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What is behind the Epidemic of Insulin Resistance?

February 03, 20235 min read

What Is Causing the Epidemic of Insulin Resistance and Diabetes?

The good bacteria in our body needs to be so plentiful, we are a bacterial hotel. In fact, microbes living in and on our body outnumbers our cells ten times! 10 trillion cells in our body means 100 trillion bacteria and microbes!

That means 1,000's of different species coexist within us. Most reside in our GI tract. Weighing about 3-4 pounds, these bacteria have coexisted with us for millennia. They are beneficial, helping us thrive by assisting in;

  • Digesting and absorbing foods

  • Producing vitamins and short-chain fatty acids

  • Killing pathogens

  • Maintaining a healthy weight

  • Support detoxification

  • Are inflammatory fighters

  • Provide immunity

  • Control hormone functions

  • Absorb our nutrients


M
ost of these organisms are helpful and essential, but some are harmful and cause significant damage to the delicate balance of the ecosystem in our gut.

Insulin resistance is a concern because it doubles the risk for heart attack and stroke—and triples the odds that a heart attack or "brain attack" will be deadly, according to the International Diabetes Federation.

What is Dysbiosis and How Does it Connect to Insulin Resistance?

Dysbiosis occurs when harmful organisms, bacteria, fungi, yeast, mold, viruses, and parasites, take over the gut environment. Like a hostile take over, these opportunists change our physiology to favor their survival, and are a detriment to ours.

What constitutes a healthy microbiome? Good bacteria is part of the microbiome. As the Chief Operating Officer in our gut; keeping vital day-to-day functions running efficiently and keeps us in optimum health.

Glyphosate has been shown to have a substantial play in insulin resistance

glysophate is whats for dinner

Connecting insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, toxins contribute to both diabetes and insulin resistance. It has recently been shown that chemicals we encounter every day contribute such as:

  • Dioxins

  • Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)

  • Pesticides

  • Phthalates

  • BPA

    Toxins destroy the microbiome balance. Once disrupted, the "foods" destroys more microbiome. An unhealthy gut results in Insulin Resistance and diabetes, etc...

    insulin resistance to gmos

  • Sugary Foods. Soda, sweets, desserts, and other foods that are made primarily of sugar are considered low-quality carbohydrates

  • White Rice, Bread, and Flour

  • Full-Fat Dairy products

  • Conventional Meat

  • Conventional grown junk food

  • Fried Foods

  • Corn, canola, vegetable, sunflower, safflower, grapeseed, peanut, and hydrogenated oils

  • Alcohol

Poor diet with damage caused by antibiotics, stress, pesticides, etc., our intestinal ecosystem sustains considerable intestinal damage. Dr. Gerard Mullin, M.D. asserts that "Dysbiosis is not so much about the microbe as it's about the impact on us the host; it's about the relationship between the host and the microbe."

Dysbiosis is easy to identify because it starts with excessive gas, diarrhea, constipation, and left unchecked, it shows up as skin disorders, joint pain, chronic fatigue, autoimmune diseases, diabetes, cancer, heart disease and more.

Triggers of Dysbiosis

The main primary contributors to Dysbiosis are:

  • Poor bacterial colonization

  • Medications

  • Stress

  • Diet

  • GMO's

  • conventional grown produce, meat, eggs, dairy

  • Pesticides, herbicides, fungicides

  • Antibiotics

  • Environmental toxins

  • Infections

  • C-sections

  • Not breast fed

  • Chlorinated water

  • Sleep deprivation

  • Alcohol

  • Aspartame


Trigger of Dysbiosis: Poor Colonization

The first step to Dysbiosis is in birth. A vaginal birth naturally initiates bacterial colonization. Infants born this way have a microbiota that reflects their mother's fecal and vaginal flora. In contrast, those delivered via cesarean have a flora reflective of the hospital environment and the health care workers. Children born through C-sections are at risk of delayed access to breast milk, which can be an additional detriment to developing a healthy flora.

Research in the September 2008 issue of the Journal of Nutrition showed gut microbiota after C-section, characterized by a lack of Bifidobacterial species, essential to the development of the immune system. In contrast, vaginally delivered babies showed a predominance of these species.

It's essential for women who want to conceive to be aware of the health of their intestinal flora. Infants born to women with Dysbiosis also have Dysbiosis. Taking care of GI infections and imbalances and supplementing with specific probiotics will help impart healthy flora to the baby.

