Insulin Part 4
Can Insulin
Sensitivity Be Restored?
Insulin sensitivity can be
restored to its original state, well, perhaps
not to its original state, but you can restore
it to the state of about a 10-year-old.
One of my first experiences
with this, I had a patient who literally had
sugars over 300. He was taking over 200 units of
insulin, and he was a bad cardiovascular
patient, so I put him on a low-carbohydrate
diet.
He was an exceptional case,
after one month to six weeks he was totally off
of insulin. He had been on over 200 units of
insulin for 25 years. He was so insulin
resistant, but one thing good about it is that
when you lower that insulin, that insulin is
having such little effect on him that you can
massively lower the insulin and its not going to
have much of an effect on his blood sugar. Two
hundred units of insulin is not going to lower
your sugar any more that 300 mg/deciliter.
You know that the insulin is
not doing much, so we could rapidly take him off
the insulin and he was actually cured of his
diabetes in a matter of weeks. He became
sensitive enough and was still producing a lot
of insulin on his own. Then we were able to
measure his own insulin. It was still elevated,
and it took a long time, maybe six months or
longer, to bring that insulin down.
It will probably never get to
the point of the sensitivity of a 10-year-old,
but yes, your number of insulin receptors
increases and the activity of the receptors, the
chemical reactions that occur beyond the
receptor, occur more efficiently.
How to
Increase Insulin Sensitivity
You can increase sensitivity
by diet, which is one of the major reasons to
take omega-3 oils. We think of circulation as
that which flows through arteries and veins, and
that is not a minor part of our circulation, but
it might not even be the major part. The major
part of circulation is what goes in and out of
the cell.
The cell membrane is a fluid
mosaic. The major part of our circulation is
determined by what goes in and out. It doesn't
make any difference what gets to that cell if it
can't get into the cell. We know that one of the
major ways that you can affect cellular
circulation is by modulating the kinds of fatty
acids that you eat. So you can increase receptor
sensitivity by increasing the fluidity of the
cell membrane, which means increasing the
omega-3 content, because most people are very
deficient.
They say that you are what you
eat and that mostly pertains to fat because the
fatty acids that you eat are the ones that will
generally get incorporated into the cell
membrane. The cell membranes are going to be a
reflection of your dietary fat and that will
determine the fluidity of your cell membrane.
You can actually make them over fluid.
If you eat too much and you
incorporate too many omega-3 oils then they will
become highly oxidizable (so you have to eat
Vitamin E and monounsaturates as well).
There was an interesting study
pertaining to this where they had a breed of rat
that was genetically susceptible to cancer.
Researchers fed them a high-omega-3 diet, plus
iron, without any extra Vitamin E and they were
able to almost shrink down the tumors to nothing
because tumors are rapidly dividing. This is
like a form of chemotherapy, and the membranes
that were being formed in these tumor cells were
very high in omega-3 oils. The iron acted as a
catalyst for that oxidation, and the cells were
exploding from getting oxidized so rapidly. So
omega-3 oils can be a double-edged sword. In
fact, most food is a double-edged sword.
Like oxygen and glucose, food
keeps us alive and kills us. Eating is the
biggest stress we put on our body and that is
why in caloric restriction experiments you can
extend life as long as you maintain nutrition.
This is the only proven way of actually reducing
the rate of aging, not just the mortality rate
but the actual rate of aging.
It has actually been shown by
quite a number of papers that resistance
training for insulin resistance is better than
aerobic training. There are a variety of other
reasons too. Resistance training is referring to
muscular exercises. If you just do a bicep curl,
you immediately increase the insulin sensitivity
of your bicep. Just by exercising you are
increasing the blood flow to that muscle, and
one of the factors that determines insulin
sensitivity is how blood can get there. It has
been shown conclusively that resistance training
will increase insulin sensitivity.
Protein’s
Role
Now, back to the
macronutrients. As I said before, you don't want
very much in the way of non-fiber carbs, but
fiber carbs are great. You are going to get some
non-fiber carbs though. Even if you just eat
broccoli you are going to get some non-fiber
carbs. That is OK since for the most part you
are getting something that is really pretty good
for you.
