@@veryberry39 "What he meant" only really applies in the US. Expensive insulin isn't a problem for basically any other developed nation. Developing nations, well, everything's unaffordably expensive for them.
I have type II. Thankfully it's under control. I had to change my diet and take Metformin. My A1C went from 14+ (life threateningly high) to 5 (normal). I also lost 25+ lbs in about 4 months. My vision was starting to go. I'm much better now that I changed my diet and got my blood sugar down. No more candy and soda for me! They even dropped my meds to once a day. I could have died at any time. I'm so glad it was treated promptly. It saved my vision and my life.
@@briardi89 35 lbs. is fabulous! At my Walmart the salads are very high in salt and fat and preservatives. So, I've been trying not to eat them. I'm trying to get back to salads, post covid. I used to do a lot of salad bar at a local supermarket. The salad bar probably had a lot of preservatives and the bags of leaves seem to keep getting recalled. I hate chopping all of those things.
I just got back on my diet again (never fully left) took a few weeks off due to some stress and i fell into old habits. Back to the 1 diet soda a day and my water/protein shake/ propel Carrots are 100% my saving grace (and salad with a small amount of kale some spinach and lettuce) plus boneless skinless chicken breast. Will get even easier that things will be in season here! Keep the grind and keep up the good work. Change is one step at a time!
i was diagnosed with T2D in 2022, I got 2 tests done in 3 days both times my A1C was just under 14 mmol/L. Now a year and a half later my test has my A1C at 6.6 mmol/L. It really wasn't all that difficult. I cut back on cakes, muffins, and sugary drinks, went on a high-protein diet, i became more physically active, and of course Metformin.
As a Type 2 diabetic who went from 350 lbs and an A1C in the 14 range. To about 225 lbs and an A1C of 5.5 it is very possible to get your life and body under control and back to a much healthier state. My journey was primarily diet change and being on both Metformin and Ozempic. There is no magic cure but if you are willing to work at it from various angles then there is a way forward.
Hey Ginger, that's great to hear- congrats! I'm curious how long that took. I'm at 265lbs now, and just hit 10 on my last A1C, even though I'd been moving a lot and releasing weight the prior few months.
Type 2 Diabeties should not be messed with. My dad lived with it his entire life and never controlled and he's facing the consequence of that now. Blindness, dialysis, highblood pressure. I've lived with type 2 for 5 years and seeing how my dad is. I've gotten tired of it and changed my life style and reserved my diabetes to the point it seems like I never had it. My AC1 was 7.8 but now it's been between 5.2-5.4 for quite sometime now.
this gives me hope. we have been told conflicting things about t2d remission, some that it's possible and some day it's always only temporarily in remission, no matter what changes you do, it'll always return. my husbands in remission with same changes as yourself, fingers crossed it stays that way.
@@piddlydiddly absolutely! He just have to keep up his life style change, diet and exercise and it'll be in remission for a very long time. I'm able to have sugar on a sugar basis but I understand when and how much of it to have.
@@SuperSOSSOS 30+ years, no exercise, no diet change, just depended on the medications which they don't tell you that the more you take the worse it gets. The saddest part about it every now and then he'll ask me to take him to the doctors because he no longer wants all these diseases.
@piddlydiddly Look into Ron Santo, he never went into remission, but he was a pro baseball player with t2d in an Era before pin prick blood tests. Yes he died from bladder cancer and lost both legs, but he also lived to 70, and had t2d for nearly 50 years.
i'm a type 1 myself, but my dad was type 2 and i know a lot of type 2s via the diabetic community. what i found terrifying that in the last two ish years i heard twice that people who had an elevated A1c were basically told "you got type 2, watch your weight, okay bye" - there is a bitter irony that both turned out to be type 1 but even if the type 2 had been correct (which should be tested for though) you can just say "watch you weight, ciao" ..neither was even _suggested_ to get a glucose meter, or see a dietician, or have follow-up appoints to watch the development. it would be frustrating with a rare disease, but with somehing as common as diabetes that is just inacceptable behaviour from a doctor.
I had a coworker who was told “you’re type 2, here’s a blood sugar checker, bye!” So he was constantly brain fogged etc at work so I was telling him the TLDR he has to pay attention to because otherwise he LITERALLY COULDNT FUNCTION ENOUGH TO DO HIS JOB & he didn’t listen or try to do anything about his diabetes. How is that kind of “medical care” legal? & how do people just let themselves stay sick & oblivious when people are actively trying to tell them how they could realistically care for themselves? 😭
Same! I’m shutting people down left and right every day. Like, “No Shelly. I can’t drink the juice from the Mongolian Yak fruit to cure my diabetes like your great uncle Fleming. He sounds like a liar.”
@thatsmrfisher, I am a natural path, I have the cure for your Diabetes. Send me your email for further engagement and observe yourself getting healed from Diabetes..
My A1C was initially a 9.6. I don't like sweets so I had to look at other things. I ended up cutting out all beer and limiting my carbs to 30g a day. My A1C dropped to 6.2. The lowest it's been was 5.1 with diet changes alone.
Metformin is also special among type 2 diabetes mellitus medicines in that its use is linked to a longer lifespan. Actually, the increased lifespan observed among diabetics taking it in one trial was so great that they outlived the control group that didn't have diabetes and this helped to trigger research into anti-ageing effects of metformin.
I would also love a video on the newest research into Type 1, particularly this new trend doctors are seeing, of late-adult-onset T1. People are so quick to assume that's another trend to blame on lazy fat people, despite the fact that their diabetes acts like T1, not T2. But it looks more and more like a hormonal-changes result than anything to do with lifestyle, especially when it's not clearly correlated with body-mass. I was diabetic for 15 years before I even heard a doctor refer to insulin as the hormone that it is. And the increase in diabetes in general (aside just from our getting better at diagnosing it) is more easily explained by the fact that people today die WITH diabetes, rather than dying FROM it. Metformin alone has only been around since the mid 90s. We are basically 1-2 generations into a lot more people who have diabetes or are likely to develop it, being able to live long enough to have kids, and pass along those genetic markers. And when you factor in the epigenetic stuff we're learning about how the grandchildren of people who survived famines are more likely to be obese, regardless of their lifestyle, it becomes clear that we are at least another generation away from figuring out how to actually reduce the number of people dealing with diabetes.
type 2 diabetes runs in my family, and my brother and i have both been diagnosed while we’re still in our 20s. we’re both an average body size and i at least have been somewhat physically active over the past few years… i rly appreciate people pushing back on the myth that poor personal choices cause diabetes; sometimes it just happens. and even if a person’s choices *do* play a role they don’t deserve the amount of stigma that is involved.
For women, having PCOS is a major risk factor. It also makes it much more difficult to control your weight. If I don't constantly stay vigilant about my weight, I immediately start gaining weight again. And a couple years ago, when I was in the lower bracket of obesity, I had a blood sugar level scare. Basically, I have to control my weight and eating habits, always, if I want to stay healthy. That doesn't mean I can't eat a peace of cake or some sweets occasionally. But I can't afford not to think about my diet.
@@mr_dodex was accurate tbh! As to be expected from Sci Show, ofc. Not anything particularly new for me except the how certain things functioned and even some of that I had known already. o7
@@mr_dodex in my opinion the downplaying of exercise and weight was unnecessary, but working in diabetes research with the focus on exercise it might be my bias. and they could mention the effect of insulin resistance in the brain and the effect it has on the bodyweight. but it was a good overwiew
A lot of good info. I'm Type 2 diabetic -- and actually close to *under*weight, so it irritates me to no end when people presume it's all "poor lifestyle/diet/weight" related. Especially since it literally runs in my entire family. I manage it effectively with medication and diet changes fortunately and caught it well before any damage.
I appreciate you covering this subject. I've been overweight and with poor health habits, but aggravating to my doctor at the time, I wasn't showing any signs of diabetes. Other health issues, but not that. Since having COVID in 2022, though, I've been getting poor A1C results and am now prediabetic. It's no excuse for my poor health habits, but it it does explain why I was so incredibly fortunate for decades and then like a lightswitch being turned off, I no longer was. Regarding the doctor being aggravated that I wasn't diabetic - as weird as it sounds, I do mean that literally. She wasn't a good doctor and managed to screw up the one time I successfully kept myself on a proper diet by ordering me on a dangerous fad diet. When I talked to a dietitian afterward, she (the dietitian) was horrified and gave me a diet that was essentially what I'd had success with but 50 calories higher. Unfortunately I haven't had success staying on that diet since the fad diet derail. PS. Do not give health "advice" in reply. It's unwelcome and harmful.
I have a friend who is very overweight, who was in the hospital for other reasons, and the doctor tested him every couple of hours to see if he had diabetes yet. That's not how it works! GPs don't seem to be getting a very good education about diabetes. I'm not sure that endocrinologists are either. I hope you found a better doctor!
@@Sarcasticron A lot of doctors don't seem to keep up with new research once they finish their schooling. It's maddening. They should have to get annual continuing education credits in their specialties and get recertified at some regular interval, maybe every ten years, but at least in the USA many of them have knowledge that ends at that graduation date.
I was pre-diabetic. About twenty years ago I got the bug/fever/whatever that was going around work and ran a fever for a couple of days. T2 runs in my family, both sides in elders. Afterwards I felt different. I had recently moved and found a Dr. I told her I was diabetic and she tested me (after telling me this is not how most patients present) and agreed.
@@Sarcasticron They do test when you are in the hospital now, especially post surgery. It has been determined that post surgical patients are likely to have high blood sugar because of the stress and inactivity and that they heal better if the blood sugars are kept down.
@@Sarcasticron Yep. Though for a much worse reason. Thankfully the diet fiasco had me distrusting her and I got a second opinion on her malprescription or I wouldn't be here now. I went a couple years refusing to go to anyone but I ended up with someone decent who I stayed with until he retired. New one has been decent too.
Thanks for this. There's type 1 diabetes in my family, so this was useful information. As always, SciShow quality, presentation, and information density are all top-notch, and this was no exception!
Yeah... turns out being poor, living with food scarcity and bouts of starvation, leading to eating quantity over quality, subsisting on potatoes, rice, pasta (Mac n chese) boxes of ramen noodles, all carb heavy can and will lead to type 2 diabetes.
Also the ultra processed food & refined carbs that they target advertise to the poor, and give as alms to the poor via breadlines. Slow motion genocide.
Yeah, turns out if you're poor you lose the ability to meditate and manage your life properly and you become incapable of understanding what a good diet looks like. If only we had more money, then we could do and know all these things.
