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General Health & Fitness
Health & Wellness
New Research Confirms We Got Cholesterol All Wrong
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<blockquote data-quote="dnfuss" data-source="post: 124204" data-attributes="member: 15487"><p>Wow, that's quite a convincing argument. Basically, "I know I'm right so you're an idiot." Let's instead try to have an adult discussion.</p><p></p><p> </p><p></p><p>Such anecdotes in no way prove that these subjects became diabetic from eating sugar. There is simply no clinical evidence to that effect. They didn't get diabetes from being fat, they got fat from having diabetes. It just wasn't diagnosed yet. It usually isn't until it's pretty advanced. Just because A is associated with B doesn't mean that A causes B. Again, most people who are fat do NOT have diabetes. What accounts for that if being fat causes diabetes?</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>They still have diabetes. They just aren't exhibiting high blood sugars because they're controlling their diet, exercising, etc. So I congratulate them on managing their disease well. It should allow them to live a full and healthy life. But if they return to their previous lifestyle the high blood sugars will resume almost immediately. That is not a "cure." Persons with completely normal blood sugar control (true non-diabetics) can eat a high-sugar diet, never exercise, and they do not exhibit the high blood sugars characteristic of diabetes. Once you have diabetes, it cannot be "cured," only controlled.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dnfuss, post: 124204, member: 15487"] Wow, that's quite a convincing argument. Basically, "I know I'm right so you're an idiot." Let's instead try to have an adult discussion. Such anecdotes in no way prove that these subjects became diabetic from eating sugar. There is simply no clinical evidence to that effect. They didn't get diabetes from being fat, they got fat from having diabetes. It just wasn't diagnosed yet. It usually isn't until it's pretty advanced. Just because A is associated with B doesn't mean that A causes B. Again, most people who are fat do NOT have diabetes. What accounts for that if being fat causes diabetes? They still have diabetes. They just aren't exhibiting high blood sugars because they're controlling their diet, exercising, etc. So I congratulate them on managing their disease well. It should allow them to live a full and healthy life. But if they return to their previous lifestyle the high blood sugars will resume almost immediately. That is not a "cure." Persons with completely normal blood sugar control (true non-diabetics) can eat a high-sugar diet, never exercise, and they do not exhibit the high blood sugars characteristic of diabetes. Once you have diabetes, it cannot be "cured," only controlled. [/QUOTE]
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General Health & Fitness
Health & Wellness
New Research Confirms We Got Cholesterol All Wrong
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