Protein is an essential
nutrient. You want to use it as a building block
because your body requires protein to repair
damage and replenish enzymes. All of the encoded
instructions from your DNA are to encode for
proteins. That is all the DNA encodes for. You
need protein, but you want to use it as a
building block. I don't believe in going over
and above the protein that you need to use for
maintenance, repair and building blocks.
I don't think you should be
using protein as a primary fuel source, though
your body can use protein very well as a fuel
source. It is good to lose weight while using it
as a fuel source because it is an inefficient
fuel source. Protein is very thermogenic,
meaning it produces a lot of heat, which means
that less of it is going into stored energy and
more is being dissipated--just like throwing a
log into a fireplace. Your primary fuel should
be coming from fat.
You can calculate the amount
of protein a person requires or at least
estimate it by their activity level. The book
“Protein Power” actually went very well in
to this. You have to calculate how much protein
is required by activity level and lean body
mass. There is still some gray area as to how
many grams per kilogram of lean body mass,
depending on the activity that person requires.
It can range anywhere from one
to two grams of protein per kilogram of lean
body mass, maybe even a little bit higher if
someone is really active. You don't want to go
under that amount for very long. It is better to
go over than to go under that amount for very
long.
If you can cure a diabetic of
diabetes, you can do the same thing to a
so-called non-diabetic person and still improve
that person. I want to improve my insulin
sensitivity just as much as I do my diabetics
because insulin sensitivity is going to
determine, for the most part, how long you are
going to live and how healthy you are going to
be. It determines the rate of aging more so than
anything else we know right now.
Supplements
What about
supplements such as Chromium?
All of my diabetics go on
1,000 mcg of chromium, some a little bit more if
they are really big people. The amount is
usually 500 mcg for a non-diabetic, though it
depends on their insulin levels.
I use a lot of supplements.
What you really want to do is to try to convert
the person back into being an efficient burner
of fat. Earlier we talked about when you are
very insulin resistant and you are waking up in
the morning with an insulin level that is
elevated, you cannot burn fat but instead are
burning sugar.
One of the reasons that sugar
goes up so high is because that is what your
cell is needing to burn, but if it is so insulin
resistant it requires a blood sugar of 300 so
that just by mass action some can get into the
cell and be used as fuel. If you eliminate that
need to burn sugar, you don't need such high
levels of sugar even if you are insulin
resistant.
You want to increase the
ability of the cells in the body to burn fat and
make that glucose burner into a fat burner. You
want to make a gasoline-burning car into a
diesel-burning car. Did anyone ever look at the
molecular structure of diesel fuel in your spare
time? It looks almost identical to a fatty acid.
There is a company right now that can tell you
how to alter vegetable oil to use in your
Mercedes. It's just a matter of thinning it out
a little bit. It is a very efficient fuel.
Triglycerides
You can look at other
variables that will give you some idea too, such
as triglycerides. If people are very sensitive
to high levels of insulin, they come in with
insulin levels of 14 and they have triglycerides
of 1000. You would treat them just as you would
if they had an insulin level of 50. It gives you
some idea of the effect of the hyperinsulinemia
on the body.
You can use triglycerides as a
gauge, which I often do. The objective is to try
to get the insulin level just as low as you
possibly can. There is no limit. They classify
diabetes now as a fasting blood sugar of 126 or
higher. A few months ago it might have been 140.
It is just an arbitrary number. Does that mean
that someone with a blood sugar of 125 is
non-diabetic and fine? If you have a blood sugar
of 125 you are worse than if you had a blood
sugar of 124--same with insulin. If you have a
fasting insulin of 10, you are worse off than if
you had an insulin of 9. You want to get it just
as low as you can.
Does This
Apply to Athletes?
With athletes, think about the
effect of carbohydrate loading before an event.
What happens if you eat a bowl of pasta before
you have to run a marathon? What does that bowl
of pasta do? It raises your insulin. What is the
instruction of insulin to your body?
