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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Possible insulin resistance?
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<blockquote data-quote="dnfuss" data-source="post: 137003" data-attributes="member: 15487"><p>What is described simply isn't reflective of our understanding of robust blood glucose control in the euglycemic. The so-called experts on the referenced site (Jason Fung, et al.) are the same ones who say that diabetics have been "cured" by intensive fasting despite maintaining HgbA1c of 6.5%, etc. Regularly elevated blood sugars, <u>in and of themselves</u>, cause physiological damage to the tissues and organs of the body. That is the fundamental pathology of diabetes. It's not somehow acceptable because you're in ketosis. So even if the explanation of the cellular process were correct, it still wouldn't justify tolerating sustained damaging blood glucose levels.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dnfuss, post: 137003, member: 15487"] What is described simply isn't reflective of our understanding of robust blood glucose control in the euglycemic. The so-called experts on the referenced site (Jason Fung, et al.) are the same ones who say that diabetics have been "cured" by intensive fasting despite maintaining HgbA1c of 6.5%, etc. Regularly elevated blood sugars, [U]in and of themselves[/U], cause physiological damage to the tissues and organs of the body. That is the fundamental pathology of diabetes. It's not somehow acceptable because you're in ketosis. So even if the explanation of the cellular process were correct, it still wouldn't justify tolerating sustained damaging blood glucose levels. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Possible insulin resistance?
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