The cortisone was dissolving my muscles and making me weaker and I was also suffering
from hyperinsulinemia.
The patient dies a self induced death caused by complications
from hyperinsulinemia.
Not exact matches
Women with PCOS and
hyperinsulinemia typically have higher levels of testosterone and suffer
from mild acne to increased hair on their face, neck and abdomen.
In this condition, vascular cells could become dysfunctional because of
hyperinsulinemia or because vascular cells themselves are insulin resistant, which is caused by increased insulin production
from pancreatic beta cells as a compensatory mechanism to overcome insulin resistance.
That's oxaloacetate (
from the Kreb cycle) and neuropeptide Y (a brain chemical) working with your
hyperinsulinemia (feel like rocket science yet?).
A classical ketogenic diet — with a staggering 70 - 90 percent of total calories coming
from fat — might not be necessary.51 Classical ketogenic diets restrict protein as well as carbohydrate, since 48 - 58 percent of the amino acids in dietary proteins can be glucogenic, thereby undermining the purpose of a diet intended to generate a high amount of ketones and limit glucose as much as possible.46 As therapy for AD, however, simply lowering carbohydrate intake to a point where some ketones are generated and
hyperinsulinemia is corrected could have positive effects just by easing the metabolic burden on the brain.
If subpopulation, lets say, adapted to low CHO, then more CHO might lead to bunch of more or less stealth problems,
from indigestion over
hyperinsulinemia to microbiota rebalancing (which, now we know, release some neurotransmitters on its own and thus influence not only physical health but behavior apart
from their ability to use or create nutrients we need).
The plaques more logically result
from functional inhibition of IDE due to peripheral
hyperinsulinemia.
Specifically, if the initial pathogenesis of AD comes
from peripheral
hyperinsulinemia, there is reason to believe that restriction of dietary carbohydrates should be frontline therapy for AD.
I think obesity is a marker of disease, but ultimately it serves to protect the body
from the effects of
hyperinsulinemia.
And this
hyperinsulinemia is implicated in poor health in practically every part of the body (see diagram below
from doctoral student of mine Catherine Crofts).
Listed below is the progression
from health to disease, with
hyperinsulinemia building progressively throughout.
Published peer - reviewed commentary
from 1999 reveals that concern was percolating about the real issue, exacerbating
hyperinsulinemia in a patient with too much insulin already.