The following article uses the diabetes or
diabetic words -10- times without clarifier,
but actually, as indicated elsewhere in the
article with its repeated use of the 'type 2'
clarifier, the article is SOLELY about Cello-
sis, and to be more clear, solely about ...
... the only preventable / reversible Dispar-
ate High Glucose Condition of Preventable
Cellosis, a condition estimated to be the
one that 85% of those with Cellosis have.
15% of those with Cellosis have one of the
20 specific types of Cellosis that are ...
... non-preventable & non-reversible. Addi-
tionally, there are 6 Disparate High Glucose
Conditions having nothing whatsoever to
do with anything in the following article (see
sig for details on the 6 non-Cellosis Dispar-
ate High Glucose Conditions).
For clarity, Preventable Cellosis is used in
the following excerpts except for the one
time they're talking about the 20 specific
types of Cellosis that are non-preventable
& non-reversible:
- - -
October 1 2021
Preventable Cellosis: The best way to
'reverse' the condition - new study
https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/health/1499801/diabetes-type-2-remission-weight-loss
- - -
Those with Preventable Cellosis can put their
condition into remission - a state of normal
blood sugar without the use of medication -
if they lose weight, but how many pounds
need to be lost?
"We propose that for most patients with Pre-
ventable Cellosis, without cardiovascular
disease, the main treatment focus should be
managing the key underlying abnormality &
driver of the Preventable Cellosis: a BMI of
30 or higher (that refers to white people, the ...
... level that increases Preventable Cellosis
risk in non-white individuals is lower than
that - see sig for details)," ... "Such an ap-
proach would have the added benefit of
addressing not just high blood sugar, but
other BMI 30 & higher-related complications,"
which include:
o Fatty liver disease
o Obstructive sleep apnea
o Osteoarthritis
o High blood pressure
o High cholesterol.
So, how much weight does one need to lose
in order to put their Preventable Cellosis into
remission?
According to the researchers, losing 15 percent
of your body weight – and maintaining it – has
a "major impact on Preventable Cellosis progres-
sion".
For some people who achieved this target, their
condition had successfully been put into remis-
sion.
Elsewhere, in the DiRECT trial, 70 percent of those
with Preventable Cellosis who lost 33 pounds or
more – who had an average start weight of 220
pounds – went into remission.
The participants who achieved remission had been
diagnosed with Preventable Cellosis in the past 6
years prior to the trial commencing.
Bariatric surgery has also shown "immediate" and
"sustained benefits" for Preventable Cellosis indi-
viduals.
At present, a number of weight management drugs
are available to help people shift excess fat.
This includes semaglutide, orlistat, phentermine
–topiramate, naltrexone– bupropion, & liraglutide.
Previous research on semaglutide has shown that
15 percent of body weight can "readily" be lost in
more than 25 percent of people who have Preven-
table Cellosis.
What does BMI 30 & higher have
to do with Preventable Cellosis?
... "fat around the waist" is a "key mechanistic con-
tributor to Preventable Cellosis".
"We propose a treatment goal of total weight loss
of at least 15 percent." ...
Not only will this help to improve (lower) blood
sugar level (that only applies to non-Islit indivi-
duals), it's seen as "the most effective way to dis-
rupt the core pathophysiology of Preventable Cel-
losis".
The following graphic is titled "What is type 2 dia-
betes?", but actually, it errs in mentioning nothing
about causality, says nothing about the mentioned
symptoms being involved in all 7 of the Disparate
High Glucose Conditions, & in its "Why is it danger-
ous" area it fails to say that undiagnosed Insulinitis ...
... (Islit) will KILL you if exogenous insulin is not
given in time to prevent death. In rare cases, un-
diagnosed non-Islit conditions can also kill you
but most often that takes much longer to kill than
undiagnosed Islit.
https://cdn.images.express.co.uk/img/dynamic/11/590x/secondary/Type-2-diabetes-3679283.jpg?r=1633120553955
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Pro-Humanist FREELOVER, Insulinitis (Islit)
since age 5, got it in March 1961
https://prohuman.net/pix2/new_superior_clarifying_name_is_INSULINITIS.jpg
C.ure I.nsulinitis A.ssociation
ASAP!
https://prohuman.net/cureinsulinitisassociation.htm
Glucose Anomalies Research regarding
Potential Cures / Improvements in Treatments
The Sooner The Better!
https://prohuman.net/glucoseanomaliesresearch.htm
- - -
The old confusing way which all-too-often
involves folks using the diabetes / diabetic
words without a clarifier:
diabetes / diabetic without a clarifier,
diabetes / diabetic guessing required
https://prohuman.net/pix2/diabetesdiabeticguessinggame.jpg
- - -
Logic and reasoning behind ceasing using
diabetes & diabetic & reactive hypoglycemia
words and phrases, replacing all that with
vastly superior names, ending diabetes &
diabetic & reactive hypoglycemia confusion,
misleading, & misunderstanding:
Diabetes Bubble / Diabetes Bubble Burst
Splendid!
