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Insulin Resistance By Grata Young
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We hear a lot about insulin resistance, but stop and think a little bit, do you
think our cells only become resistant to insulin? The more hormones your cells
are exposed to, the more resistant they will become to almost any hormone.
Certain cells more than others, so there is a discrepancy. The problem with
hormone resistance is that there is a dichotomy of resistance, that all the
cells don't become resistant at the same time.
And different hormones affect different cells, and the rate of hormone is
different among different cells and this causes lots of problems with the
feedback mechanisms. We know that one of the major areas of the body that
becomes resistant to many feedback loops is the hypothalamus. The various
interrelationships there I really don't have time to go in to here.
But hypothalamic resistance to feedback signals plays a very important role in
aging and insulin resistance because the hypothalamus has receptors for insulin
too. I mentioned that insulin stimulates sympathetic nervous system, it does so
through the hypothalamus, which is the center of it all.
"Insulin is by far your biggest poison." You may find an excellent source of
insulin information at: overcome-diabetes.com
The receptors self-regulate.
If you want to know if insulin sensitivity can be restored to its original
state, well, perhaps not to its original state, but you can restore it to the
state of about a ten year old.
One of my first experiences with this, I had a patient who literally had sugars
over 300. He was taking 200+ units of insulin, he was a bad cardiovascular
patient, and it only made sense to me that you don't want to feed these people
carbohydrates, so I put him on a low carbohydrate diet.
He was an exceptional case, after a month to six weeks he was totally off of
insulin. He had been on 200 some units of insulin for twenty-five years. He was
so insulin resistant, one thing good about it is that when you lower that
insulin, that insulin is having such little effect on him that you can massively
lower the insulin and its not going to have much of an effect on his blood sugar
either. 200 units of insulin is not going to lower your sugar any more that 300
mg/deciliter.
You know that the insulin is not doing much. So we could rapidly take him off
the insulin and he was actually cured of his diabetes in a matter of weeks. So
he became sensitive enough, he was still producing a lot of insulin on his own,
then we were able to measure his own insulin and it was still elevated, and then
it took a long time, maybe six months or longer to bring that insulin down.
It will probably never get to the point of the sensitivity of a ten year old,
but yes, your number of insulin receptors increases, and the activity of the
receptors, the chemical reactions that occur beyond the receptor occur more
efficiently.
You can increase sensitivity by diet, that is one of the major reasons you want
to take Omega 3 oils. We think of circulation as that which flows through
arteries and veins, and that is not a minor part of our circulation, but it
might not even be the major part. The major part of circulation is what goes in
and out of the cell.
The cell membrane is a fluid mosaic. The major part of our circulation is
determined by what goes in and out. It doesn't make any difference what gets to
that cell if it can't get into the cell. We know that one of the major ways that
you can affect cellular circulation is by modulating the kinds of fatty acids
that you eat. So you can increase receptor sensitivity by increasing the
fluidity of the cell membrane, which means increasing the omega 3 content,
because most people are very deficient.
They say that you are what you eat and that mostly pertains to fat because the
fatty acids that you eat are the ones that will generally get incorporated into
the cell membrane. The cell membranes are going to be a reflection of your
dietary fat and that will determine the fluidity of your cell membrane. You can
actually make them over fluid.
If you eat too much and you incorporate too many omega 3 oils then they will
become highly oxidizable (so you have to eat Vitamin E as well and
monounsaturates as well) There was an interesting article pertaining to this
where they had a breed of rat that was genetically susceptible to cancer.
What they did was they fed them a high omega 3 diet, plus iron, without any
extra Vitamin E and they were able to almost shrink down the tumors to nothing,
because tumors are rapidly dividing. This is like a form of chemotherapy, and
the membranes that were being formed in these tumor cells were very high in
omega three oils, the iron acted as a catalyst for that oxidation, and the cells
were exploding from getting oxidized so rapidly. So omega 3 oils can be a double
edged sword.
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To learn more about insulin, please read: Overcome Type I Diabetes and Type II
Diabetes Naturally |