Medicine
fromScienceDaily
1 day agoYou don't need to lose weight to reverse prediabetes, study finds
Prediabetes can return to normal blood sugar without weight loss by changing fat distribution and improving insulin function.
The study found that prediabetic adults who have gene variations in their vitamin D receptors have a 19% lower risk of developing diabetes. Initially, the study did not reveal a noteworthy difference in those diabetics that took vitamin D compared to those who didn't. However, in an earlier analysis of the research, the D2d Research Group found that the certain group of the study that had higher levels of vitamin D had "progressively larger reductions in participants' risk of developing diabetes."
I creaked and groaned and belched like a tractor. Heaving myself out of the back seat of a car took so much effort that I dreamed about a portable winch. I waddled to the bathroom four or five times a night, between bouts of heartburn. I woke up with headaches, a mouth as dry as an emery board and a heavy coating of fatigue that I could never shake.
Across the nation, an estimated 20 million people; 7 percent of the US population have diabetes. As many as 40 million more teeter on the edge of the illness and are classified as pre-diabetic meaning they have insulin resistance and higher-than-normal blood sugar levels that indicate they're heading toward diabetes. But even for pre-diabetics, the disease isn't inevitable: Weight loss, a healthy diet, and consistent exercise can significantly cut the risk of developing diabetes.