I'm poor. Just finished my p90x workout. Just finished my oatmeal with protein powder and other nutrient rich foods. Just finished my grocery budget for the month. I'm at $200 for my groceries and I am fit and healthy. Now I'm going to go to work to make my contribution to society and make the money I need. I'll see you guys when you get your lives together and stop making excuses.
@@SilentStormParadox I'm a medically retired disabled Iraqi war veteran. I live on $1000 VA disability per month. Life is good now compared to when I was a child living with food scarcity age birth through joining the military at age 17. Starvation age 5 through 6, which was a powerful enough experience to be burned in detail in my memories. Food scarcity and Starvation again in my mid 30s after I left my ex after 12 years of horrible marriage and lost everything. Managed to rejoin the military at 39 because of my prior service and the government was desperate for bodies to ship to Iraq. Living with far less than adequate parents growing up, and dealing with a sadistic ex through a protracted and harrowing divorce left it's mark throughout my body and I'm certain was in great part why my brother and I ended up with type 2 diabetes. Thankfully the VA is helping to keep me healthy and stable with AC1 and hormone monitoring every three months. I eat as well as I can with a goal of three fresh fruits and 6 fresh vegetables per day and I primarily subsist on grains and beans. I go for 5k walks every morning before the sun comes up, and 45 to 50k mountain bike rides every other day, on top of all the physical therapy exercises the VA has me do daily. Not every person can live a perfect life and have perfect knowledge on how to best succeed in their circumstances. Skills are far more important than money and in the last 10 years I've learned and polished skills that will keep me alive and healthy even if civilization were to stop. Starvation and food scarcity haven't been a problem since I rejoined the military at 39 and never will be again. From my parents and my ex I've learned never to rely on others. Even with what the VA provides me I have a plan B for if that gets disrupted. I can only count on myself and be my own best advocate.
I’m a nurse who caught COVID in February 2020…. And ended up with severe long COVID. With organ damage. Now I’m the first in my whole family to be diabetic. But because I’m fat doctors ignore all other factors, like my new post-COVID autoimmune disorder, multi organ damage, or active healthy lifestyle. Well, it used to be. But because I’m overweight no one cares. I was told to use ozempic, I refused because I knew it was bad news when it was new.
Hello nurse, lose the weight, you already knew that. Doctors aren’t ignoring everything else, its because being fat makes everything else worse. You already knew that. Out of all the curses god hands out left and right, not putting sugar and fat into your mouth while living a sedentary lifestyle is the least people can do.
My nan is waiting for a knee replacement, but they won't do anything until her diabetes (type 2) is under control, but she can't be very active to try and help that, and she generally eats well. It becomes so frustrating, because it's been 18 months, and her other knee is being impacted, but every time it's always about her blood sugars or other things. If only there was something that could help help/cure
I have type 2 diabetes, as well as Hashimoto's thyroid disease. So far, my doc doesn't think I have any autoimmune diabetes. But I'm currently on multiple therapies, and have finally managed to get my a1c down 2.5 points, to an 8.0. It's HARD and I'm really working at it. I've been diabetic for 10 years, and have lived with my thyroid disease for 20.
I really wished you had emphasized more the ways in which the 'lifestyle changes' can be out of patients' control. This condition is heavily treated by both the public and medical professionals as being a moral failure, that if the patient had just 'tried harder' they wouldn't have gotten diabetes, and it's extremely harmful to patients.
My ex died of unregulated diabetes. He would go through life eating and drinking whatever he wanted, until needed an ambulance. He would spend time in hospital, allowing the staff to fix him. Lost all of his teeth, several toes, foot, etc. After getting out he would start all over again.
Great video! Thank you. I've lived with T2 for 18 years and have been an advocate for those of us who deal with this (former blogger). I especially appreciate that you mention that we aren't to blame for our condition. Stigma is horrible and only adds to the stress. I will definitely be sharing this informative video. 👏
The main reason the price of that drug sky rocketing is because it has become the drug of choice for the rich and famous to loose some weight and now everyone wants it to try and loose weight and not use it for its intended use of treatment of type 2 diabetes
I’ve been on Mounjaro for a little over a year and I love it. I’m on a lower dose though, so my side effects are minimal. my a1c has been 4.7-5.0 since starting it- down from 11.9.
Ozempic wreaked havoc on me as well. I worry that is going to drive disordered eating for folks even further if it’s marketed purely as a weight loss option.
Not all drugs are for all people! I'm sorry that one was so rough for you. I hope you are able to find a different approach that works for you. I've been on medications that had side effects that were, for me, worse than what they were supposed to treat. Other people might do great on it, but for whatever reason, I didn't.
I was diagnosed with type 1 as an adult. One doctor mentioned 1.5 as a possibility early on but never explained the difference and no other doctor I've seen has mentioned it. I also would love more of an explanation video on the differences
@@sparker_87 Basically, LADA is like slow-onset type 1. So at first it looks like type 2, and is often misdiagnosed as type 2, but a couple/few years down the road the person ends up in the ER with terrible ketoacidosis, and no idea what's going on, because doctors never tell type 2 diabetics that they can get ketoacidosis too. Often they don't think to test for ketoacidosis (they should do this test a lot more often, even if the sugars aren't high, because they're not always sky-high every day). For a proper diagnosis, they should always do an antibody test to see if it's an autoimmune type, which is more likely to be type 1 or LADA. But it's not 100% accurate, and sometimes type 2 is autoimmune. Either way it would be better to just teach every diabetic about ketoacidosis. Good luck!
Having been diagnozed just a few months ago, and scheduled to (maybe) transition to Ozempic soon, I can now (again) say that I'm _so_ happy to live in Norway. Seeing the extortionate prices in the US ("from around $915 per injection pen"), and comparing it to Norwegian prices (NOK520, or ~$48), makes me pay the slightly higher taxes here with even more pleasure. But socialized medicine is bad, I guess... 😅
Yep, it's real sad. People will fight against universal healthcare, while paying insane premiums to insurance companies who turn around and deny everything. Like, uh, what???
The frustrating thing is a lot of USA people would be happy to have socialized healthcare, but the government is so structurally racist it would literally make its own population sicker than give healthcare to BIPOC-& most if not all our government representatives are largely controlled by the corporations paying them to vote to protect corporations over citizens. How does the public get universal healthcare with a government against its own citizens well being? 😭
@@schizescribe Hey now, it's not just BIPOC they are so desperately trying to prevent from accessing health care. They are almost as interested in keeping healthcare away from the disabled and the chronically ill, and anyone LGBTQ+, as they are keeping it from BIPOC - and arguably just from women in general. 🤮
I have type one diabetes, and would love to see content about that… everything seems to look at type two… just recently got an insulin pump and closed loop system - an “artificial pancreas”!! Would be great to learn more about the tech
huh,,, i clicked on this just because i love sci show and watch every video, but.. i've been chronically ill for a long time, and we've been trying to figure it out, and the mention of capillaries/spider veins and tingling along with frequent urination has made me... reconsider? not in an "oh eureka! i've figured it out after watching one singular video" but in a " this is something to bring up to my doctor at the very least just to rule out. (so far we've been looking towards heart or possible connective tissue issues)
Have you ever tested A1c? Some doctors test fasting glucose, which means nothing, it's just a snapshot at the time of the blood draw. Even A1c be unreliable. Ask for a C-Peptide test, a high level means that your pancreas makes a lot of insulin and works too hard. But doctors tend not to get it done because they don't know how to interpret the results.
Check your fasting insulin levels or c-peptide in your next bloodwork, you are going to have to ask for it, it will let you know long before your blood sugar levels get out of control.
For a long time a lot of the issues-especially frequent urination-has been a “test for diabetes” 🚩 but with healthcare in the USA what it is it’s not surprising they didn’t think of it 😅 Yeah have the doctor test your fasting glucose levels! There’s usually also a “if we give you our lab standard sugary drink how high does your blood sugar go?” test but I don’t know what it’s called. Good luck! I hope you find answers soon! ❤
I know this is about type 2 but PLEASE stop spreading the myth that type 1 is most commonly diagnosed in childhood. We've known for decades that over half of new cases occur in people over the age of 30, and it's up to 2/3 if you start counting at 20. Most of us get this disease as adults, where it often progresses slower than it does in kids. These two things combine to result in roughly 40% of cases of type 1 in the US starting out misdiagnosed as type 2 (something that would have been great to include in this video!), and that's only the ones who manage a correct diagnosis (research dating back to at least 1980 suggests that 10-20% of those diagnosed with type 2 actually have type 1, and another 10-15% have MODY or type 3c).
+1, I was diagnosed in my 20s and I had to fight my doctor to get tested for type 1 because he would only treat me for type 2 (and I wasn't getting better). Looking forward to a new video on type 1!
There’s also LADA or type 1.5 diabetes as it’s more likely found in late adulthood (20s onwards) it’s an autoimmune disease that damages beta cell causing a rapid destruction of the cells. It’s also most often misdiagnosed as dm2
@@jessicapearson9479 Please educate yourself. According to Joslin Diabetes Center research, type 2 has roughly 5x greater genetic risk factors than type 1 (the numbers aren't exact because type 1 risk depends on several factors like the age/sex of the parent with type 1). Poor diet may increase risk of type 2 but you don't get the disease if you don't have the genes to trigger overproduction of insulin that in turn causes insulin resistance and the weight gain so may people mistakenly think is the source of the disease rather than a result of it.
My mom was diagnosed with pre-diabetes last year and reversed it in just 8 weeks and so far it didnt come back. All with just lifestyle changes, so make sure you use all the weapons you have to fight against the sickness and not just medication alone (unless you doctor tells you so).
I agree. When your Dr says that medication is how to combat this disease, sometimes when you adjust your diet to "healthy " sometimes the medication won't work as effectively and you could put yourself in danger! Unless your Dr recommends changes, people should always maintain thier diet to keep things as consistent as possible.
it's also important to know: if lifestyle changes alone don't work, then it's not because you're a failure. we can advocate for taking your health into your own hands and still accept that there are factors just beyond our control - acceptance and a will to fight are not mutually exclusively (unless you are a Sith, bc they deal in absolutes)
Soo true! If you have good genetics you can eat and eat. You might gain weight but not get diabetes. Unfortunately most type 2 who "reverse" their diabetes will see it again as their body agrees. Because our energy pathways are complicated, our bodies are very resilient. But it also means a person can have multiple genetic failures. Genetic failures plus the stress of 3 pregnancirs completely destroyed my pancreas. r@fariesz6786
Can't speak for population as a whole. I have type 2 diabetes right now, at about 210 lbs. When I drop to about 180 lbs, I revert to prediabetes. You'd think this would be strong enough incentive to stay at 180 lbs or less, but damn, food tastes soooo good. I use nutrisense to track my blood sugar and try my best to stay in range just through diet and exercise. Here's hoping geneticists figure out a way to turn off insulin resistance that doesn't involve medications that also cause horrific diarrhea. C'mon CRISPR, we need your help out here!
