Home February 2021 › Forums › Forums › Supplementation › insuline and fat in meals › Reply To: insuline and fat in meals
-
This sounds ludacris to me.
Do you have science to back up the fact Long acting insulin puts your pancreas to sleep lol ????
I do agree fats should be kept lower but insulin main job is to shuttle carbs. Fats sill be stored as fat no matter what by the body as we are always producing insulin when eating Normal combined meal. Just less than what we inject.
_________________________________________
Instagram name – Hillydoc. Www.physique-enhancement.co.uk | http://www.trainedbyjpclothing.com – The most anabolic clothing ever! |
http://www.trainedbyjp-nutrition.com – highest quality supplements on the market.[/quote]
when im talking about long acting slin puting your pancreas to sleep im not talking about 10 or 20 iu of lantus a day. it obviously has to be enough to trigger the negative feedback loop, but thats what a lot of people do (at least thats what they tell me, they are doing). 50-70 iu of long acting insulin are no rarity and if you are stacking short acting insulin in top, there is a good chance that your pancreas won’t secrete insulin anymore, which will be very unhealthy over time . i should have been more precise with my answer, sorry! i thought about high doses straight away._________________________________________
e-mail: avatarderboss@hotmail.de
[/quote]
Even at the higher doses in yet to see how it would make the pancreas lazy.
I do get your train of thought. If injecting enough then maybe the pancreas will stop working n maybe not start again. A bit like the HPTA.
However we’re is there any evidence or suggestion of this. Not saying it can’t happen but id be very hard pushed to believe there is any evidence to show this may happen.
I would love to see it if so_________________________________________
Instagram name – Hillydoc. Www.physique-enhancement.co.uk | http://www.trainedbyjpclothing.com – The most anabolic clothing ever! |
http://www.trainedbyjp-nutrition.com – highest quality supplements on the market.
[/quote]
Agree with you. I’ve done tones of research on it since this thread was opened and have yet to find anything supporting that claim. I have also asked a few specialists and my doctor and all of them say that it doesn’t put the pancreas to sleep since there is no negative feedback loop. [/quote]
there is a negativ feedback loop whith every hormone in the body!!!
thats the first thing that pops up when i google :
“insulin negative feedback loop”Insulin and glucagon work in a so called negative feedback loop. During this process, one event triggers another, which triggers another, and so on, to keep your blood sugar levels balanced. Once blood sugar levels reach homeostasis, the pancreas stops releasing insulin.
your body will notice exogenous insulin and will stop producing endogenous insulin if enought exogenous insulin is present to deal with the raise in blood sugar. if the amount of sugar is higher than the amount of exogenous insulin can cover, your body will produce endogenous insulin to brin bloodsugar levels further down.
e-mail: avatarderboss@hotmail.de