https://prohuman.net/diabetesbubblediabetesbubbleburst.htm
- - -
Disparate High Glucose Conditions,
DHGCs, 7 disparate categories of
unpreventability / nonreversibility
of all-but-one of the specific types
of DHGCs (thus far, research actively
trying to change that):
o 15 specific types of rapid-onset Insul-
initis (Islit), unpreventable & nonrevers-
ible (thus far), the overwhelming majority
with Islit have Insulitis Islit (sometimes
called type 1 diabetes, often confusingly
called diabetes with no clarifier)
https://prohuman.net/pix2/new_superior_clarifying_name_is_INSULINITIS.jpg
14 specific types of Islit are not caused
by Insulitis, present in a small minority
of those with Islit.
o 1 specific type of slow-onset Islit, Latent
Autoimmune Islit, also unpreventable &
nonreversible (thus far) (sometimes called
latent autoimmune diabetes in adults, often
confusingly called diabetes with no clarifier)
o Preventable Cellosis is the only specific
type of DHGC that is preventable & revers-
ible (in many, sometimes it's called type 2
diabetes, often confusingly called diabetes
with no clarifier)
Risk for Preventable Cellosis, Hypertension,
& Cardiovascular Disease increases as one's
weight increases but BMI risk increases at
lower BMI levels in non-white individuals:
https://prohuman.net/pix2/BMI-WaistCircumference-Cellosis&Hypertension&CardiovascularDisease-Risk.jpg
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-05-bmi-offs-obesity-diabetes-non-white.html
PreCellosis (often confusingly called pre-
diabetes with no clarifier) is the oft-times
preventable & reversible Cellosis precondi-
tion that all-too-often the overwhelming ma-
jority having it are unaware they have it
o 20 specific types of Cellosis, unpreven-
table & nonreversible (thus far, sometimes
called type 2 diabetes, all-too-often con-
fusingly called diabetes with no clarifier)
o 1 specific type of DHGC only occurring
in the late stage of impregnation in women,
a type that's transient but that increases
risk of later getting Cellosis, that ...
... condition called Gestational Cellosis
(sometimes called gestational diabetes,
sometimes confusingly called diabetes with
no clarifier).
o 11 specific types of Diminosis (new name
created in 2010 for a monogenic condition
age 6 months that sometimes is called
maturity onset diabetes of the young, some-
times confusingly called diabetes with no
clarifier), unpreventable & non-reversible
(thus far).
o 12 specific types of Neonatal Diminosis
(new name created in 2010 for a monogenic
condition at age < or = 6 months that some-
times is called neonatal diabetes, sometimes
confusingly called diabetes with no ...
... clarifier), 8 types are permanent & unpre-
ventable & nonreversible (thus far); 4 specific
types are transient but can recur.
o 25 specific types of Ohiglucons (new name
created in 2010 for other diabetes mellitus,
but often confusingly called diabetes with
no clarifier).
23 specific types are totally unpreventable.
Hemochromatosis Ohiglucon, is only preventa-
ble if Hemochromatosis is found and treated
before it damages the pancreas.
Immunosuppressants Ohiglucon, caused after
a transplant with the required use of immun-
osuppressants, 50% is temporary, but if it
persists for over a year, most likely the condi-
tion is permanent.
If endogenous insulin production is near-totally
to totally lost & does not recover after immuno-
suppressants dosages reduced, it causes Im-
munosuppressants Islit.
- - -
A mostly Non-Glucose Anomaly, Insipidus, it's
also unpreventable & nonreversible (thus far):
o 6 specific types of Insipidus (new name
created in 2010 for diabetes insipidus, some-
times confusingly called diabetes with no clar-
ifier), 4 specific types don't include high glucose
& are unpreventable & nonreversible (thus far),
2 specific rare types do include high glucose &
are unpreventable & nonreversible (thus far).
- - -
The following condition is apart from the
diabetes confusion problem, but has confu-
sion issues of its own.
A Low Glucose Condition, Hut:
o The 21 specific types of Hut (new name
created in 2010 for Hypoglycemia Uncaused
by Treatments for High Glucose, often con-
fusingly called reactive hypoglycemia, con-
fusing in that it does not occur as a reac-
tion to treatment for High Glucose; one ...
... form sometimes called hyperinsulinism),
some specific types are preventable & rever-
sible, some aren't (thus far).
- - -
Stop Diabetes/Diabetic Confusion
with New Superior Clarifying Terms
https://www.change.org/stopdiabetesdiabeticconfusionwithNewSuperiorClarifyingTerms
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