😂😂😂😂 "but food tastes soooo goooood" 😂😂😂😂 hilarious. What about u balance training hard, with eating hard? I love food, but since i love my body too... just train enough so u can eat a ton 😋
This was a really good video, my paternal grandma died from diabetic related complications when I was 6, and my dad ended up diagnosed with it when I was in highschool. He's doing better managing it, but that's definitely scared me into living a healthy / active lifestyle and keeping an eye on my diet.
Such a funky room for a talk about Type II diabetes.... I like it.... it is weird though that the light in the room is not coming from the light in the room
I'm actually surprised you use your index finger to draw blood. We in the netherlands use any other finger since the index finger is the most sensitive finger and usually used to read braille. And since diabetes can result in (partial) blindness this is kind of a big deal
I like that "managed diabetes" is transitioning into "diabetes in remission." Not for myself, but for my disabled sister. She once had a BMI of 70 (she weighed over 400 lbs) and was in a diabetic coma at the hospital; she was hospitalized for two months in the bariatric ward while they tried to get her weight under control. What caused the issue? Drinking a 2 liter bottle of full sugar soda every day. Today she's got a BMI of closer to 30, no longer has to take insulin or metformin, and she was officially classified as "managed diabetes." Her new endocrinologist doesn't even worry about it since her last A1C checked in at 4.9 - she's fine. She still drinks soda..... but we switched her to zero sugar stuff.
The new set and casual delivery are interesting. If it makes the hosts comfortable im for it. Or maybe he just moves around too much and this is the easiest way to keep him in frame 😅
12:50 I was on a 1.5mg prescription for the "Trulicity" brand name , but now cannot get it because too many doctors are prescribing it to their non-diabetic patients for weight loss and my A1C is now over 12%
Type 2 diabetes is a real nightmare when you get side effects from the medicine you are supposed to take for cure....my dad has been diabetic for almost 6 years by now and the metformin which is the most general drug for any diabetic patient became a real nightmare. It took us a lot to make his health stable. So though medicine is necessary make sure you monitor your diabetic levels and note the rapid changes in your health before it's too late. I don't say you should avoid medicines....take medicine if it's necessary... consult your doctors and make sure your medicine works for you not against you.
I’ve been struggling to control my Type II diabetes since receiving chemotherapy for cancer 2 years ago. Thankfully, I’m now cancer-free but still struggling to get my diabetes back under control. I’m told that the steroids given during my chemo can affect how the pancreas produces insulin. My health care team says that my diet is very good and my exercise is within recommendations (not very enthusiastic about exercise but walk a lot). I am on Metformin and a couple of other medications. Any constructive thoughts?
Have a look at the studies on keto as a treatment. It can help reverse diabetes. It isn't an easy fix, and take it steady at the start - a tapered start rather than just cutting out all carbs/sugars, otherwise glucose levels can drop too quickly. But it can help.
This video was insightful and full of a lot of information people can easily understand. I appreciate appropriate information regarding the types of food that are beneficial to those who have T2. I would have liked a tad more focus on intracellular mylio lipids and it's role in T2, however this informative and helpful video can help many who may be new to this.
the thing is, they are still risk factors. it qon't hurt to lose a couple pounds/kilos, excercise regukarky and eat as healthy as you possible can. emphasising a good lifestyle is essential to combating and preventing most diseases. you might stilll end up developing the disease but even then you can manage it.
People are aware of what is recommended but the problem of that is that recommendation when already at the point of type 2 diagnosis leads only to temporary change (if any) with progressive increases in medication because it doesn’t get to the root of the problem. While it won’t make them more money… incorporating fasting at least to start with electrolytes will help. Not a fad but also researched with improvements in important markers and better yet helps the body (liver, kidneys) heal and maintain itself again. At that point only would the recommended things to do besides the medicines would be fine long term. * I’ll add strength training is important especially for diabetics whether try fasting or not. And don’t need to go crazy on cardio. Just walk after a meal but not skip on resistance training full body 2-3 /wk.
Wasn’t properly diagnosed, but realized I had many of the symptoms of pre diabetes. Started intermittent fasting and going to a proper clean keto diet. The first two days were rough but once the body gets used to running on fats, including your own, the food cravings disappear. I also felt way more energetic and clear headed. With the new found energy I started working out, decided to supplement creatine and omega 3 (not big on fish) and now even on total fasting days my energy is through the roof. The fat has been burning off insanely quick while simultaneously being able to put on some noticeable muscle mass. The best part is I’ve found that these changes feel long term sustainable and if anything should get easier once I approach my ideal weight. Looooove it. Also bizarrely, I noticed a HUGE change in my dreams while sleeping. It’s hard to articulate it, but it seemed like prior I rarely dreamt at all, but when I did they would be brief, colorless, soundless and so vague it was nearly abstract. Now my dreams are insanely vivid, with highly detailed scenes that flow together. It literally feels like I’ve unlocked a second level of consciousness.
I am board-certified in internal medicine and have taken care of thousands of diabetics, mainly type 2 diabetics. Good video, but I would also add these points; (1) there definitely is a link between your family history and the risk of type 2 diabetes, (2) insulin resistance is definitely linked to obesity, (3) type 2 diabetics usually have the "Metabolic Syndrome", a constellation of findings that includes increased intra-abdominal fate, insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, and obstructive sleep apnea, (4) the increased intra-abdominal fat seems to act something like an endocrine gland/organ that releases pro-inflammatory agents that damage blood vessels and nerves and increase insulin resistance, (5) hormones released by the gut/intestines influence eating habits and insulin responsiveness and seem to be part of this condition, (6) insulin resistance is associated with increase fat deposition in the liver, which can cause damage and cirrhosis, and much more. I think Type 2 diabetes has components that look something like an eating disorder, which is not a character flaw or problem with will power. It's much more complicated than this. Finally, obese Type 2 diabetics who return to ideal body weight early in their condition often normalize their blood sugars and other metabolic markers of disease, but they remain at risk for diabetes if they gain weight back again.
@9:06 Glucose levels are also increased through stress, which can be connected to being from a marginalized community that deals with chronic societal bias.
I hope this video increases the awareness of diabetes in general! I've been T1 for the last 28 years (since I was 4 years old) and I've spent the last 15 years of my life understanding it DEEPLY via college and University, this entire video is almost like me re-iterating all my own knowledge back upon myself and re-affirming my own knowledge vs all the utter crap I've heard from people that aren't in the know! - ALSO metformin is awesome for T1's with insulin resistance! also, where is the LOVE button on youtube? I need to LOVE this video :')
I was in remission once. I was working on my feet for a year on multiple jobs. Lost a lot of weight and no longer needed injection. I move and got a desk job and my diabetes came back worse than before... Now I have had to make dietary changes and exercise more but it's still hard to manage.
My mom had no problems with her blood sugar until she had a stroke in 2013. Since then she has needed medication for high blood sugar and can't eat too much sugar, so even though I haven't heard her say she has diabetes I assume she has diabetes type 2
Instead of pin pricks to get blood samples an active and preemptive effort could be accomplished by the use of automatic glucose monitors as an instant feedback of the body's glucose response. Unfortunately, manufacturers disqualify people from having them prescribed unless you are already have the full blown diabetic disease when it is too late. I have yet to get a good answer from the manufacturers.
The diet advice is super overwhelming! I find what works for me is when you eat, have a general idea of how much carbs you’re eating & try to eat at least 3:1 carbs:protein (and fiber). More than that can be too complicated & overwhelming! 😅❤
I am diabetic type 2. I'm 5'11 and wiegh 210 to 220lbs tops. I take care of my sugar levels now much closer. A1c stays 7. to 7.4. Id like it lower but its really hard. I've lost part of my foot and have charcot foot in the other. I've never really been obese I'm a bit over wieght. I think and believe its related to my availability of the right foods. I'm financially challenged if you will. But if you are told you are pre-diabetic please take it seriously before your way of life is changed for ever like mine was. And if you were I wish you the best of luck qnd a long life.
Great vid, generally. I'll just add a couple things for those who need further info. 1) this vid does not cover all medication options, by a longshot. So, please don't think you only have the 3 choices discussed. Please work closely with your doctor to find the right choice/s for you. 2) Personally, I would not consider myself in remission after only 1 3-month period. Blood sugar levels can fluctuate. Based upon my own experience with DM I would at least wait a year and of course, only along with my doctor's opinion. Also, please, educate yourself. There is a LOT more information out there now. Stay well!
No mention of studies, like the one from Harvard School of Public Health, that indicates a strong link between red meat and diabetes. Would have expected that to be mentioned, especial considering the significant environmental impact of red meat.
Since starting some new meds that need to be taken with food, I've noticed that even when taking it with supper, that my energy levels drop excessively fast the next day n I need to keep eating cuz it feels like im having a diabetic crash (at least from the descriptions I've heard of it from diabetics). But I've also experienced numbness in my hands for a couple of yrs now. I always assumed it was the result of nerve damage in my hands from a lifetime of injuries but I'm also poor n have eating disorders so I don't often eat healthy n tend to eat a lot of sugar. Now hearing that numbness is a symptom of diabetes it has me a lil worried. I'll need to discuss it with my doctor when I have the follow up appointment for my new meds. Thx for possibly saving my life.
Can you tell me definitively which is more likely to develop type 2 diabetes, drinking sugar-free soda or soda with sugar? I've been drinking about 2 liters per day for the past 10 years with only 1 meal per day and little physical activity due to an anxiety disorder, and I wonder whether choosing soda with sugar was the right choice. I heard that the sweetness of sugar-free soda still causes a release of insulin even though there isn't much sugar in the bloodstream (especially when you only eat once a day) which can cause insulin resistance, so I'd like to believe that picking soda with sugar was the right choice. But there's so much conflicting info on the internet. Being now worried about diabetes I'm of course changing my diet but I'd still like to know which drink would've been worst.
13:45 - a few seconds before the host said Remission is getting a H1C value of less than 6.5 without medication, and then afer says if its below 6.5 with medication sometimes. Which one is true?
