Conventional medical treatments are designed to raise
the already high insulin levels in order to lower blood sugar.
Not exact matches
This system can pop into overdrive in obese and diabetic women who
already have
higher insulin levels and are prone to
insulin resistance.
This tells us that worrying about spiking our
insulin immediately after training with tremendous amounts of
high - GI carbs is not necessary, as our
insulin is
already above the threshold for exerting its maximal benefit.
Insulin levels significantly increase in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy as a normal part of pregnancy; the majority of women with PCOS already have high insulin
Insulin levels significantly increase in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy as a normal part of pregnancy; the majority of women with PCOS
already have
high insulin insulin levels.
These study findings bring cause for concern because women with PCOS are
already at a
higher risk for developing heart disease and are
insulin resistant.
In humans,
high rates of
insulin release from the pancreas, (through the consumption of sugar - rich, processed foods and drinks), which ultimately cause weight gain.2 Because this food is
already processed, it means that there isn't any fiber to slow down the absorption of these energy - dense nutrients into the system.
If you don't know
already, then type 2 diabetes is the end progression of severely impaired
insulin sensitivity,
high blood sugar, and
high insulin levels.
Carbohydrates also can raise
insulin, the fat - storage hormone, which may
already be
high due to mercury toxicity.
Animal protein causes our bodies to create very
high IGF - 1 (
insulin - like growth factor 1) hormone levels which not only is a known cause for cancer, but also drastically promotes the spread of cancer cells that
already exist or may form.
Remember, PCOS
already includes astronomically
high insulin levels.
As a result, dangerously
high levels of
insulin and glucose may go undetected for years, by which time serious damage may
already have occurred).
Because many women with PCOS are
already insulin resistant before pregnancy, they are at a
higher risk for gestational diabetes.
In this case we should not add more
insulin; the level is
already too
high and will increase damage.
If your liver's glycogen stores are
already full, then the fructose will be converted to fat which can then form ceramides in a
high insulin environment.
To go back to our «dam» analogy, excessive exogenous
insulin for someone who
already has hyperinsulinemia is like building our dam wall
higher than it needs to be.