To store energy and not burn
it. I see a fair amount of athletes and this is
what I tell them, you want everybody, athletes
especially, to be able to burn fat efficiently.
So when they train, they are on a very
low-carbohydrate diet. The night before their
event, they can stock up on sugar and load their
glycogen if they would like.
They are not going to become
insulin resistant in one day. Just enough to
make sure, it has been shown that if you eat a
big carbohydrate meal that you will increase
your glycogen stores, that is true and that is
what you want. But you don't want to train that
way because if you do you won't be able to burn
fat, you can only burn sugar, and if you are an
athlete you want to be able to burn both.
Few people have problems
burning sugar if they are athletes, but they
have lots of problems burning fat, so they hit
the wall. And for certain events, like
sprinting, it is less important, truthfully for
their health it is very important to be able to
burn fat, but a sprinter will go right into
burning sugar. If you are a 50-yard dash person,
whether you can burn fat or not is not going to
make a huge difference in your final
performance.
Beyond your athletic years, if
you don't want to become a diabetic, and don't
want to die of heart disease and don't want to
age quickly, it is certainly not going to do you
any harm to be able to burn fat efficiently in
addition to sugar.
Vanadyl
Sulfate
Vanadyl Sulfate is an insulin
mimic, so that it can basically do what insulin
does by a different mechanism. If it went
through the same insulin receptors, then it
wouldn't offer any benefit, but it doesn't, it
actually has been shown to go through a
different mechanism to lower blood sugar, so it
spares insulin and then it can help improve
insulin sensitivity. To really lower a
person’s insulin, I give 25 mg 3 times a day
temporarily.
Glutamine
Powder
I also put people on glutamine
powder. Glutamine can act as a brain fuel, so it
helps eliminate carbohydrate cravings while they
are in that transition period. I like to give it
to them at night, and I tell them to use it
whenever they feel they are craving
carbohydrates. They can put several grams into a
little water and drink it and it helps eliminate
carbohydrate cravings between meals.
A high-protein diet will
increase an acid load in the body, but not
necessarily a high-fat diet. Vegetables and
greens are alkalinizing, so if you are eating a
lot of vegetables along with your protein it
equalizes the acidifying effect of the protein.
I don't recommend a high-protein diet; I
recommend an adequate protein diet.
Fat in the
Diet
I think you should be using
fat as your primary energy source, and fat is
kind of neutral when it comes to acidifying or
alkalinizing. In general, over 50 percent of the
calories should come from fat, but not from
saturated fat. When we get to fat, the
carbohydrates are clear-cut. No scientist out
there is really going to dispute what I've said
about carbohydrates.
There is the science behind
it. You can't dispute it. There is a little bit
of a dispute as to how much protein a person
requires. When you get to fat, there is a big
gray area as to which fat a person requires. We
just have one name for fat, we call it fat or
oil. Eskimos have dozens of names for snow and
east Indians have dozens of names for curry. We
should have dozens of names for fat because they
do many different things. And how much of which
fat to take is still open to a lot of
investigation and controversy.
My take on fat is that if I am
treating a patient who is generally
hyperinsulinemic or overweight, I want them on a
low-saturated-fat diet, because most of the fat
they are storing is saturated fat. When their
insulin goes down and they are able to start
releasing triglycerides to burn as fat, what
they are going to be releasing mostly is
saturated fat. So you don't want them to take
anymore orally. There is a ration of fatty acids
that is desirable if you took them from the
moment you were born, but we don't. We are
dealing with an imbalance here that we are
trying to correct as rapidly as we can.
Most of us here have enough
saturated fat to last the rest of our life.
Truthfully. Your cell membranes require a
balance of saturated and poly-unsaturated fat,
and it is that balance that determines the
fluidity. As I mentioned, your cells can become
over-fluid if they don't have any saturated fat.
Saturated fat is a hard fat.
We can get the fats from foods to come mostly
from nuts. Nuts are a great food because it is
mostly mono-unsaturated. Your primary energy
source ideally would come mostly from
mono-unsaturated fat. It's a good compromise. It
is not an essential fat, but it is a more fluid
fat. Your body can utilize it very well as an
energy source.