My cousin was misdiagnosed with type two diabetes. Turns out he was type one and was being mistreated the whole time. The doctor would get mad at me and accuse him of not doing his treatments because his numbers were all out of whack. He was doing his treatments he just had the wrong diagnosis. He went into keto acidosis and went to the hospital where they confirmed he was type one. He has a new doctor now and is getting the proper treatment.
I wonder if anyone could tell me their opinion about these two questions: First, I've heard that you should really eat sweet food as soon as possible (for example before launch), because body can process them better in the morning rather than in the afternoon. Is that true though? Second, and I dont remember this one well and hoped it would be included in the video, my friend studied biology. When i talked to her about diabetes, if I remember correctly, she mentioned that what can speed up diabetes dramatically is when people get big hits of sugar instead of slower intake of the same amount of sugar, for example eating 10 pieces from a box of chocolate in 10 minutes vs eating same amount during 5 hours. She mentioned something about spikes in sugar intake hurt insulin producing cells more. What do you think or know about this? It sounds of course sensibly to not binge eat sweet stuff...
Insulin is only extraordinarily expensive in north America more so the USA while Europe and most of the rest of the world pay considerably less for it as we don't get drug companies free reign over pricing
It has nothing to do with that at all. Most insulin is still patented despite "generics" being available they're patented. In Europe, Americans subsidize the costs of your drugs through aid agreements. If these drugs just existed on your markets sold at retail prices, they might cost a little more. Of course, if Americans weren't eating the additional fees of subsidizing the world's healthcare, we would pay significantly less. At least, that is how I understand it. It's basically that we pay your way. If American companies weren't greedy, we would pay less. If we stopped supporting Europe financially, your nations couldn't negotiate "lower prices," which come in the form of much higher taxes for you than we pay. Regardless of how anyone looks at it, the price for insulin, particularly in the US, is truly absurd.
@@VariantAEC So after researching this for 10 minutes, I learned that European Governments sets the prices of their medication, while the US allows pharmaceutical companies to decide theirs. This _could_ be called subsidizing, but it's _because_ you let the pharmaceutical companies set the price, not because you made an active choice to subsidize.
I'd love to see you do one of these for type 1, especially from a perspective of how to help a type 1 diabetic who's having low or high glucose (and what that means). There's so little understanding about type 1 in the general population and type 1 diabetes can easily kill you if not treated properly.
I would really love to know how exactly the cells become insulin resistant. Like does the protein fold funny so that it does not receive the insulin as well, what would cause that ect... Also how does changing diet/exercise actually effect the cells cause of the resistance. I hope more research will discover these things soon!
The way it's been described to me and I don't know how scientifically accurate this is but your body will store glucose in your body as fat cells, over time if the majority of your body is fat cells (higher BMI) there's just no room to store the glucose, your pancreas will produce more and more insulin in an attempt to "cram the glucose" into your exceedingly packed cells, which will cause your cells to be even more resistant to future insulin, a vicious cycle until eventually your pancreas quits and stops producing insulin all together, a way to reverse this is to exercise and build muscle, when exerting the stored energy, your cells will be more receptive to insulin as they will need the glucose to replenish their stores and muscle is significantly more responsive to insulin versus fat cells because they need more energy to maintain. TLDR: a low energy sedentary lifestyle and the overeating of quick easy carbs that your body can easily break down into glucose. Also genetics in some cases.
Glucose thats entered the cell, will bind to the transporter that transported the glucose into the cell. That will change the transporters form to not being able to transport glucose into the cell anymore. With high blood glucose the likelihood for cells to be saturated with glucose is high and the cells transporter is blocked as a result.
It's a good question and sad this video doesn't lay it out. Cells become insulin resistant due to the accumulation of fat inside the cells. These fats interfere with insulin signaling preventing glucose from entering the cells. Look up Dr. Neal Barnard. He has several talks on this and how to fix it.
That stuff is known, it just wasn't covered in this video. I'm not sure why they think this video was "the" one to understand diabetes, it barely scratched the surface. It seemed like they were more interested in making social commentary than informing. Look up the channel "Nourished by Science". He has many fascinating, science-based videos on insulin resistance. I'd link you to it, but they removed another comment I made elsewhere inking someone else to it. I guess they don't really want anyone getting the science, just their editorial opinions.
There are other ways the cells become resistant other than fat. Hormones, medications, and genetic mutations are other causes of insulin resistance. For example, during pregnancy the hormone progesterone increases insulin resistance. I had to take 4x my normal amount of insulin by the end of one pregnancy. I have also experienced uncontrollable high blood sugars while taking a steroid (it was for a life threatening allergic reaction). That med stimulated my body to make its own glucose. Insulin, with a healthy diet and exercise could only lower my glucose for an hour or 2 before raising it to the 200-300 range again! It took 2-3 months before I could get in a healthy glucose range. It was insanely frustrating and stressful! I went through 10x my normal insulin.
Low carb/Keto is a way to manage diabetes but won't cure it. You'll get your blood sugar and A1C down but until you can actually consume carbs without spiking blood sugar an unhealthy amount you haven't cured the condition. People who instead go to a high carb but complex carbs, not simple carbs and lots of fibre while limiting saturated fats, actually cure the condition. They may notice an initial spike in blood sugars, but this goes down over time eating whole foods and eventually cures the condition to the point where not only do their A1C and blood sugar get under control but if they eat something bad like cake they still don't get an unhealthy blood sugar spike. Low carb has also shown in studies to result in a higher all cause mortality rate so even if you stay low carb your whole life and just manage diabetes instead of curing it you'll still end up with a shorter lifespan so it's better to just eat a healthy whole foods diet instead.
It just puts type 2 in remission, it's not that hard if your body has trouble processing carbohydrates just eat a diet that doesn't have them. And if you are type 1 you will need less insulin to control your blood glucose levels so you will have less side effects throughout your life.
My sister is in remission from type 2 diabetes and my brother in law her husband is pre diabetic. Sadly my brother in law's parents who live with them and both have type 2 diabetes don't really care and continue to eat like crap and think anything other then salt, pepper and onion powder is too much spice. I feel bad for my niece and nephew because they don't get exposed to different foods and my sister who enjoys cooking can't seem to stand up to her in laws and tell them to make their own meals.
My dad is Type 2 but his dad and uncles were all type 1. I think he’s actually type 1 or “1 and a half” because he was overweight when he was diagnosed but most of his life he was super skinny! My boyfriend got type 1 from a bad ear infection in his late 20’s, but his doctor says he’s really 1.5 and they have really similar patterns.
Next time y'all are in need of an idea, I'd love to see a video on feline diabetes. There's a serious lack of knowledge, even among vets, and having a resource for people dealing with it that doesn't involve having to sift through a bunch of medical jargon would have a ton of value
Insulin isn't "incredibly expensive". It's actually incredibly cheap.
What's expensive is pharmaceutical industry price gouging.
Yes, but you know exactly what he meant.
@@veryberry39 "What he meant" only really applies in the US.
Expensive insulin isn't a problem for basically any other developed nation.
Developing nations, well, everything's unaffordably expensive for them.
And most cases of Diabetes arise from the fact the EVERYTHING has too much sugar in it now.
Incredibly cheap after the millions dumped into R&D, regulations, experts, professionals, etc.
@@JohnusSmittinisinsulin was synthesized so n 1978
They sure need the research to make it 46 years later
I have type II. Thankfully it's under control. I had to change my diet and take Metformin. My A1C went from 14+ (life threateningly high) to 5 (normal). I also lost 25+ lbs in about 4 months. My vision was starting to go. I'm much better now that I changed my diet and got my blood sugar down. No more candy and soda for me! They even dropped my meds to once a day.
I could have died at any time. I'm so glad it was treated promptly. It saved my vision and my life.
Me too. I was diagnosed in December and have lost ~35lbs with at first chicken 🍗 and broccoli 🥦 then moved to Walmart salads.
@@briardi89 35 lbs. is fabulous! At my Walmart the salads are very high in salt and fat and preservatives. So, I've been trying not to eat them. I'm trying to get back to salads, post covid. I used to do a lot of salad bar at a local supermarket. The salad bar probably had a lot of preservatives and the bags of leaves seem to keep getting recalled. I hate chopping all of those things.
Very well done! Thank you for your honesty and hard work!
This was awesome to read! I'm so happy for you!
I just got back on my diet again (never fully left) took a few weeks off due to some stress and i fell into old habits. Back to the 1 diet soda a day and my water/protein shake/ propel Carrots are 100% my saving grace (and salad with a small amount of kale some spinach and lettuce) plus boneless skinless chicken breast. Will get even easier that things will be in season here! Keep the grind and keep up the good work. Change is one step at a time!
i was diagnosed with T2D in 2022, I got 2 tests done in 3 days both times my A1C was just under 14 mmol/L. Now a year and a half later my test has my A1C at 6.6 mmol/L. It really wasn't all that difficult. I cut back on cakes, muffins, and sugary drinks, went on a high-protein diet, i became more physically active, and of course Metformin.
As a Type 2 diabetic who went from 350 lbs and an A1C in the 14 range. To about 225 lbs and an A1C of 5.5 it is very possible to get your life and body under control and back to a much healthier state. My journey was primarily diet change and being on both Metformin and Ozempic. There is no magic cure but if you are willing to work at it from various angles then there is a way forward.
You go champion of diabetes 👏 🎉❤🫡
as we say in the community: your diabetes mileage my vary.
great job though! hope you'll stay healthy for a long time.
Hey Ginger, that's great to hear- congrats! I'm curious how long that took. I'm at 265lbs now, and just hit 10 on my last A1C, even though I'd been moving a lot and releasing weight the prior few months.
@@joecolletti I guess it takes time..maybe 6mths or so for weight and sugar levels to show on a more permanent basis. I'm only guessing.
Type 2 Diabeties should not be messed with. My dad lived with it his entire life and never controlled and he's facing the consequence of that now. Blindness, dialysis, highblood pressure. I've lived with type 2 for 5 years and seeing how my dad is. I've gotten tired of it and changed my life style and reserved my diabetes to the point it seems like I never had it. My AC1 was 7.8 but now it's been between 5.2-5.4 for quite sometime now.
this gives me hope. we have been told conflicting things about t2d remission, some that it's possible and some day it's always only temporarily in remission, no matter what changes you do, it'll always return. my husbands in remission with same changes as yourself, fingers crossed it stays that way.
How long has your dad left the diabetes uncontrolled?
