Insulin Resistance and how to combat it....
Jude_V
Posts: 72 Member
I found this really interesting article - I was looking for some reason why I just can't seem to lose any weight. I have incorporated most of the suggestions here and I do, generally, feel better. I guess I need to up my exercise a bit and be patient...
Many overweight adults can't seem to lose weight no matter what they try. The problem may not lie in their calorie counts but their very cells: Increasing numbers of Americans, leading nutritionists say, are insulin-resistant. That is, their bodies no longer properly use the hormone insulin to process the food that's eaten. Net result: The body hangs on tight to the fat that's already there.
A stubborn inability to lose weight because of insulin resistance is a complicated but common problem, says integrative nutritionist Beth Reardon, director of nutrition for Duke Integrative Medicine, part of the Duke University Health System. If you're fighting the scale, she adds, you may be among the 79 million American adults who have or are heading toward prediabetes, a syndrome of insulin-related challenges that usually leads to diabetes unless health changes are made.
In 2010, 1.9 million new cases of full-blown diabetes were diagnosed, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Indeed, diabetes and obesity are so related that some health experts have coined the descriptor diabesity.
Why you may not be losing weight
When we eat, the food is broken down into glucose (blood sugar), the body's main energy source. As blood flows through the pancreas, this organ detects the high levels of glucose and knows to release insulin, a hormone that it produces in order to allow the cells throughout the body to use the glucose. The cells have insulin receptors that allow glucose to enter. Then the cell either uses the glucose to make energy right away or stores it as a future energy source.
For some people, though, this system has gone haywire. The cells' insulin receptors have pretty much stopped acknowledging the insulin, which means the cells don't get the glucose. Instead, the glucose builds up in the blood, where the pancreas notes the escalating glucose levels and pumps out still more insulin in response.
"The cells are starving because the fuel they need isn't being absorbed at the insulin receptor site on the cell," Reardon says.
So what does the body do in response? It hangs on fiercely to the energy stores -- fat -- it already has. And any glucose the cells do manage to absorb goes straight into storage -- as still more fat.
You can't lose weight because your body is in survival mode.
This whole process builds slowly over years. What triggers it in the first place? Experts believe that for many people, the problem stems mainly from a diet overloaded with simple carbohydrates -- bread, pasta, pizza, pastries, crackers, chips and other processed snack foods, sweetened beverages, corn syrup, and other quickly-digested sugars and starches. In other words: the typical modern Western diet. Faced with constant, quick hits of easily digested energy sources, the pancreas keeps pumping out insulin to help the energy get into the cells, but the overwhelmed cells finally say, "Enough!" and stop paying attention.
5 Early Warning Signs of Diabetes
More warning signs of insulin resistance
This kind of stubborn fat doesn't happen in isolation. The difficulty losing weight almost always occurs along with most of the following warning signs that you may be insulin resistant:
•
Weight gain centered in the middle -- "belly fat" -- measuring greater than 40 inches for a man or 35 inches for a woman
•
A body mass index (BMI) in the overweight or obese zones
•
A tendency to crave carbohydrates (as the starving cells tell the brain to give you more, more, more!)
•
Frequent fatigue, especially right after eating
•
Foggy thinking (because glucose is the preferred energy source for the brain, and the brain's cells, too, are starving for glucose)
•
High glucose levels, as measured by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) or fasting plasma glucose test (FPG) (The latter test isn't routinely offered in clinical practices.)
•
High fasting and timed insulin levels, which are measured as part of the OGTT
•
High blood pressure (135/85 or above)
•
Low levels of "good" HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/Dl for a man, below 50 mg/Dl for a woman)
•
High triglyceride levels (150 mg/Dl or above)
Together, this constellation of symptoms is known as "metabolic syndrome," or "syndrome X." Even though there seems to be a genetic predisposition for some people, insulin resistance that leads to type 2 diabetes largely depends on lifestyle. "Anyone can eat his or her way to diabetes," Reardon says. "Diabetes is particularly lifestyle and diet-driven."
