Mon, Mar-22-04, 12:50
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Senior Member
Posts: 741
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Plan: PP
Stats: 160/149/125
BF:
Progress: 31%
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Killing beta cells: in the genes?
I was idly perusing the Usenet groups this morning and came across a thread in the diabetes forum in which Oldal4865 explained that ongoing beta-cell degeneration is from having the diabetes gene: http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthre...56&page=1&pp=15
Quote:
However, as a variety of folks have mentioned, you still have a bunch of dead beta cells, and according to the gloomy web sites which Frank Roy has cited, more are dying because you have the genes which cause Type 2 diabetes.
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5. If you read the gloomy web sites which Frank Roy found, you will see that when folks with genes like yours manufacture insulin, they also damage their
beta cells. Keep making insulin and sooner or later enough beta cells will die, and you will no longer be asymptomatic (i.e. you will have high blood sugars again).
6. If you read the gloomy web site which Frank Roy found, very carefully,
http://www.joplink.net/prev/200209/02.html
you will note that the author, a teaching M.D. at the Univ. of Missouri Med School, thinks that if you can find a way to live without making much insulin, you can delay the rate at which beta cells die. Thus, you can delay the time at which you start displaying diabetic symptoms.
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My father is a T2, this runs in our family. I am not a diabetic, but I was/am IR. I have been assuming that since I am relatively young (mid-thirties) and controlling my BG and insulin well with Atkins that I can probably preserve most of my beta cells and avoid this diagnosis. But maybe my beta cells are genetically programmed to self-destruct anyway as I get older. Does anyone here know more about this?
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