@@piddlydiddly absolutely! He just have to keep up his life style change, diet and exercise and it'll be in remission for a very long time. I'm able to have sugar on a sugar basis but I understand when and how much of it to have.
@@SuperSOSSOS 30+ years, no exercise, no diet change, just depended on the medications which they don't tell you that the more you take the worse it gets. The saddest part about it every now and then he'll ask me to take him to the doctors because he no longer wants all these diseases.
@piddlydiddly Look into Ron Santo, he never went into remission, but he was a pro baseball player with t2d in an Era before pin prick blood tests. Yes he died from bladder cancer and lost both legs, but he also lived to 70, and had t2d for nearly 50 years.
i'm a type 1 myself, but my dad was type 2 and i know a lot of type 2s via the diabetic community.
what i found terrifying that in the last two ish years i heard twice that people who had an elevated A1c were basically told "you got type 2, watch your weight, okay bye" - there is a bitter irony that both turned out to be type 1 but even if the type 2 had been correct (which should be tested for though) you can just say "watch you weight, ciao" ..neither was even _suggested_ to get a glucose meter, or see a dietician, or have follow-up appoints to watch the development. it would be frustrating with a rare disease, but with somehing as common as diabetes that is just inacceptable behaviour from a doctor.
I had a coworker who was told “you’re type 2, here’s a blood sugar checker, bye!” So he was constantly brain fogged etc at work so I was telling him the TLDR he has to pay attention to because otherwise he LITERALLY COULDNT FUNCTION ENOUGH TO DO HIS JOB & he didn’t listen or try to do anything about his diabetes. How is that kind of “medical care” legal? & how do people just let themselves stay sick & oblivious when people are actively trying to tell them how they could realistically care for themselves? 😭
Insulin costs in Australia where pharma prices are regualted is often less than people's monthly Coffee Bills.
Would love to see another video on type 1 diabetes! I have type 1 and explaining it to people is exhausting. There are so many misconceptions.
“You did this to yourself! You should be ashamed!”
and always explaining that type 1 is different than type 2 (ex they say fasting is useful for you) 😢
Don't forget cinnamon. That will cure Type 1 Diabetes. 😂
“You’re too young to have diabetes!”
Well, Karen, I was diagnosed before I was a year old.
Same! I’m shutting people down left and right every day. Like, “No Shelly. I can’t drink the juice from the Mongolian Yak fruit to cure my diabetes like your great uncle Fleming. He sounds like a liar.”
Can’t state how much I appreciate this video. I’ve just been diagnosed with type 2 in the last month and feel I understand it a lot better now
@thatsmrfisher, I am a natural path, I have the cure for your Diabetes. Send me your email for further engagement and observe yourself getting healed from Diabetes..
My A1C was initially a 9.6. I don't like sweets so I had to look at other things. I ended up cutting out all beer and limiting my carbs to 30g a day. My A1C dropped to 6.2. The lowest it's been was 5.1 with diet changes alone.
I would love a similar video on type 1 diabeties
Metformin is also special among type 2 diabetes mellitus medicines in that its use is linked to a longer lifespan. Actually, the increased lifespan observed among diabetics taking it in one trial was so great that they outlived the control group that didn't have diabetes and this helped to trigger research into anti-ageing effects of metformin.
Became diagnosed as type 1 in 2009, would love a type 1 video.
I would also love a video on the newest research into Type 1, particularly this new trend doctors are seeing, of late-adult-onset T1.
People are so quick to assume that's another trend to blame on lazy fat people, despite the fact that their diabetes acts like T1, not T2. But it looks more and more like a hormonal-changes result than anything to do with lifestyle, especially when it's not clearly correlated with body-mass. I was diabetic for 15 years before I even heard a doctor refer to insulin as the hormone that it is. And the increase in diabetes in general (aside just from our getting better at diagnosing it) is more easily explained by the fact that people today die WITH diabetes, rather than dying FROM it. Metformin alone has only been around since the mid 90s. We are basically 1-2 generations into a lot more people who have diabetes or are likely to develop it, being able to live long enough to have kids, and pass along those genetic markers. And when you factor in the epigenetic stuff we're learning about how the grandchildren of people who survived famines are more likely to be obese, regardless of their lifestyle, it becomes clear that we are at least another generation away from figuring out how to actually reduce the number of people dealing with diabetes.
type 2 diabetes runs in my family, and my brother and i have both been diagnosed while we’re still in our 20s. we’re both an average body size and i at least have been somewhat physically active over the past few years… i rly appreciate people pushing back on the myth that poor personal choices cause diabetes; sometimes it just happens. and even if a person’s choices *do* play a role they don’t deserve the amount of stigma that is involved.
For women, having PCOS is a major risk factor. It also makes it much more difficult to control your weight. If I don't constantly stay vigilant about my weight, I immediately start gaining weight again. And a couple years ago, when I was in the lower bracket of obesity, I had a blood sugar level scare. Basically, I have to control my weight and eating habits, always, if I want to stay healthy. That doesn't mean I can't eat a peace of cake or some sweets occasionally. But I can't afford not to think about my diet.
>is diabetic
>has been diabetic for a decade
>grew up around diabetics
>still watching this video
😅
Wfpb diet with the mastering diabetes program. Backed by studies on pubmed.
How was it? Did you know everything? Were there any mistakes in the video?
@@mr_dodex was accurate tbh! As to be expected from Sci Show, ofc. Not anything particularly new for me except the how certain things functioned and even some of that I had known already. o7
@@Caterfree10 great to know. Appreciate the response.
@@mr_dodex in my opinion the downplaying of exercise and weight was unnecessary, but working in diabetes research with the focus on exercise it might be my bias.
and they could mention the effect of insulin resistance in the brain and the effect it has on the bodyweight. but it was a good overwiew
A lot of good info. I'm Type 2 diabetic -- and actually close to *under*weight, so it irritates me to no end when people presume it's all "poor lifestyle/diet/weight" related. Especially since it literally runs in my entire family. I manage it effectively with medication and diet changes fortunately and caught it well before any damage.
I have multiple people in my family with diabetes,im fit ,active fast regular and keep carbs lower in morning and low and behold i dont have it
I appreciate you covering this subject. I've been overweight and with poor health habits, but aggravating to my doctor at the time, I wasn't showing any signs of diabetes. Other health issues, but not that. Since having COVID in 2022, though, I've been getting poor A1C results and am now prediabetic. It's no excuse for my poor health habits, but it it does explain why I was so incredibly fortunate for decades and then like a lightswitch being turned off, I no longer was.
Regarding the doctor being aggravated that I wasn't diabetic - as weird as it sounds, I do mean that literally. She wasn't a good doctor and managed to screw up the one time I successfully kept myself on a proper diet by ordering me on a dangerous fad diet. When I talked to a dietitian afterward, she (the dietitian) was horrified and gave me a diet that was essentially what I'd had success with but 50 calories higher. Unfortunately I haven't had success staying on that diet since the fad diet derail.
PS. Do not give health "advice" in reply. It's unwelcome and harmful.
I have a friend who is very overweight, who was in the hospital for other reasons, and the doctor tested him every couple of hours to see if he had diabetes yet. That's not how it works! GPs don't seem to be getting a very good education about diabetes. I'm not sure that endocrinologists are either. I hope you found a better doctor!
@@Sarcasticron A lot of doctors don't seem to keep up with new research once they finish their schooling. It's maddening. They should have to get annual continuing education credits in their specialties and get recertified at some regular interval, maybe every ten years, but at least in the USA many of them have knowledge that ends at that graduation date.
I was pre-diabetic. About twenty years ago I got the bug/fever/whatever that was going around work and ran a fever for a couple of days. T2 runs in my family, both sides in elders. Afterwards I felt different. I had recently moved and found a Dr. I told her I was diabetic and she tested me (after telling me this is not how most patients present) and agreed.
@@Sarcasticron They do test when you are in the hospital now, especially post surgery. It has been determined that post surgical patients are likely to have high blood sugar because of the stress and inactivity and that they heal better if the blood sugars are kept down.
@@Sarcasticron Yep. Though for a much worse reason. Thankfully the diet fiasco had me distrusting her and I got a second opinion on her malprescription or I wouldn't be here now. I went a couple years refusing to go to anyone but I ended up with someone decent who I stayed with until he retired. New one has been decent too.
Thanks for this. There's type 1 diabetes in my family, so this was useful information. As always, SciShow quality, presentation, and information density are all top-notch, and this was no exception!
Yeah... turns out being poor is quite stressful, and stress chemistry wrecks havoc on your body in all sorts of ways...
Yeah... turns out being poor, living with food scarcity and bouts of starvation, leading to eating quantity over quality, subsisting on potatoes, rice, pasta (Mac n chese) boxes of ramen noodles, all carb heavy can and will lead to type 2 diabetes.
Also the ultra processed food & refined carbs that they target advertise to the poor, and give as alms to the poor via breadlines. Slow motion genocide.
Yeah, turns out if you're poor you lose the ability to meditate and manage your life properly and you become incapable of understanding what a good diet looks like. If only we had more money, then we could do and know all these things.
I'm poor. Just finished my p90x workout. Just finished my oatmeal with protein powder and other nutrient rich foods. Just finished my grocery budget for the month. I'm at $200 for my groceries and I am fit and healthy. Now I'm going to go to work to make my contribution to society and make the money I need. I'll see you guys when you get your lives together and stop making excuses.
@@SilentStormParadox I'm a medically retired disabled Iraqi war veteran. I live on $1000 VA disability per month. Life is good now compared to when I was a child living with food scarcity age birth through joining the military at age 17. Starvation age 5 through 6, which was a powerful enough experience to be burned in detail in my memories. Food scarcity and Starvation again in my mid 30s after I left my ex after 12 years of horrible marriage and lost everything. Managed to rejoin the military at 39 because of my prior service and the government was desperate for bodies to ship to Iraq. Living with far less than adequate parents growing up, and dealing with a sadistic ex through a protracted and harrowing divorce left it's mark throughout my body and I'm certain was in great part why my brother and I ended up with type 2 diabetes. Thankfully the VA is helping to keep me healthy and stable with AC1 and hormone monitoring every three months. I eat as well as I can with a goal of three fresh fruits and 6 fresh vegetables per day and I primarily subsist on grains and beans. I go for 5k walks every morning before the sun comes up, and 45 to 50k mountain bike rides every other day, on top of all the physical therapy exercises the VA has me do daily.
