Low-Carb Diet Can Cure Type-2 Diabetes

I'm not sure about the word "cure" though. Even though insulin sensitivity may be heightened, I'm not sure it gets backs to a level that would indicate cured. If a person were to do this for a year and the do a glucose test and be back to normal within 2 to 3 hours, I would agree that they had been cured. Is there any info about that? --This seems to be more about controlling glucose and improving to be sure.
I think that the word "cured" is being used as many of the type 2 diabetes patients did not need any medication any longer. Not needing medication means that you are cured, is the line of thinking. That is what the colourful bar chart in the quoted study shows.
 
Correct. However the brain functions better on carbs.
There are many people who disagree with you on this one. They claim that they feel much more alert and awake when they live on a low-carb-high-fat diet (e.g. keto diet). Carbs make them feel drowsy, sleepy and less alert.
 
I think that the word "cured" is being used as many of the type 2 diabetes patients did not need any medication any longer. Not needing medication means that you are cured, is the line of thinking. That is what the colourful bar chart in the quoted study shows.
Cured to me would be having someone drink 100 g of glucose and not spike to 250. Then they would be back to normal in 2 to 3 hours. ----Controlling A1c and improving to me is not the same thing as being cured. ---I agree that all that is listed in Baron's opening posting is very good. It's just the word "cured" or "cure" that I question when discussing this subject.
 
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There are many people who disagree with you on this one. They claim that they feel much more alert and awake when they live on a low-carb-high-fat diet (e.g. keto diet). Carbs make them feel drowsy, sleepy and less alert.
Ketones definitely can fuel the brain but we'll have to agree to disagree on how well. I do agree that there are no essential carbohydrates.
 
Losing weight (or more accurately losing fat) is all to do with energy balance. Intake or non intake of carbs has nothing to do with it.
If you mean your caloric intake has to be lower than you caloric burn, then I agree.
 
I'm not sure about the word "cure" though. Even though insulin sensitivity may be heightened, I'm not sure it gets backs to a level that would indicate cured. If a person were to do this for a year and the do a glucose test and be back to normal within 2 to 3 hours, I would agree that they had been cured. Is there any info about that? --This seems to be more about controlling glucose and improving to be sure.
HBa1c test
 
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