What can help this stubborn weight come off
The good news is that you can reverse even this super-stubborn weight loss associated with prediabetes. "It's all about babying the pancreas," Reardon says.
Here's how:
Start moving more. Sure, you can think of it as burning calories, but your real goal by exercising is to engage the metabolism. As you work your muscles, you increase the number of enzymes that are looking for glucose as a fuel source (instead of just turning it into fat).
Aim for 30 to 45 minutes of moderate exercise (like walking) five to seven days a week. Bonus: Heavier people burn more energy when performing the same amount of exercise as leaner people, according to recent research at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
Do a "whiteout." You don't need a degree in nutrition to make things easier on your cells. Start with the simple step of eliminating white sugar, white flour, and white rice from your diet. This automatically reduces the amount of quickly digested carbohydrates you take in.
Move away from wheat. You've surely heard that 100-percent whole wheat is better for you than processed white, but there are better grains to help you cope with stubborn fat. "All modern wheat varieties are different from the kinds our bodies evolved to process," Reardon says. The man-manipulated wheat we eat today is lower in fiber and too digestible, affecting glucose levels too quickly.
Explore the wide world of good grains. You don't have to give up all breads and cereals. But you do want to move toward whole (intact), unrefined grains, which offer more fiber and other nutritional benefits. Luckily a huge range of whole, unprocessed, unrefined alternatives to wheat, corn, and rice is now widely available at supermarkets, and even at food wholesale warehouses. Look for so-called "ancient grains" such as spelt, quinoa, amaranth, barley, brown rice, and teff.
Get carb-choosy about all your food. Carbs aren't just in grains. Eat fruits and vegetables in whole forms, rather than as purees and juices, so the body has to work harder to get the glucose in them. When you can, be sure to eat the peels too, to get more fiber.
Shop outside the box. Because countering insulin-resistance weight gain depends on every mouthful, give up most packaged foods. They tend to be high in fat and chemicals, low in fiber and other nutrients. Shop the grocery perimeter instead, where most whole food is located.
Learn about (and lower) inflammation, a component underlying many common chronic diseases. This dangerous process undermines the general health of cells. What helps: Adding healthy sources of anti-inflammatory proteins (especially coldwater fish like salmon or omega-3 fortified eggs), walnuts, blueberries, flax, olive oil, green tea, red wine, and spices like cinnamon and turmeric. Replace such fats as butter and lard.
As a last resort, ask a doctor about medication that can help. Metformin is sometimes prescribed for very stubborn cases of the inability to lose excess weight because of insulin resistance, Reardon says. This drug helps control the amount of glucose in your blood; it's only effective in connection with dietary changes and exercise.
"Insulin resistance is preventable, and with these steps someone suffering from it should notice almost immediate changes," Reardon says. Lethargy, fatigue, and foggy thinking start to lift. You'll have more energy. And the pounds will finally start to drop.
Many overweight adults can't seem to lose weight no matter what they try. The problem may not lie in their calorie counts but their very cells: Increasing numbers of Americans, leading nutritionists say, are insulin-resistant. That is, their bodies no longer properly use the hormone insulin to process the food that's eaten. Net result: The body hangs on tight to the fat that's already there.
A stubborn inability to lose weight because of insulin resistance is a complicated but common problem, says integrative nutritionist Beth Reardon, director of nutrition for Duke Integrative Medicine, part of the Duke University Health System. If you're fighting the scale, she adds, you may be among the 79 million American adults who have or are heading toward prediabetes, a syndrome of insulin-related challenges that usually leads to diabetes unless health changes are made.
In 2010, 1.9 million new cases of full-blown diabetes were diagnosed, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Indeed, diabetes and obesity are so related that some health experts have coined the descriptor diabesity.
Why you may not be losing weight
When we eat, the food is broken down into glucose (blood sugar), the body's main energy source. As blood flows through the pancreas, this organ detects the high levels of glucose and knows to release insulin, a hormone that it produces in order to allow the cells throughout the body to use the glucose. The cells have insulin receptors that allow glucose to enter. Then the cell either uses the glucose to make energy right away or stores it as a future energy source.