Not every person can live a perfect life and have perfect knowledge on how to best succeed in their circumstances. Skills are far more important than money and in the last 10 years I've learned and polished skills that will keep me alive and healthy even if civilization were to stop. Starvation and food scarcity haven't been a problem since I rejoined the military at 39 and never will be again. From my parents and my ex I've learned never to rely on others. Even with what the VA provides me I have a plan B for if that gets disrupted. I can only count on myself and be my own best advocate.
It is so incredibly refreshing to me that ya'all made it a point to NOT correlate weight to type 2 risk.
I’m a nurse who caught COVID in February 2020…. And ended up with severe long COVID. With organ damage. Now I’m the first in my whole family to be diabetic. But because I’m fat doctors ignore all other factors, like my new post-COVID autoimmune disorder, multi organ damage, or active healthy lifestyle. Well, it used to be. But because I’m overweight no one cares. I was told to use ozempic, I refused because I knew it was bad news when it was new.
Hello nurse, lose the weight, you already knew that. Doctors aren’t ignoring everything else, its because being fat makes everything else worse. You already knew that. Out of all the curses god hands out left and right, not putting sugar and fat into your mouth while living a sedentary lifestyle is the least people can do.
Sarah Hallberg is who you wanna research when it comes to keeping your sugars low without Ozempic or Trulicty or any of that.
That sounds awful. My mom is on ozempique and she's had terrible side effects of severe vomiting for months. It's really horrible.
The new sets are really beautifully designed - great job guys!
+
My nan is waiting for a knee replacement, but they won't do anything until her diabetes (type 2) is under control, but she can't be very active to try and help that, and she generally eats well. It becomes so frustrating, because it's been 18 months, and her other knee is being impacted, but every time it's always about her blood sugars or other things. If only there was something that could help help/cure
It's like doctors think type 2s aren't allowed to take insulin.
@Sarcasticron it's also because insulin is insanely expensive bc companies are price gouging
Fasting and keto get on it people wtaf?
I have type 2 diabetes, as well as Hashimoto's thyroid disease. So far, my doc doesn't think I have any autoimmune diabetes. But I'm currently on multiple therapies, and have finally managed to get my a1c down 2.5 points, to an 8.0. It's HARD and I'm really working at it. I've been diabetic for 10 years, and have lived with my thyroid disease for 20.
Same here. Thyroid disease for 3 years now and taking pill for that and now from one month prediabetic
I hope you feel better now.
Just fast regularly aswell no one has mentioned fasting on this site🤷♂️
@@Macgee826 yes, trying to do atleast a 16 hour fast and sometime later shift to omad
I really wished you had emphasized more the ways in which the 'lifestyle changes' can be out of patients' control. This condition is heavily treated by both the public and medical professionals as being a moral failure, that if the patient had just 'tried harder' they wouldn't have gotten diabetes, and it's extremely harmful to patients.
For real though! I get so much fat shaming because of this. For me I have it on both sides of the family and I had a bad case of covid.
I was diagnosed a few days before with video went up, I'm very grateful for this so I can stay informed and healthy
My ex died of unregulated diabetes. He would go through life eating and drinking whatever he wanted, until needed an ambulance. He would spend time in hospital, allowing the staff to fix him. Lost all of his teeth, several toes, foot, etc. After getting out he would start all over again.
How difficult to watch.
😞
Great video! Thank you. I've lived with T2 for 18 years and have been an advocate for those of us who deal with this (former blogger). I especially appreciate that you mention that we aren't to blame for our condition. Stigma is horrible and only adds to the stress. I will definitely be sharing this informative video. 👏
Ozempic was pure torture, not to mention the outrageous cost. It's taken my body months to recover from its use.
The main reason the price of that drug sky rocketing is because it has become the drug of choice for the rich and famous to loose some weight and now everyone wants it to try and loose weight and not use it for its intended use of treatment of type 2 diabetes
I’ve been on Mounjaro for a little over a year and I love it. I’m on a lower dose though, so my side effects are minimal. my a1c has been 4.7-5.0 since starting it- down from 11.9.
Ozempic wreaked havoc on me as well. I worry that is going to drive disordered eating for folks even further if it’s marketed purely as a weight loss option.
Not all drugs are for all people! I'm sorry that one was so rough for you. I hope you are able to find a different approach that works for you. I've been on medications that had side effects that were, for me, worse than what they were supposed to treat. Other people might do great on it, but for whatever reason, I didn't.
@@alysonmarie this was my fear going into own GLP-1 journey. I’ve struggled with disordered eating my whole life so I have to be careful.
No mention of Type 1 LADA? Thought it would be an interesting mention since it’s described as Type 1.5 by some
I was diagnosed with type 1 as an adult. One doctor mentioned 1.5 as a possibility early on but never explained the difference and no other doctor I've seen has mentioned it. I also would love more of an explanation video on the differences
@@sparker_87 Basically, LADA is like slow-onset type 1. So at first it looks like type 2, and is often misdiagnosed as type 2, but a couple/few years down the road the person ends up in the ER with terrible ketoacidosis, and no idea what's going on, because doctors never tell type 2 diabetics that they can get ketoacidosis too. Often they don't think to test for ketoacidosis (they should do this test a lot more often, even if the sugars aren't high, because they're not always sky-high every day). For a proper diagnosis, they should always do an antibody test to see if it's an autoimmune type, which is more likely to be type 1 or LADA. But it's not 100% accurate, and sometimes type 2 is autoimmune. Either way it would be better to just teach every diabetic about ketoacidosis. Good luck!
the relaxed lean reid has while reading the script is so calming like im listening to a therapist
Having been diagnozed just a few months ago, and scheduled to (maybe) transition to Ozempic soon, I can now (again) say that I'm _so_ happy to live in Norway.
Seeing the extortionate prices in the US ("from around $915 per injection pen"), and comparing it to Norwegian prices (NOK520, or ~$48), makes me pay the slightly higher taxes here with even more pleasure.
But socialized medicine is bad, I guess... 😅
Yep, it's real sad. People will fight against universal healthcare, while paying insane premiums to insurance companies who turn around and deny everything. Like, uh, what???
The frustrating thing is a lot of USA people would be happy to have socialized healthcare, but the government is so structurally racist it would literally make its own population sicker than give healthcare to BIPOC-& most if not all our government representatives are largely controlled by the corporations paying them to vote to protect corporations over citizens. How does the public get universal healthcare with a government against its own citizens well being? 😭
@@schizescribe Hey now, it's not just BIPOC they are so desperately trying to prevent from accessing health care. They are almost as interested in keeping healthcare away from the disabled and the chronically ill, and anyone LGBTQ+, as they are keeping it from BIPOC - and arguably just from women in general. 🤮
It's never too late to take steps to control your diabetes. I'm in my 50s and with diet and exercise and medicine I get good bloodwork regularly.
I have type one diabetes, and would love to see content about that… everything seems to look at type two… just recently got an insulin pump and closed loop system - an “artificial pancreas”!! Would be great to learn more about the tech
huh,,, i clicked on this just because i love sci show and watch every video, but.. i've been chronically ill for a long time, and we've been trying to figure it out, and the mention of capillaries/spider veins and tingling along with frequent urination has made me... reconsider? not in an "oh eureka! i've figured it out after watching one singular video" but in a " this is something to bring up to my doctor at the very least just to rule out. (so far we've been looking towards heart or possible connective tissue issues)
Have you ever tested A1c? Some doctors test fasting glucose, which means nothing, it's just a snapshot at the time of the blood draw. Even A1c be unreliable. Ask for a C-Peptide test, a high level means that your pancreas makes a lot of insulin and works too hard. But doctors tend not to get it done because they don't know how to interpret the results.
Best of luck! I'm chronically ill as well with suspected hEDS, still trying to figure out everything that's going on and what might help.
Smart.
Check your fasting insulin levels or c-peptide in your next bloodwork, you are going to have to ask for it, it will let you know long before your blood sugar levels get out of control.
For a long time a lot of the issues-especially frequent urination-has been a “test for diabetes” 🚩 but with healthcare in the USA what it is it’s not surprising they didn’t think of it 😅 Yeah have the doctor test your fasting glucose levels! There’s usually also a “if we give you our lab standard sugary drink how high does your blood sugar go?” test but I don’t know what it’s called. Good luck! I hope you find answers soon! ❤
I know this is about type 2 but PLEASE stop spreading the myth that type 1 is most commonly diagnosed in childhood. We've known for decades that over half of new cases occur in people over the age of 30, and it's up to 2/3 if you start counting at 20. Most of us get this disease as adults, where it often progresses slower than it does in kids. These two things combine to result in roughly 40% of cases of type 1 in the US starting out misdiagnosed as type 2 (something that would have been great to include in this video!), and that's only the ones who manage a correct diagnosis (research dating back to at least 1980 suggests that 10-20% of those diagnosed with type 2 actually have type 1, and another 10-15% have MODY or type 3c).
+1, I was diagnosed in my 20s and I had to fight my doctor to get tested for type 1 because he would only treat me for type 2 (and I wasn't getting better). Looking forward to a new video on type 1!
There’s also LADA or type 1.5 diabetes as it’s more likely found in late adulthood (20s onwards) it’s an autoimmune disease that damages beta cell causing a rapid destruction of the cells. It’s also most often misdiagnosed as dm2
@scishow : please see these comments!
Actually it IS. Because type 1 IS ACTUALLY GENETIC where as type 2 is solely based on how you eat!
So clearly you do not know as much as you think!
@@jessicapearson9479 Please educate yourself. According to Joslin Diabetes Center research, type 2 has roughly 5x greater genetic risk factors than type 1 (the numbers aren't exact because type 1 risk depends on several factors like the age/sex of the parent with type 1). Poor diet may increase risk of type 2 but you don't get the disease if you don't have the genes to trigger overproduction of insulin that in turn causes insulin resistance and the weight gain so may people mistakenly think is the source of the disease rather than a result of it.
My mom was diagnosed with pre-diabetes last year and reversed it in just 8 weeks and so far it didnt come back.
All with just lifestyle changes, so make sure you use all the weapons you have to fight against the sickness and not just medication alone (unless you doctor tells you so).
I agree.
When your Dr says that medication is how to combat this disease, sometimes when you adjust your diet to "healthy " sometimes the medication won't work as effectively and you could put yourself in danger!
Unless your Dr recommends changes, people should always maintain thier diet to keep things as consistent as possible.
