet would also work in people who had suffered from Type 2 diabetes for years, as bariatric surgery patients tended to remain diabetes-free. He is presenting the findings to the American Diabetes Association conference in San Diego this weekend.
    Dr Iain Frame, director of research at Diabetes UK, which supported the study, said: "It shows that Type 2 diabetes can be reversed, on a par with successful surgery without the side effects. However, this diet is not an easy fix."
    Whether the reversal "would remain in the long term" was still an open question.
    Despite the diet's potential, Prof Taylor was a little pessimistic about how many would stick to it.
    "Maybe five per cent," he said. "However, if they did, it would save the NHS many millions of pounds."
    Almost a tenth of the entire NHS budget, or about ?9 billion a year, is spent managing diabetes and its complications. Most of that is spent on type 2 diabetics, who outnumber type 1 diabetics by about nine to one
    Crash course diet reverses Type 2 diabetes in a week - Telegraph
    sigpic another happy customer

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  • Canker_Canison
    V.I.P. Member
    • May 2010
    • 3905

    #2
    Sadly, most people look to the surgery as the easy fix to their weight problems. A diet is something they try for two days before proclaiming it never worked.

    So the chances of these people sticking to a 600 Kcal diet is practically none.

    Still, for those with will power & a desire to save their lives, it's looking promising.
    Canker

    "Animal, vegetable or mineral... I'll do anything, to anything, with anything"
    - The Baby Eating Bishop of Bath & Wells
    [COLOR=Green]

    Comment

    • Evastar
      V.I.P. Member
      • Apr 2009
      • 1220

      #3
      its the same as smoking, people know it's bad for them but they still don't want to give it up.

      it's not news that overeating causes heart disease, diabetes etc and a whole host of other health problems, maybe this will give some people the impetus they need to go on a diet, but i would say most will just continue taking their meds and ignoring the evidence.

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