For some people, though, this system has gone haywire. The cells' insulin receptors have pretty much stopped acknowledging the insulin, which means the cells don't get the glucose. Instead, the glucose builds up in the blood, where the pancreas notes the escalating glucose levels and pumps out still more insulin in response.
"The cells are starving because the fuel they need isn't being absorbed at the insulin receptor site on the cell," Reardon says.
So what does the body do in response? It hangs on fiercely to the energy stores -- fat -- it already has. And any glucose the cells do manage to absorb goes straight into storage -- as still more fat.
You can't lose weight because your body is in survival mode.
This whole process builds slowly over years. What triggers it in the first place? Experts believe that for many people, the problem stems mainly from a diet overloaded with simple carbohydrates -- bread, pasta, pizza, pastries, crackers, chips and other processed snack foods, sweetened beverages, corn syrup, and other quickly-digested sugars and starches. In other words: the typical modern Western diet. Faced with constant, quick hits of easily digested energy sources, the pancreas keeps pumping out insulin to help the energy get into the cells, but the overwhelmed cells finally say, "Enough!" and stop paying attention.
5 Early Warning Signs of Diabetes
More warning signs of insulin resistance
This kind of stubborn fat doesn't happen in isolation. The difficulty losing weight almost always occurs along with most of the following warning signs that you may be insulin resistant:
•
Weight gain centered in the middle -- "belly fat" -- measuring greater than 40 inches for a man or 35 inches for a woman
•
A body mass index (BMI) in the overweight or obese zones
•
A tendency to crave carbohydrates (as the starving cells tell the brain to give you more, more, more!)
•
Frequent fatigue, especially right after eating
•
Foggy thinking (because glucose is the preferred energy source for the brain, and the brain's cells, too, are starving for glucose)
•
High glucose levels, as measured by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) or fasting plasma glucose test (FPG) (The latter test isn't routinely offered in clinical practices.)
•
High fasting and timed insulin levels, which are measured as part of the OGTT
•
High blood pressure (135/85 or above)
•
Low levels of "good" HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/Dl for a man, below 50 mg/Dl for a woman)
•
High triglyceride levels (150 mg/Dl or above)
Together, this constellation of symptoms is known as "metabolic syndrome," or "syndrome X." Even though there seems to be a genetic predisposition for some people, insulin resistance that leads to type 2 diabetes largely depends on lifestyle. "Anyone can eat his or her way to diabetes," Reardon says. "Diabetes is particularly lifestyle and diet-driven."
What can help this stubborn weight come off
The good news is that you can reverse even this super-stubborn weight loss associated with prediabetes. "It's all about babying the pancreas," Reardon says.
Here's how:
Start moving more. Sure, you can think of it as burning calories, but your real goal by exercising is to engage the metabolism. As you work your muscles, you increase the number of enzymes that are looking for glucose as a fuel source (instead of just turning it into fat).
Aim for 30 to 45 minutes of moderate exercise (like walking) five to seven days a week. Bonus: Heavier people burn more energy when performing the same amount of exercise as leaner people, according to recent research at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
Do a "whiteout." You don't need a degree in nutrition to make things easier on your cells. Start with the simple step of eliminating white sugar, white flour, and white rice from your diet. This automatically reduces the amount of quickly digested carbohydrates you take in.
Move away from wheat. You've surely heard that 100-percent whole wheat is better for you than processed white, but there are better grains to help you cope with stubborn fat. "All modern wheat varieties are different from the kinds our bodies evolved to process," Reardon says. The man-manipulated wheat we eat today is lower in fiber and too digestible, affecting glucose levels too quickly.
Explore the wide world of good grains. You don't have to give up all breads and cereals. But you do want to move toward whole (intact), unrefined grains, which offer more fiber and other nutritional benefits. Luckily a huge range of whole, unprocessed, unrefined alternatives to wheat, corn, and rice is now widely available at supermarkets, and even at food wholesale warehouses. Look for so-called "ancient grains" such as spelt, quinoa, amaranth, barley, brown rice, and teff.