@@caseypalmateer4515 Most people need medication until they get their A1c down into a healthy range.
it's also important to know: if lifestyle changes alone don't work, then it's not because you're a failure. we can advocate for taking your health into your own hands and still accept that there are factors just beyond our control - acceptance and a will to fight are not mutually exclusively (unless you are a Sith, bc they deal in absolutes)
Soo true! If you have good genetics you can eat and eat. You might gain weight but not get diabetes. Unfortunately most type 2 who "reverse" their diabetes will see it again as their body agrees. Because our energy pathways are complicated, our bodies are very resilient. But it also means a person can have multiple genetic failures. Genetic failures plus the stress of 3 pregnancirs completely destroyed my pancreas. r@fariesz6786
Can't speak for population as a whole. I have type 2 diabetes right now, at about 210 lbs. When I drop to about 180 lbs, I revert to prediabetes. You'd think this would be strong enough incentive to stay at 180 lbs or less, but damn, food tastes soooo good.
I use nutrisense to track my blood sugar and try my best to stay in range just through diet and exercise. Here's hoping geneticists figure out a way to turn off insulin resistance that doesn't involve medications that also cause horrific diarrhea. C'mon CRISPR, we need your help out here!
😂😂😂😂 "but food tastes soooo goooood" 😂😂😂😂 hilarious. What about u balance training hard, with eating hard? I love food, but since i love my body too... just train enough so u can eat a ton 😋
Sounds like a Metformin side effect!
@@karen-rg3pi The metformin shits are so bad.
Insulin resistance makes weight gain easy and loss really hard. Good luck to you!
Ah, a fellow metformin sufferer I see. 😩
This was a really good video, my paternal grandma died from diabetic related complications when I was 6, and my dad ended up diagnosed with it when I was in highschool. He's doing better managing it, but that's definitely scared me into living a healthy / active lifestyle and keeping an eye on my diet.
God I hope a cure comes along...
Living with diabetes is living without one of life's most primal joys, good food.
This is not true meat,eggs ,butter ,cheese all delicious
Loving the new set!
Loving the new SciShow set
Such a funky room for a talk about Type II diabetes.... I like it.... it is weird though that the light in the room is not coming from the light in the room
I like this set and subtle changes in how the information is presented. Good work!
Love this set. Super welcome change!
Another great video narration Reid!
I'm actually surprised you use your index finger to draw blood. We in the netherlands use any other finger since the index finger is the most sensitive finger and usually used to read braille. And since diabetes can result in (partial) blindness this is kind of a big deal
I like that "managed diabetes" is transitioning into "diabetes in remission." Not for myself, but for my disabled sister. She once had a BMI of 70 (she weighed over 400 lbs) and was in a diabetic coma at the hospital; she was hospitalized for two months in the bariatric ward while they tried to get her weight under control. What caused the issue? Drinking a 2 liter bottle of full sugar soda every day. Today she's got a BMI of closer to 30, no longer has to take insulin or metformin, and she was officially classified as "managed diabetes." Her new endocrinologist doesn't even worry about it since her last A1C checked in at 4.9 - she's fine. She still drinks soda..... but we switched her to zero sugar stuff.
The new set and casual delivery are interesting. If it makes the hosts comfortable im for it. Or maybe he just moves around too much and this is the easiest way to keep him in frame 😅
I kept thinking "Why don't they get this guy a more comfortable chair, so he can sit still for 5 seconds."
@@RickinICT right? I think he's too tall for it
I quite like these new sets you've got
12:50 I was on a 1.5mg prescription for the "Trulicity" brand name , but now cannot get it because too many doctors are prescribing it to their non-diabetic patients for weight loss and my A1C is now over 12%
Check out Sarah Hallberg and Dr Perlmutter and get on that grain free keto vibe and your A1C will improve.
Type 2 diabetes is a real nightmare when you get side effects from the medicine you are supposed to take for cure....my dad has been diabetic for almost 6 years by now and the metformin which is the most general drug for any diabetic patient became a real nightmare. It took us a lot to make his health stable. So though medicine is necessary make sure you monitor your diabetic levels and note the rapid changes in your health before it's too late. I don't say you should avoid medicines....take medicine if it's necessary... consult your doctors and make sure your medicine works for you not against you.
I’ve been struggling to control my Type II diabetes since receiving chemotherapy for cancer 2 years ago. Thankfully, I’m now cancer-free but still struggling to get my diabetes back under control. I’m told that the steroids given during my chemo can affect how the pancreas produces insulin. My health care team says that my diet is very good and my exercise is within recommendations (not very enthusiastic about exercise but walk a lot). I am on Metformin and a couple of other medications. Any constructive thoughts?
Have a look at the studies on keto as a treatment. It can help reverse diabetes. It isn't an easy fix, and take it steady at the start - a tapered start rather than just cutting out all carbs/sugars, otherwise glucose levels can drop too quickly. But it can help.
This video was insightful and full of a lot of information people can easily understand. I appreciate appropriate information regarding the types of food that are beneficial to those who have T2. I would have liked a tad more focus on intracellular mylio lipids and it's role in T2, however this informative and helpful video can help many who may be new to this.
Great info, thank you!
I really like the new sets and backdrops
Thanks a bunch for sharing this with us Big Dog!
the thing is, they are still risk factors. it qon't hurt to lose a couple pounds/kilos, excercise regukarky and eat as healthy as you possible can. emphasising a good lifestyle is essential to combating and preventing most diseases. you might stilll end up developing the disease but even then you can manage it.
Great video as always. I really love this new set you guys have been using!
People are aware of what is recommended but the problem of that is that recommendation when already at the point of type 2 diagnosis leads only to temporary change (if any) with progressive increases in medication because it doesn’t get to the root of the problem.
While it won’t make them more money… incorporating fasting at least to start with electrolytes will help. Not a fad but also researched with improvements in important markers and better yet helps the body (liver, kidneys) heal and maintain itself again.
At that point only would the recommended things to do besides the medicines would be fine long term.
* I’ll add strength training is important especially for diabetics whether try fasting or not.
And don’t need to go crazy on cardio. Just walk after a meal but not skip on resistance training full body 2-3 /wk.
Wasn’t properly diagnosed, but realized I had many of the symptoms of pre diabetes. Started intermittent fasting and going to a proper clean keto diet. The first two days were rough but once the body gets used to running on fats, including your own, the food cravings disappear. I also felt way more energetic and clear headed. With the new found energy I started working out, decided to supplement creatine and omega 3 (not big on fish) and now even on total fasting days my energy is through the roof. The fat has been burning off insanely quick while simultaneously being able to put on some noticeable muscle mass. The best part is I’ve found that these changes feel long term sustainable and if anything should get easier once I approach my ideal weight. Looooove it.
Also bizarrely, I noticed a HUGE change in my dreams while sleeping. It’s hard to articulate it, but it seemed like prior I rarely dreamt at all, but when I did they would be brief, colorless, soundless and so vague it was nearly abstract. Now my dreams are insanely vivid, with highly detailed scenes that flow together. It literally feels like I’ve unlocked a second level of consciousness.
Good explanation and suggestion doctor thank u from India❤
I am board-certified in internal medicine and have taken care of thousands of diabetics, mainly type 2 diabetics. Good video, but I would also add these points; (1) there definitely is a link between your family history and the risk of type 2 diabetes, (2) insulin resistance is definitely linked to obesity, (3) type 2 diabetics usually have the "Metabolic Syndrome", a constellation of findings that includes increased intra-abdominal fate, insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, and obstructive sleep apnea, (4) the increased intra-abdominal fat seems to act something like an endocrine gland/organ that releases pro-inflammatory agents that damage blood vessels and nerves and increase insulin resistance, (5) hormones released by the gut/intestines influence eating habits and insulin responsiveness and seem to be part of this condition, (6) insulin resistance is associated with increase fat deposition in the liver, which can cause damage and cirrhosis, and much more. I think Type 2 diabetes has components that look something like an eating disorder, which is not a character flaw or problem with will power. It's much more complicated than this. Finally, obese Type 2 diabetics who return to ideal body weight early in their condition often normalize their blood sugars and other metabolic markers of disease, but they remain at risk for diabetes if they gain weight back again.
No more confusion! This video is like a beacon of clarity in the world of Type 2 Diabetes!
I think "Fat Fiction" does that pretty well.
Kinda fitting that the pre-roll ad was for McD...
McDiabetes?
@emyra_3293
The McDiabetes is my favorite milkshake! 😜
@@emyra_3293 McDHeartAttack
Thank you. I have type 2 diabetes. It's like walking a tightrope. I had gestational diabetes with all my pregnancies.
@9:06 Glucose levels are also increased through stress, which can be connected to being from a marginalized community that deals with chronic societal bias.
I hope this video increases the awareness of diabetes in general! I've been T1 for the last 28 years (since I was 4 years old) and I've spent the last 15 years of my life understanding it DEEPLY via college and University, this entire video is almost like me re-iterating all my own knowledge back upon myself and re-affirming my own knowledge vs all the utter crap I've heard from people that aren't in the know! - ALSO metformin is awesome for T1's with insulin resistance!
also, where is the LOVE button on youtube? I need to LOVE this video :')
I was in remission once. I was working on my feet for a year on multiple jobs. Lost a lot of weight and no longer needed injection. I move and got a desk job and my diabetes came back worse than before... Now I have had to make dietary changes and exercise more but it's still hard to manage.
As someone with T2D, this is awesome to see. It would be cooler to see more into the genetic component and historical treatment of diabetes.
My mom had no problems with her blood sugar until she had a stroke in 2013. Since then she has needed medication for high blood sugar and can't eat too much sugar, so even though I haven't heard her say she has diabetes I assume she has diabetes type 2
Thank you so much for making type two diabetes.Not as frightening
Instead of pin pricks to get blood samples an active and preemptive effort could be accomplished by the use of automatic glucose monitors as an instant feedback of the body's glucose response. Unfortunately, manufacturers disqualify people from having them prescribed unless you are already have the full blown diabetic disease when it is too late. I have yet to get a good answer from the manufacturers.
Ive been type 2 for 3+yrs now. The eating advice by "experts/Drs" they're all over the place. I'm getting better results from Keto
Dr. Jason Fung has a thing to say about diabetes…his lectures are certainly worth a listen!
The diet advice is super overwhelming! I find what works for me is when you eat, have a general idea of how much carbs you’re eating & try to eat at least 3:1 carbs:protein (and fiber). More than that can be too complicated & overwhelming! 😅❤
I am diabetic type 2. I'm 5'11 and wiegh 210 to 220lbs tops. I take care of my sugar levels now much closer. A1c stays 7. to 7.4. Id like it lower but its really hard. I've lost part of my foot and have charcot foot in the other. I've never really been obese I'm a bit over wieght. I think and believe its related to my availability of the right foods. I'm financially challenged if you will. But if you are told you are pre-diabetic please take it seriously before your way of life is changed for ever like mine was. And if you were I wish you the best of luck qnd a long life.