Trigger of Dysbiosis: Medications

Several categories of medications can directly impact the health of the GI flora. The most significant ones include:

Antibiotics: This class of medications is the most common and significant cause of major alterations in normal GI tract flora. Depending upon the scope of antimicrobial activity, antibiotics can wipe out multiple categories of beneficial organisms, leading to Dysbiosis. Antibiotics don't differentiate between the good guys and the bad guys. This produces an overgrowth of existing flora, such as yeast (Candida) and Clostridium difficile, resulting in potentially severe and life-threatening (in the case of C. difficile) systemic effects.

PPIs: Proton pump inhibitors that block stomach acid (HCl) production provide a gateway for Dysbiosis to develop, as HCl is critical to digestion and acts as a defense against pathogens. PPIs are known to alter the gut flora directly as well.

NSAIDs: Chronic use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen, naproxen sodium, aspirin, and indomethacin can inhibit the growth of good bacteria and alter the gut flora, resulting in leaky gut, which further perpetuates Dysbiosis.

Hormone-Based Medications: According to Gut and Psychology Syndrome author Dr. Natasha Campbell- McBride, M.D., "birth control pills alter the immune system. Steroidal hormones change the gut flora and harm beneficial bacteria. Widespread use of hormone-based medication significantly contributes to Dysbiosis.

Trigger of Dysbiosis: Stress

Stress triggers Dysbiosis and decreases blood flow, oxygenation, motility, enzyme output, and nutrient absorption. Dr. Gerard Mullin, M.D., Impacting intestinal flora, explains that stress directly suppresses the beneficial bacteria Lactobacilli and Bifidobacterium, which are critical to GI health.

Further, chronic stress diminishes immunity, essential hormones and promotes inflammation, which can all result in a leaky gut. 

Adrenaline and noradrenaline stimulate the growth of E.coli, Yersinia, and Pseudomonas, which promote inflammation. All of this culminates in a vicious, self-perpetuating cycle when you're chronically stressed, sick, and confused.

Insulin resistance was found in 55.9% of people with low vitamin D and B12 levels and low magnesium is a risk factor for diabetes and insulin sensitivity.

Exercise, getting quality sleep, eating a nutritious diet high in unsaturated fats like olive oil, avocado oil, ghee, MCT, butter, and coconut oil, are important. Intermittent fasting is too. Eating fermented food like raw sauerkraut, kefir, yogurt and kimchee with fiber rich foods repopulates the microbiome and corrects insulin sensitivity in people with and without diabetes.

If you want help, we have a multiphase program to reverse insulin sensitivity and diabetes.

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Kari E. Gray

Kari Gray is a strategic problem-solver and a thought leader. Her Living Prevention, Not Prescription prevention education, is congruent with her Health Reinvented vision and mission. A professional committed to changing the corporate health system narrative and exploiting humanity, Kari is a visionary awarded and recognized for excellence. She is leading a team building transformative wellness solutions at alternacare.org.

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AlternaCare & Living Prevention trademarks are federally registered protected and enforceable. Any unauthorized use is expressly prohibited.

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Disclaimer; This website content is not a substitute for professional medical care and diagnosis. The information contained is not physical or mental health medical care or advice. We are not medical professionals, and this website should not be misconstrued to mean otherwise. There may be risks for people making lifestyle modifications, If you participate in lifestyle changes, do so with the help of a health professional. If you choose to change your lifestyle you do so of your own free will and accord, knowingly and voluntarily assuming all risks associated with lifestyle change. This site, this company, and Kari Gray have no liability for risks associated with lifestyle changes.


See Here for Website Terms of Use

+Donations are non-refundable.

*in development

AlternaCare Foundation

304 Olson Ave Suite 114-174

Papillion, NE 68046

707.742.3554

AlternaCare & Living Prevention trademarks are federally registered protected and enforceable. Any unauthorized use is expressly prohibited.

Disclaimer; This website content is not a substitute for professional medical care and diagnosis. The information contained is not physical or mental health medical care or advice. We are not medical professionals, and this website should not be misconstrued to mean otherwise. There may be risks for people making lifestyle modifications, If you participate in lifestyle changes, do so with the help of a health professional. If you choose to change your lifestyle you do so of your own free will and accord, knowingly and voluntarily assuming all risks associated with lifestyle change. This site, this company, and Kari Gray have no liability for risks associated with lifestyle changes.


See Here for Website Terms of Use