Is there a way to triumphantly reverse diabetes type 2?

Reversing diabetes is a term that usually refers to a significant long-term improvement in insulin sensitivity in people with diabetes type 2 (T2D). People with T2D who are able to get their average blood glucose level to below 5.7 mmol/L or 102 mg/dl for over two or three months without taking diabetes medication are said to have put their diabetes into remission.

On finding out that  I was  diabetic,  and experiencing  a  near  collapse from a medicine prescribed to me,  I began  researching  natural methods  of lowering  my  blood sugar with a passion. I came across  a  method of reduced carbohydrate consumption that  was  guaranteed  to  lower  my  fasting blood  sugar  concentration  to below 100mg/100ml in  just  three  weeks.

 It  involved eating three meals  a day, each meal comprising a  cup of vegetables and any meat. The amount of food I ate was determined by a calculation  of  my  basal  metabolic rate. The carbohydrates were  leafy  or non-starchy vegetables. I ate  about  a cup full at  each  meal together  with any  type  of  meat  so long  as  it  wasn’t  processed. 

I was  allowed  to  stave off any  hunger with protein smoothies. The method was effective,  and I saw my blood  glucose levels melting each  day. I intuitioned that exercise would help, so I would  run  on a treadmill  and did  weight  training every day. After 21 days my fasting blood  glucose level was under 100mg/100 ml. I also  noticed  that  my  midriff had  shrunken.

However, I didn’t know about insulin  resistance,  and I naively thought that I was  cured  of  diabetes. Indeed that notion was  reinforced  after a  few  weeks , when I had a  blood test  which showed my  glucose levels  were  normal. That was in 2012.

 Because at that time, I didn’t  connect my weight gain with diabetes, I did not give weight control the importance that I would later realize it required. Seven years ago a blood  test read 300mg/100ml. This time I tried a vegan  approach. 

The regimen  was 30  to  60  days of raw vegetables,  fruits  and  nuts. which for me basically meant salads. I drank an infusion of herbs before every meal to alkalinize my body fluids. I ran every day.  I followed the diet for thirty  days; and, indeed  my  blood  sugar  levels  dropped to normal. 

I went back to an omnivorous diet, but stopped eating bread and drinking milk. Since  then  I have lossed and gained  weight several  times,  correlated  with  normal  and  elevated blood sugar  levels. Today, a few months shy of my 70th birthday, I have resolved to permanently keep my T2D in remission.

Anybody reading  this might  rightly ask: “If  he  knows  his condition and knows  how to  control it, then  why  does  he  relapse?” My  honest  answer  is, it is because of an ignorance of the mechanisms involved in causing diabetes. Importantly, it is also because of my human condition: a lack  of  self-discipline brought  on by times of  inadequate mindsets, stress, worry about  money, procrastination, family issues, and the list goes  on.

Although I  saw that my T2D could  go  into  remission, I didn’t really know why until I saw the  scientific proof  that type 2 diabetes can  be  reversed. I would like to share this proof with you.

Probably one  of  the  most important pieces  of  evidence of diabetes  type  2 reversal  comes  from studies  at Newcastle  University in  the  northeast  of England; the results  of  which are so  convincing  that treatments have been implemented for  type  2  diabetics on  a national  level.

These groundbreaking studies were  led   by Professor  Roy Taylor and his team. The  team used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). They  scanned the muscles used for movement  and  posture – skeletal  muscle, and  noticed that five hours after a  meal, non-diabetics stored 30% of  the glucose in those muscles; but, type  2  diabetic individuals stored almost no glucose. Their skeletal muscle was insulin resistant. 

Professor Taylor knew that the glucose which was normally stored  in  skeletal muscle had  to be  stored somewhere and  the  obvious place  was in  the  liver because whenever there is  more  glucose in  the body that can be  immediately used for energy, or stored as  glycogen, then that excess is very  quickly  converted to triglycerides in  the liver. 

Triglycerides are made of three fatty  acid molecules. They are a type of fat called lipids and are used to provide energy in the body. So, as may have been expected, MR images of the livers of diabetics showed a much higher liver fat content than the livers of non-diabetic individuals. Their livers were malfunctioning in a certain  sense because they  developed insulin resistance. That is to say their livers did not respond to the hormone insulin in the normal way. 

After a meal, instead of insulin causing the stoppage of glucose production, the storage of glucose as glycogen and the synthesis of lipids also to be stored , the insulin resistance results in glucose production and an increased synthesis of triglycerides. Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019; 7(2): 447–456 

 As a result, the liver puts out more glucose and triglycerides into the blood. It is  well known that T2 diabetic individuals have  a 50% higher  blood concentration of triglycerides than non-diabetic individuals.

