Is there any link between PA, Hypothyroidism and type 2 diabetes?
Type 2 diabetes : Is there any link... - Pernicious Anaemi...
Type 2 diabetes
There a link with type 1 diabetes as an autoimmune disease. Not type 2 to my knowledge, as its possible to be cured with a change of diet and lifestyle
There is some recent research that shows that some type 2 diabetes MAY be autoimmune. I am normal weight, eat a healthy, well balanced diet and exercise regularly and still have type 2 diabetes. As I have several other autoimmune conditions, I wouldn't be at all surprised to find that my type 2 is too.
I do get somewhat annoyed when I get told that I must've eaten too much sugar as a child, or the comment 'well you aren't fat!' The media have stereotyped all type 2s as overweight, lazy, junk food eaters, when it isn't always the case 🙁
I do find myself agreeing with what you say. I guess there will often be multiple reasons why individual bodies respond in the ways they do. Agree on weight issue too. My sister is 18stone,never exercises and at 57 she's not diabetic. Too many poorly educated healthcare assistants applying a one cap fits all explanation at my GPS II fear.Thank you for your reply
The first thing that any G.P. says when I have a phone consultation is 'If you lose a bit of weight, your diabetes will be better controlled'. My reply is always 'I'm 8 stone, how much weight would you like me to lose?' That it usually met with silence.
I am 8 stone 4 lbs, 5 foot 5" and just told I am pre-diabetic. I do have a sweet tooth though, but eat healthy most of the time, organic foods, organic eggs, grass fed meat, no processed foods. I find it funny that I have become diabetic since being prescribed T3. Put on 5 lbs and have a really bad sweet tooth now. Although my energy levels are a little better.
Would be funny if not so frustrsting🙄
I think there is a link. I found this info.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/364...
The study found that B12 deficient rats, developed glucose intolerance/insulin resistance.
Speaking from personal experience, I was diagnosed with Hashi's in 1999. In 2015 I found out I was type 2 diabetic. I was utterly dumbfounded because I had eaten healthily and exercised my entire life. I had put on a bit of weight when my hypothyroidism was diagnosed, but I lost it when my thyroid meds were optimised. Like others have said, I know of many friends etc far bigger than me, who are not diabetic and who never exercise at all, so I felt "why me"?
I have been taking Metformin for 8 years now and despite me eating what would generally be deemed a "faultless" diet, my Hba1c just will not go below 46 ie still in the pre diabetic range.
Not everyone's diabetes is controllable nor curable by diet and exercise. I feel very aggrieved when the media leads people to believe that type 2 diabetes is a "lifestyle choice" and that sufferers are doughnut scoffing couch potatoes who have brought the disease upon themselves.
It is only now, that I am beginning to join up my ill health dots and investigate my possible B12 deficiency.
I’m 48, a fitness geek, wholefood diet, etc and my blood sugars are suddenly in the diabetic range. I have multiple autoimmune issues so I have to assume it’s that. I’m currently trying to get a gp appt to get referred to endocrinology.
I'm one of those was on a healthy diet, and get 'too much' exercise and somehow developed type 2 diabetes. I'm fairly certain that I actually have Cushing's Syndrome, which is a metabolic disorder caused by excess cortisol (the stress hormone). I'm wondering if the cortisol has an effect on my B12 levels...
There is a link between hypothyroidism and diabetes. If thyroid hormones are not optimal they can have several different affects, including insulin resistance and less glycogen stored in liver. Your metabolism is controlled by your thyroid hormones, so can throw everything out of whack. Same with thyroid and cholesterol levels. Getting thyroid hormones optimal is key.
Hi
I have Hashimotos, low B12 at cellular level and have just been told I am now in the type 2 diabetic range (42) and my GP has put me on a 9 month diabetes programme.
I was also told I have too much good cholesterol!!!
I am very slim and have been my whole life. Over the last year I saw a nutritionist and have been eating healthier than I ever have done in my life. There is hardly anything left for me to cut out in way of sugar or saturated fats so I am bewildered how this could have happened too. I am under a private Endocrinologist and my Thyroid levels have been stable.
I can't make out if its my Thyroid again or lack of B12. I am going to re test Active B12 and MMA. Both were in the wrong direction last September.
Strangely my bloods have been low in white blood cells, my platelet count is decreasing since last October from 219 to now 184 and I now have nucleated RBCs in my blood which an adult shouldn't have as I understand it. The last 3 bloods draws I have been asked if I am on blood thinners as I bled very quickly.
All in all I have a suspicion all this is due to a combination of B12 deficiency and Thyroid problem. I don't have much faith in a GP joining up the dots though!!!
A very familiar story to me. It's so hard to get GPS to take an individual patient approach. It's one cap fits all from my experience. Sometimes I dispair as I don't feel it's going to improve in my lifetime.
My A1c has crept up, in the US I'm at 6.1. Not sure how this relates to the UK measurement. So this is prediabetic and I believe it happened because I've tried to gain a few much needed pounds. I've added too much rice, carrots and potatoes in the bean soup I make. Also I'm eating too many processed "Rice Cakes" and too many baked sweet potatoes. I did gain a few pounds but my energy is not good. I also have thyroid issues and cannot tolerate thyroid meds. I take iodine and l-tyrosine and these have kept my T-3 and T-4 in normal ranges. Then there is my B-12 level which just came back at 4,083, (normal range being 200 - 1100) so of course my new medic tells me to stop injections. I get the injections from a different provider who I see again in July. My lab was done one week after an injection. Anyway, seems like we can't win.
I think you might be right, it seems like we can't win. When things go well nature does an amazing job of balancing our bodies needs. But when something sends it out of kilter it seems very difficult for us to restore that balance. The rigid rulebook so many medics seem to live by doesn't help.Good luck.
If you follow Sten Ekberg, who I know is controversial with some folk here, you learn insulin resistance builds with time. Eating fat does not stimulate the insulin response like sugar and starch does. We've been pedalled a low fat diet for so long, when sugar is the baddie.