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May 8, 2017 By Dr. Kurt, DC

Double Diabetes

A few weeks back I had posted a picture of the infamous Unicorn Frappuccino.  It was an image that equated the sugar load of the beverage with eating 3 Snicker’s bars.  I made the comment ‘that if you’re as excited about this drink, then you should be as excited about diabetes.’

What ensued was a firestorm that I could have never predicted.  I was getting hammered for perpetuating the notion that sugar causes diabetes and the shaming police were flicking on sirens and showing their lights all over the place.  I was being accused of perpetuation a stigma, disease shaming, and diet shaming.

Functional Medicine Colorado SpringsAnd it wasn’t coming from anyone with type 2 diabetes but those moms and loved ones of people with type 1 diabetes.  The momma bears were in full force and after I let the dust settle, I understand why.  They are constantly having to explain and defend that their child’s condition isn’t from bad parenting nor chronic, reckless, lifestyle decisions.

Raising 3 boys with my wife, I know a mom will blame herself for anything that isn’t favorable, even if it’s out of her control.  But where my point was being missed was that even though something isn’t your fault, it’s still your responsibility.  And even if your child has type 1 diabetes, that child will have better outcomes by avoiding the things that contribute to type 2 diabetes…specifically a high sugar diet.

Regardless of the presentation of Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, there’s a common theme, the regulation and utilization of insulin.  One doesn’t produce insulin, the other, the cells don’t listen to insulin well.

In either scenario, the less need for insulin, the better the outcomes.  If you consume the unicorn, regardless of endogenous insulin production or exogenous insulin injection, the high sugar load calls for a higher insulin need.

What I want to make clear is that even with type 1 diabetes, this doesn’t mean someone cannot develop type 2 diabetes simultaneously.  Insulin is essential to the body for many reasons.  But too much insulin becomes annoying to the cells, and the cells can start to ignore the signal, no matter if you’re type 1.

This means that for a type 1 diabetic, not only can you provide better health outcomes by limiting foods that require a high insulin response (grains, legumes, juices, sugar, etc), you can save some money by not needed as much insulin to combat those high glycemic foods.

I know for those moms with a type 1 diabetic kid, you want to provide what you can since they have started life with some extra challenges.  But I challenge the notion that even though the type 1 diabetes was not your fault, that creating a low glycemic diet with time restricted eating will benefit the ups and downs of sugar spikes and insulin needs.  So yes, that does mean limiting grains, juices, and everything that is the Standard American Diet.  Yes, that probably does mean trying the total opposite nutrition advice of your dietician, pediatrician, and USDA sponsored eating plan.

But I also know that I get discredited because I don’t have the right initials after my name or the specialty after my name.  But here’s someone that does.  Take a look at his lectures, his documentary, his book, and take that information in the context of the insulin demand, not if insulin is coming from internal administration or from injection administration.

And to the woman/women that automatically assume I’m trying to sell something with my anti-sugar message, the only thing I’m trying to sell is creating a life culture of creating more health and needing less healthcare.  It’s no surprise that healthcare is expensive.  86% off our healthcare costs are from chronic illness.  If we want to have better health outcomes, then we have to stop arguing over who is going to pay for healthcare and instead ask what are we paying for?  I said this with Obama, I will say this with Trump.  I didn’t say no healthcare and I didn’t say perfect health.  But if you haven’t realized it yet, the more we grant access of emergency interventions to treat chronic illness, the worst outcomes we have.

If the outcome is to create health then we have to question the health practices that have been drilled into our heads that have left us with ever increasing chronic illness.  Not sure where to start?  You know how to find me.

Filed Under: Colorado Springs, Diabetes, Functional Medicine, Hormones, Lifestyle Medicine Tagged With: Diabetes, Functional Medicine Colorado Springs, Sugar

March 9, 2015 By Dr. Kurt, DC

Before You Take that Cholesterol Drug…

You may not have heard of some recent news that is happening across the pond in the mother country concerning taking statins.  You know statins as those drugs that are recommended to every man, woman, and child to “prevent heart attack due to all that pesky plaquing in the arteries.”  For the past 40 years, our national government has had a vendetta against the little waxy substance called cholesterol.  

statinsEven dietary changes are happening.  Hopefully it’s not another 40 years before they change the medical management of elevated cholesterol.  Before you decide to take a statin or if people you know and love are on statins, you may want to consider a couple things.

Type 2 Diabetes

Taking statins can increase your chance of Type 2 diabetes by almost 50%, while doing NOTHING to prolong the lives of those at a low risk heart attack.  In England, close to 8 million Brits take statins.  It’s closer to 25 million Americans taking the essential molecule blocking drugs.  Is it really working to reduce heart disease?

Researchers in Finland studied 8,749 non-diabetic men to see whether taking two of the most popular statins increased the chance of developing Type 2 diabetes.

They found those who took simvastatin or atorvastatin were 46 per cent more likely to develop the condition and those on higher doses were at even greater risk.

Last year, Britain’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence issued guidance making 40 per cent of adults eligible for statins.

It said anyone thought to have a greater than 10 per cent chance of a heart attack or stroke within 10 years should be offered the drug on the NHS.  It means virtually all men aged over 55 and women over 65 are encouraged to take statins to stave off fatal ­cardiovascular disease.

Back in 2013, the American College of Cardiology created new guidelines that would increase statin use in the states by an additional 13 million Americans.

If that study that involved 8700 people in Finland translates into 38 million Americans, we should see an increase in diabetes by at least 19 million Americans as well as a drastic increase in heart disease in the coming decades.

“Ironically diabetes triples the risk of heart ­disease for men and multiplies it by five for women, so the very drugs given to prevent heart disease may well be causing it in, potentially, ­millions of people.  Many researchers have been aware for many years that the true rate of side effects from statins have been hidden and under-reported.”

Dr. Malcolm Kendrick

Parkinson’s

Dr Kailash Chand, deputy chairman of the British Medical Association, was speaking following research which found those who take the cholesterol-lowering drugs are more than twice as likely to develop Parkinson’s disease in later life than those who do not.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Heart Disease, Hormones Tagged With: cholesterol, Crestor, Diabetes, Dr. Kurt DC, hormones, Lipitor, Parkinson's, statins

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