Professor Taylor hypothesized a connection  between the  malfunction of the T2D liver and a malfunctioning pancreas, both organs important for maintaining constant blood glucose concentrations. He  called the hypothesis, The  Twin  Cycle Hypothesis. 

It states  that a little too  much food ingested  over  time, about ten  years, causes fat  to  be  built up  in  the liver. The liver then  becomes gradually insulin resistant. Since insulin usually causes  glucose  to  be  converted to  fat in  the liver, but when the liver  is  insulin resistant,  it puts out more  glucose into  the blood. 

The  pancreas  reacts  by  putting out  more  insulin  to  try  to  drop  the  increased  blood  glucose  levels. The higher insulin levels leads to  more  resistance  which  leads to more  glucose put  out  by  the  liver as well as an increased conversion  of glucose  into  fat  within  the liver. 

One of the functions of the liver is to provide all the  body  with  fat for energy,  but as previously mentioned a malfunctioning liver will  also  leave too  much  fat  in  the  blood. This fat  then builds up in areas where  it  shouldn’t  and  one  of those areas  is the  pancreas. 

The fat stops the insulin producing  cells (beta cells) from working properly and the glucose levels rise  even more. So, two vicious  cycles interact: on  the one hand a  malfunctioning liver, and  on  the other, a defective pancreas. Diabetologia 2008 51:1781 The  takeway is that excessive fat causes T2D

If  the  Twin Cycle  Hypothesis was correct, then  it could be  proved or  disproved if  weight loss would restore normal blood glucose  levels, effectively putting the T2D into  remission. 

A study called Counterpoint proved Prof. Taylor’s hypothesis. Eleven people were  put on a  restricted diet for eight weeks and even after  one  week the amount of triglicerides in their pancreas  and liver decreased. Their  pancreas began  to  normally secrete insulin and their liver became insulin sensitive. After eight  weeks, they  lost an  average  of 15kg and were in  T2D remission. Not  only was the Twin Cycle Hypothesis  proved, it also showed that  the abnormalities of  T2D are  reversible by  reducing dietary  intake.  Diabetologia  2011 Oct;54(10):2506-14.

The important  question  now was whether the remission  was durable. Professor Taylor then  made another study to  address  this. Subjects followed  a very  low  carbohydrate  diet for eight  weeks.  The  study showed that their diabetes  went  into  remission and  that the  remission  was  long  lasting if  there was  no  weight  gain. The subjects  were monitored  for 6  months. Diabetes Care Vol. 39, Issue  5, May 2016

The findings that T2D remissions were long  lasting prompted a national trial  called the  Direct Remission Clinical  Trial where  primary  care  nurses worked with  patients to  reduce their  weight by an  average of 14.5 kg. 

Remission did occur: half  of  the  group were  still  off their medication  after one year with  normal  glucose  levels,  and 36% of  the  group achieved  remission  for two years.  The study also found  that they maintained  a normal  maximum insulin secretion rate if  they maintained their weight  loss. Diabetes Care 2020;43:813-20.

In 2024, the  scheme is ongoing nationally in England and Wales, and remission figures of  30 to  40% are  expected.

A common belief amongst the  medical  profession, including medical  schools, is that T2D is  related  mainly to obesity, and that  it is obesity and  being  overweight per  se that is the most  important  risk  factor for  both children  and  adults. This view  is  held mainly  because obesity, insulin  resistance and metabolic syndrome – a  group of  conditions that  raise  the  risk of heart disease,stroke, and  diabetes – usually precede the  development  of T2D.

However this does  not  explain the  fact that a lot  of  obese  people never develop T2D, and that individuals with a normal body  mass  index (BMI) do contract diabetes.

Professor Taylor together with Prof.  Rury R Holman of  Oxford University  hypothesized  that it  wasn’t weight  gain per se that was  causing the  diabetes but rather a  genetically  determined weight gain  threshold. That is to say that if a  person has common T2D, then  they have put on  more weight than their particular body can handle. Clin Sci (Lond) 2015 Apr;128(7):405-10

This hypothesis would be  proved if  it  could be  shown that people with T2D of normal weight exhibited the same changes that  occur  with T2D of obese or  overweight people. In other  words,  their blood glucose levels would return to non-diabetic glucose levels.

A clinical trial proved the hypothesis when a study of T2D individuals of normal  weight  showed that after losing weight, their blood  glucose levels also became  normal. Clin Sci (Lond). 2023 Aug; 137(16): 1333–1346

In  summary, it  has  been  proven  that ordinary type two diabetes is  caused by an untolerated excess of fat which is determined  by  the genetic make-up of each  individual. It  has also  been  proven that by reducing body fat to below an  individual’s threshold, remission of their T2D is possible. T2D  can therefore, be  reversed,  and the remission will remain as  long as there is  no regain of  weight.