Grain-Fed
Animals are not Healthy
Animal proteins are good for
you, but not the ones that are fed grains.
Grain-fed animals are going to
make saturated fat out of the grains. Saturated
fat in nature occurs to a very tiny degree. In
the wild there is very little saturated fat out
there. If you talk about the Paleolithic diet,
we didn't eat a saturated fat diet. Saturated
fat diets are new to mankind. We manufactured a
saturated fat diet by feeding animals grains.
You can consider saturated fat to be
second-generation carbohydrates. We eat the
saturated fats that other animals produce from
carbohydrates.
Zone was a good diet compared
to the American diet. Is it an optimal diet? No.
Is it optimal for what is known today about
nutrition? It is not. Initially the author spoke
about how it made no difference if you got your
carbohydrate from candy or vegetables.
What he is doing now is
changing his recipes so that the 40 percent
carbohydrates are coming primarily from
vegetables, and the carbohydrates are going way
down because he knows that if they don't, it's
not as good a diet.
I recommend 20 percent of
calories from carbs, depending on the size of
the person, 25 percent to 30 percent of calories
from protein, and 60 percent to 65 percent from
fat. You can get beef that is not grain-fed.
Insulin is
Not the Only Cause of Disease
There are other considerations
in disease, such as iron. We know that high iron
levels are bad for you. If a person's ferritin
is high, red meat is out for a while until the
level goes down.
There is a great deal of
difference between a non-grain-fed cow and a
grain-fed cow.
Non-grain fed will have only
10 percent or less saturated fat. Grain-fed can
have over 50 percent.
Also, a non-grain-fed cow will
actually be high in omega-3 oils. Plants have a
pretty high percentage of omega-3, and if you
accumulate it by eating it all day, every day
for most of your life, your fat gets a pretty
high proportion of omega-3. I would try for 50
percent oleic fat, and the other fats would
depend on the individual, but about 25 percent
of the other two.
In a heavy diabetic I would
probably go down on the saturated fat and go 60
percent oleic, and 1 to 1 on the omega-6 to 3
ratio--that would be therapeutic. The
maintenance ratio would be about 2.5 to 1 for
the omega-6 to 3 ratio. I would try to do most
of this through diet. There are some
practicalities involved. I would ask the person
if they like fish and if they practically puke
in front of me they are going on a tablespoon of
cod liver oil, the best brand is made by
Carlson, which doesn't taste fishy at all.
Most people end up going on a
supplement of omega-3 oils because they are not
going to eat enough fish to get an adequate
amount. It is a little hard to get that much
entirely from diet.
Sardines are a very good
therapeutic food. They are baby fish so they
haven't had time to accumulate a bunch of metal.
They are smoked so they are not cooked and the
oil is not spoiled in them. You have to eat the
whole thing, not the boneless and skinless. You
need to eat all the organs as they are high in
vitamins and magnesium.
DNA
Glycates
If people are worried about
chromosomal damage from chromium, what they
should really be worried about instead is high
blood sugar. DNA repair enzymes glycate as well.
Insulin is by far your biggest poison. They
disproved that study that was against chromium
many times. They showed that it only happens if
you put cells in a petrie dish with chromium but
in vivo studies prove otherwise. The lowering of
insulin is going to be better than any possible
detriment of any of the therapies you are using.
Insulin is associated with cancer, everything.
Insulin should be tested on
everybody repeatedly. It isn’t strictly
because there haven't been drugs until recently
that could effect insulin, so there is no way to
make money off of it. Fasting insulin is one way
to look at it, not necessarily the best way, but
it is a way that everybody could get it done.
Any family doctor can measure a fasting insulin.
There are other ways to
measure insulin sensitivity that are more
complex. We use intravenous insulin and watch
how rapidly the blood sugar crashes in a fasting
state in 15 minutes, and that assesses insulin
sensitivity. Then you give them dextrose to make
sure they don't crash any further. There are
other ways that are utilized to directly assess
insulin sensitivity, but you can get a pretty
good idea just by doing a fasting insulin.