Get carb-choosy about all your food. Carbs aren't just in grains. Eat fruits and vegetables in whole forms, rather than as purees and juices, so the body has to work harder to get the glucose in them. When you can, be sure to eat the peels too, to get more fiber.
Shop outside the box. Because countering insulin-resistance weight gain depends on every mouthful, give up most packaged foods. They tend to be high in fat and chemicals, low in fiber and other nutrients. Shop the grocery perimeter instead, where most whole food is located.
Learn about (and lower) inflammation, a component underlying many common chronic diseases. This dangerous process undermines the general health of cells. What helps: Adding healthy sources of anti-inflammatory proteins (especially coldwater fish like salmon or omega-3 fortified eggs), walnuts, blueberries, flax, olive oil, green tea, red wine, and spices like cinnamon and turmeric. Replace such fats as butter and lard.
As a last resort, ask a doctor about medication that can help. Metformin is sometimes prescribed for very stubborn cases of the inability to lose excess weight because of insulin resistance, Reardon says. This drug helps control the amount of glucose in your blood; it's only effective in connection with dietary changes and exercise.
"Insulin resistance is preventable, and with these steps someone suffering from it should notice almost immediate changes," Reardon says. Lethargy, fatigue, and foggy thinking start to lift. You'll have more energy. And the pounds will finally start to drop.
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Replies
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Thanks Jude!
I am a diabetic and am currently using Glycomet. My GI shot up to 300. With increased GI and BP, it was just a matter of time before my health took an ugly turn. That was my wake up call.
I dint want that to happen. I too charge and started working out. I took care of my diet too. Today, after 4-5 months of working out, I am lighter by 35 pounds but have another 20-25 more to go. Hope to lose them all in the next few months.
My GI has dropped and my BP is close to the normal range. Miracles dint happen overnight but little changes over time made the difference for me.
Hope I can live a healthy life without pills and tablets.
Cheers
AI0 -
Those symptoms could have been written by me, they are exactly what I struggle with, ALL OF IT!!
I have been diagnosed as IR and am on Metformin for it, but I must admit I don't always take my tablets so my glucose levels go a bit wild, I really must work on taking them regularly.0 -
I've recently read a book (been quoting this a lot today) by Byron Richards called "mastering Leptin"... He discusses the very things you've covered. Also has a website but the book has more detail. The website has good info if you dig enough. What I finally understood was the nutrition side of it all. I think I inadvertently addressed insulin resistance when I started because I focused on nutrition first not calories. The holding on to every single morsel you ate because you aren't giving your body enough nutrients. I began with an idea that fat was inflammation and sought to treat that. Also have psoriatic arthritis. The book mentions all sort of conditions and how regulating leptin response can solve them. Most of the time it's not losing the weight that has solved the issue but the change to diet...eating nutritious food that keeps you fuller for longer (fibre as you mention) that happens to be lower in cals. Richards uses the leptin diet which has 5 basic rules.
The thing is..the closer you get to BMI, the less likely certain foods you've avoided will affect you but if you eat too much of them and gain again the whole cycle is interrupted and can go haywire again. I've not stayed 100% on track and am still slowly slowly losing but symptoms of arthritis are showing again. Fact is too then that this has to become a way of life to maintain weight and health. This book helped me understand how what I did worked. Before, I'd just patched everything together from all over. Lucky it worked.0 -
Richards uses the leptin diet which has 5 basic rules.
Interesting stuff - I suffered with eczema until I started gaining weight (possibly the start of my insulin resistance?) - I do, now also suffer with painful joints (wrists, knees, ankles) which gets worse when I eat a lot of carbs.
What are the 5 basic rules
Has anyone used Glysen? It was a supplement I saw mentioned in an article - hard to get here in the UK and expensive but if it works I might invest. I'd like ot persuade my GP to prescribe metformin but I suspect she won't given that I've had a hysterectomy and am 53....0 -
that sounds like me too!! is it genetic? i have been excersisng and weight is fluctuating up and down by 2-3 pounds. i have reduced white stuff but not completely i suppose that is may next step.0
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Nice article.0
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I found this on a site reviewing the book, it was a good site but this was just tacked on the end as a sort of "oh by the way" statement!
