Intermittent fasting - research suggesting it raises risk of diabetes.
angiew321
Posts: 17 Member
I don't know enough about the subject to comment (and I don't do intermittent fasting myself) but thought this might be of interest to those on intermittent diets, or the dieticians/nutritionists on this forum.
My only comment is that this piece of research was done on rats not humans, so whether it will be the same in humans is anyone's guess.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/may/20/fasting-diets-raise-risk-of-diabetes
My only comment is that this piece of research was done on rats not humans, so whether it will be the same in humans is anyone's guess.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/may/20/fasting-diets-raise-risk-of-diabetes
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A fine thing that fasting can be used to reverse diabetes, too, then.0
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I recently started an IF plan that limits the times at which you eat - basically, you fast for 16 hours and have an 8 hour eating window, with the emphasis on a balanced mix of healthy, wholesome foods, i.e. not processed rubbish. I have read a lot of research around this and the effects on insulin balance as well as other hormones, especially ghrelin and growth hormones seem to be pretty positive. I've lost 6 lbs in two weeks and feel great. It's easy to fit into my lifestyle, although it took my body a couple of days to get used to the new pattern.2
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Suggest we not post research NOT done on humans. Totally pointless.1
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kkmulholland2 wrote: »Suggest we not post research NOT done on humans. Totally pointless.
Agreed. But so far, 100% of the evidence presented in favor of the "miracle" aspects of intermittent fasting is based upon animal research. So that applies to both sides of the coin.4 -
kkmulholland2 wrote: »Suggest we not post research NOT done on humans. Totally pointless.
Agreed. But so far, 100% of the evidence presented in favor of the "miracle" aspects of intermittent fasting is based upon animal research. So that applies to both sides of the coin.
Intermittent fasting is a miracle probably saving your life daily. You can't eat continuously day and night without rupturing your stomach. You have to stop and if you do you are then intermittently fasting.5 -
ive done IF most of my life and I will be 44 in august and so far so good even when obese I wasnt diabetic or even prediabetic.1
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I do an 8-12 hours daily intermittent fast every night.
Take any collegiate level human physiology course, the human body is adapted to go days without food. The same adaptation is why human easily store fat as energy reserves.3 -
kkmulholland2 wrote: »Suggest we not post research NOT done on humans. Totally pointless.
I did actually point that out - please see my second paragraph.
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I always believe everything I read in The Guardian. When will they write an article entitled: Sugar Consumption Increases Risk of Diabetes." ?1
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This shows IF can improve IR without weight loss in prediabetics.
https://www.cell.com/cell-metabolism/fulltext/S1550-4131(18)30253-50
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