Please do a video on Type One!!! There are so many people who doesn't understand type 1 OR 2!!
Great vid, generally. I'll just add a couple things for those who need further info. 1) this vid does not cover all medication options, by a longshot. So, please don't think you only have the 3 choices discussed. Please work closely with your doctor to find the right choice/s for you. 2) Personally, I would not consider myself in remission after only 1 3-month period. Blood sugar levels can fluctuate. Based upon my own experience with DM I would at least wait a year and of course, only along with my doctor's opinion. Also, please, educate yourself. There is a LOT more information out there now. Stay well!
No mention of studies, like the one from Harvard School of Public Health, that indicates a strong link between red meat and diabetes. Would have expected that to be mentioned, especial considering the significant environmental impact of red meat.
This made me feel more relieved since I got diagnosed with T2 diabetes almost a year ago.
You should look into Dr. Sarah Hallberg; that's who's advice helped my wife achieve a remission state.
Since starting some new meds that need to be taken with food, I've noticed that even when taking it with supper, that my energy levels drop excessively fast the next day n I need to keep eating cuz it feels like im having a diabetic crash (at least from the descriptions I've heard of it from diabetics). But I've also experienced numbness in my hands for a couple of yrs now. I always assumed it was the result of nerve damage in my hands from a lifetime of injuries but I'm also poor n have eating disorders so I don't often eat healthy n tend to eat a lot of sugar. Now hearing that numbness is a symptom of diabetes it has me a lil worried. I'll need to discuss it with my doctor when I have the follow up appointment for my new meds. Thx for possibly saving my life.
Can you tell me definitively which is more likely to develop type 2 diabetes, drinking sugar-free soda or soda with sugar? I've been drinking about 2 liters per day for the past 10 years with only 1 meal per day and little physical activity due to an anxiety disorder, and I wonder whether choosing soda with sugar was the right choice. I heard that the sweetness of sugar-free soda still causes a release of insulin even though there isn't much sugar in the bloodstream (especially when you only eat once a day) which can cause insulin resistance, so I'd like to believe that picking soda with sugar was the right choice. But there's so much conflicting info on the internet. Being now worried about diabetes I'm of course changing my diet but I'd still like to know which drink would've been worst.
13:45 - a few seconds before the host said Remission is getting a H1C value of less than 6.5 without medication, and then afer says if its below 6.5 with medication sometimes. Which one is true?
TY Good video.
The ad right before this video was for candy at a local store. You have to wonder about the advertising algorithm. 🤨
Deffo want one on D1 to as it's a completely different disease with the same symptoms
My cousin was misdiagnosed with type two diabetes. Turns out he was type one and was being mistreated the whole time. The doctor would get mad at me and accuse him of not doing his treatments because his numbers were all out of whack. He was doing his treatments he just had the wrong diagnosis. He went into keto acidosis and went to the hospital where they confirmed he was type one. He has a new doctor now and is getting the proper treatment.
Hmm, I mean these informations are considered common knowledge already, such as eating healthy and exercising. Can't say I learned anything new.
I wonder if anyone could tell me their opinion about these two questions:
First, I've heard that you should really eat sweet food as soon as possible (for example before launch), because body can process them better in the morning rather than in the afternoon. Is that true though?
Second, and I dont remember this one well and hoped it would be included in the video, my friend studied biology. When i talked to her about diabetes, if I remember correctly, she mentioned that what can speed up diabetes dramatically is when people get big hits of sugar instead of slower intake of the same amount of sugar, for example eating 10 pieces from a box of chocolate in 10 minutes vs eating same amount during 5 hours. She mentioned something about spikes in sugar intake hurt insulin producing cells more. What do you think or know about this? It sounds of course sensibly to not binge eat sweet stuff...
Insulin is only extraordinarily expensive in north America more so the USA while Europe and most of the rest of the world pay considerably less for it as we don't get drug companies free reign over pricing
It has nothing to do with that at all. Most insulin is still patented despite "generics" being available they're patented. In Europe, Americans subsidize the costs of your drugs through aid agreements. If these drugs just existed on your markets sold at retail prices, they might cost a little more. Of course, if Americans weren't eating the additional fees of subsidizing the world's healthcare, we would pay significantly less. At least, that is how I understand it. It's basically that we pay your way. If American companies weren't greedy, we would pay less. If we stopped supporting Europe financially, your nations couldn't negotiate "lower prices," which come in the form of much higher taxes for you than we pay.
Regardless of how anyone looks at it, the price for insulin, particularly in the US, is truly absurd.
@@VariantAEChahahahahahahaha hahahahahahahaha hahahahaha 🤡🤡🤡🤡 no
@@VariantAECweak cope cause you get screwed, the only thing you subsidise is stock prices
@@VariantAEC So after researching this for 10 minutes, I learned that European Governments sets the prices of their medication, while the US allows pharmaceutical companies to decide theirs. This _could_ be called subsidizing, but it's _because_ you let the pharmaceutical companies set the price, not because you made an active choice to subsidize.
@@VariantAEC Also, the subsidy we're discussing is medicine research in your own country. You're paying more for those jobs.
Thank you
I'd love to see you do one of these for type 1, especially from a perspective of how to help a type 1 diabetic who's having low or high glucose (and what that means). There's so little understanding about type 1 in the general population and type 1 diabetes can easily kill you if not treated properly.
thx - well presented!!!
This was very helpful, thank you. I do wonder is there any research on why is seems to harder for people with diabetes or pre-diabetes to lose weight?
I would really love to know how exactly the cells become insulin resistant. Like does the protein fold funny so that it does not receive the insulin as well, what would cause that ect... Also how does changing diet/exercise actually effect the cells cause of the resistance. I hope more research will discover these things soon!
The way it's been described to me and I don't know how scientifically accurate this is but your body will store glucose in your body as fat cells, over time if the majority of your body is fat cells (higher BMI) there's just no room to store the glucose, your pancreas will produce more and more insulin in an attempt to "cram the glucose" into your exceedingly packed cells, which will cause your cells to be even more resistant to future insulin, a vicious cycle until eventually your pancreas quits and stops producing insulin all together, a way to reverse this is to exercise and build muscle, when exerting the stored energy, your cells will be more receptive to insulin as they will need the glucose to replenish their stores and muscle is significantly more responsive to insulin versus fat cells because they need more energy to maintain.
TLDR: a low energy sedentary lifestyle and the overeating of quick easy carbs that your body can easily break down into glucose. Also genetics in some cases.
Glucose thats entered the cell, will bind to the transporter that transported the glucose into the cell. That will change the transporters form to not being able to transport glucose into the cell anymore. With high blood glucose the likelihood for cells to be saturated with glucose is high and the cells transporter is blocked as a result.
It's a good question and sad this video doesn't lay it out. Cells become insulin resistant due to the accumulation of fat inside the cells. These fats interfere with insulin signaling preventing glucose from entering the cells. Look up Dr. Neal Barnard. He has several talks on this and how to fix it.
That stuff is known, it just wasn't covered in this video. I'm not sure why they think this video was "the" one to understand diabetes, it barely scratched the surface. It seemed like they were more interested in making social commentary than informing. Look up the channel "Nourished by Science". He has many fascinating, science-based videos on insulin resistance. I'd link you to it, but they removed another comment I made elsewhere inking someone else to it. I guess they don't really want anyone getting the science, just their editorial opinions.
There are other ways the cells become resistant other than fat. Hormones, medications, and genetic mutations are other causes of insulin resistance. For example, during pregnancy the hormone progesterone increases insulin resistance. I had to take 4x my normal amount of insulin by the end of one pregnancy. I have also experienced uncontrollable high blood sugars while taking a steroid (it was for a life threatening allergic reaction). That med stimulated my body to make its own glucose. Insulin, with a healthy diet and exercise could only lower my glucose for an hour or 2 before raising it to the 200-300 range again! It took 2-3 months before I could get in a healthy glucose range. It was insanely frustrating and stressful! I went through 10x my normal insulin.
I would love to see a video on how low carb/keto lifestyle affects diabetes and high blood pressure.
My wife sent her diabetes into remission with the Keto lifestyle.
This video already has a comment about using specific diets.
Low carb/Keto is a way to manage diabetes but won't cure it. You'll get your blood sugar and A1C down but until you can actually consume carbs without spiking blood sugar an unhealthy amount you haven't cured the condition. People who instead go to a high carb but complex carbs, not simple carbs and lots of fibre while limiting saturated fats, actually cure the condition. They may notice an initial spike in blood sugars, but this goes down over time eating whole foods and eventually cures the condition to the point where not only do their A1C and blood sugar get under control but if they eat something bad like cake they still don't get an unhealthy blood sugar spike.
Low carb has also shown in studies to result in a higher all cause mortality rate so even if you stay low carb your whole life and just manage diabetes instead of curing it you'll still end up with a shorter lifespan so it's better to just eat a healthy whole foods diet instead.
It just puts type 2 in remission, it's not that hard if your body has trouble processing carbohydrates just eat a diet that doesn't have them. And if you are type 1 you will need less insulin to control your blood glucose levels so you will have less side effects throughout your life.
My sister is in remission from type 2 diabetes and my brother in law her husband is pre diabetic. Sadly my brother in law's parents who live with them and both have type 2 diabetes don't really care and continue to eat like crap and think anything other then salt, pepper and onion powder is too much spice. I feel bad for my niece and nephew because they don't get exposed to different foods and my sister who enjoys cooking can't seem to stand up to her in laws and tell them to make their own meals.
Had to watch this cause I have been fighting type 2 diabetes for a year now and am still trying to learn more about it.
look into Hallberg's protocol on reversal.
Metformin bucks for me and so many people I know. Causes so much gastrointestinal issues and lingers after stopping.
My dad is Type 2 but his dad and uncles were all type 1. I think he’s actually type 1 or “1 and a half” because he was overweight when he was diagnosed but most of his life he was super skinny! My boyfriend got type 1 from a bad ear infection in his late 20’s, but his doctor says he’s really 1.5 and they have really similar patterns.
Next time y'all are in need of an idea, I'd love to see a video on feline diabetes. There's a serious lack of knowledge, even among vets, and having a resource for people dealing with it that doesn't involve having to sift through a bunch of medical jargon would have a ton of value