You can easily check whether you're eating too many carbohydrates. Weigh yourself first thing in the morning, and again at bedtime. If, at bedtime, you weigh more than 2 pounds over your morning weight, and you followed Rules 1-4 during the day, then you've eaten too many carbohydrates that day.
I am always way heavier in the evening!0 -
I loved reading your article . I have battled with my weight all my life and last year decided enough was enough, i started a year ago eating right and working out but struggled to loose weight. Eventually my hair started falling out and i really felt awful. I went to a gyni 1st . My problem was bad eating but a big part of it was because i had a hysterectomy about 7 years ago, they only removed my womb so i still have my ovaries. What the Gyni explained to me or rather what i understood ( i am English speaking , immigrated from South Africa to Croatia 5 years ago, so my Croatian is limited lol........) was that i still ovulate but because i don't have my period the eggs are not released so they attach themselves to my ovaries and form folicules. He said i suffer from PCOS (Polycystic ovary syndrome) in PCOS the hormones get out of balance. One hormone change triggers another, which changes another. For example:
The sex hormones get out of balance. Normally, the ovaries make a tiny amount of male sex hormones (androgens). In PCOS, they start making slightly more androgens. This may cause you to stop ovulating, get acne, and grow extra facial and body hair.
The body may have a problem using insulin, called insulin resistance. When the body doesn't use insulin well, blood sugar levels go up. Over time, this increases your chance of getting diabetes.
The most common symptoms are:
Acne.
Weight gain and trouble losing weight.
Extra hair on the face and body. Often women get thicker and darker facial hair and more hair on the chest, belly, and back.
Thinning hair on the scalp.
Irregular periods. Often women with PCOS have fewer than nine periods a year. Some women have no periods. Others have very heavy bleeding.
Fertility problems. Many women who have PCOS have trouble getting pregnant (infertility).
Depression.
He put me on the pill but i was warmed this pill "Belera" is very dangerous.
I was on for a month but decided to go and see a hormone dr just as a 2nd opinion, i am so glad i did. She did some tests and said because of the PCOS i am insulin resistant and have " Metabolic X syndrome". She put me on metformin.
I have been on the metformin for 3 weeks. I already feel so different, much more energy . i am still loosing my hair quiet a lot but she said it will take time to get my hormones in balance again.
Before i was diagnosed i was on a roller coaster, 1 lost 19 kg the 1st 3 months, i went back to South Africa for 9 weeks on holiday and gained back 9kg , it came back so quickly , when i got back i went back on a strict diet and was working out 2 hours a day. I lost the 9kg and a further 5kg but then i hit a major wall, i just couldn't loose anything i was so good and for 2 months not even 100g, i kinda lost focus, i was still eating ok and exercising 40 min a day but gained back 4kg. I was devastated but after going to the dr and starting my meds i am more determined than ever to loose the 50kg i still need to loose. It was a big wake up call , i don't want diabetes and any more health issues so i have picked myself up and dusted myself off and i am determined to see this through.
i was very confused so i loved ready this article and now i just want more info on how to eat to better control the insulin resistance. so if anyone has any suggestions , they would be greatly appreciated.0 -
Apparently Intermittent Fasting can really help with Insulin Sensitivity. I have tried the 5:2 fast but I found it too difficult but the 16:8 fast apparently works equally well so may well be worth trying.
This is where you fast for 16 hours (just drinking water) and then eat within an 8 hour window - for instance; Have breakfast at 10 am - eat normally throughout the day and don't eat anything after 6pm. This is probably easier for most people to do and you can pick times that suit you or your family.0 -
Thanks i will take a look at this.0
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bump0
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I've recently read a book (been quoting this a lot today) by Byron Richards called "mastering Leptin"...
Yes that and The End of Diabetes: The Eat to Live Plan to Prevent and Reverse Diabetes by Joel Fuhrman.
It's so simple really. Forget processed food, and the belly fat around your internal organs will go away.0 -
Bump for later0
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