Daily Mail

Are you a VICTIM of hidden DIABETES?

(Believe it or not, I was too!)

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TAs it’s revealed half a million Brits could have it without knowing ...

he small, scaly area on my chest didn’t overly worry me but as it was growing, albeit slowly, I thought I should have it checked out. my GP suggested it was a solar keratosis — sun damage — and referred me to a dermatolog­ist. she also arranged for a blood test ‘just to check things are OK’.

I’m incredibly grateful that she did because a few days later I was told to come back for a further test, which confirmed I had type 2 diabetes.

I was shocked because I really had no idea I was at risk. Yes, I was peeing a lot at night (a classic warning sign that your body is trying to get rid of excess sugar) but I had put that down to getting older. and, yes, my father had developed type 2 diabetes in his 50s — but he had been overweight for much of his adult life, while I saw myself as being slim. That was classic self-delusion.

When I got the bad news I did an honest measuremen­t of my stomach. although my trouser size was 34 in, my waist was more like 37 in — more than 35 in in men is a risk factor for type 2.

I am extremely thankful the problem was picked up so early, before raised blood sugars could do extensive damage to my blood vessels and nerves. But the diagnosis frightened me into immediate action.

as readers will know, I put myself on the 5:2 Fast Diet (cutting my calories two days a week), lost 19 lb and three inches off my waist in eight weeks, and brought my blood sugars back under control.

The reason I’m telling you this now is because there were two striking pieces of news about type 2 diabetes this week, with implicatio­ns for millions of us.

One Is extremely exciting and positive. But first, the bad news: there may be more than half a million people in the UK in a similar boat as me, living unknowingl­y with type 2 diabetes and at risk of irreversib­le complicati­ons. This disturbing new figure comes from a study carried out by researcher­s from the University of exeter based on volunteers from the UK Biobank project (a long-term health project that started in 2006 and now has 500,000 participan­ts).

The researcher­s tested the blood of just over 2,000 volunteers and found that 200 unknowingl­y had type 2. most had had it for at least two years but in some cases it was more than five.

Based on these findings, the researcher­s estimate there must be at least 500,000 people similarly affected.

Why haven’t they been diagnosed? Well, common symptoms — like feeling tired and thirsty all the time, peeing more than usual, sual, particular­ly at night — are easy to miss, especially during the early stages.

That was the bad news. The really good ood news came courtesy of a friend d of mine, Professor Roy Taylor of newcastle University. On monday he h told t ld me that th t he h would ld shortly be publishing new research showing that by going on an 800calorie, rapid weight-loss diet (like the one featured in our recent shape Up Britain campaign), not only can you restore your blood sugar levels to normal but you also actually repair and restore your pancreas.

The pancreas, which is around 5 in long and lies next to your stomach, produces the hormone insulin, which controls blood sugar l levels. l

Once the pancreas clogs up with fat, it stops working properly and you develop type 2.

Professor Taylor’s new finding is remarkable because it is widely believed that, once you become a type 2 diabetic, the damage is permanent, and you have to go on drugs for the rest of your life. But he has now shown that once you lose weight your pancreas can spring back to life.

Previous groundbrea­king work carried id out tb by Professor f Taylor’s l ’ team at newcastle found that type 2 diabetes is mainly caused by too much fat around the tummy. a couple of years ago he and a group from Glasgow University also showed that an 800-calories-a-day, rapid weight-loss diet could restore people’s blood sugar levels to normal, despite having come off medication. medication. even ev so, there was sceptic scepticism ism abo about whether the damage had truly trul been undone.

so you can imagine how delighted I was when he told me scans showed that on once you lose your belly fat, the pan pancreas, having shrunk, will often slowly ‘grow back’ to its proper size. When that happens, the cells responsibl­e for producing insulin start working again.

The nhs website still describes type 2 diabetes diabetes as a ‘progressiv­e condition’, condition’, meanin meaning that all you can realistica­lly expect is to slow down the damage by taking ever increasing medica medication.

BUTT UT THIS new research point points to a better way. as Professor Taylor told me: ‘ Our latest research is really good news for people with type 2 diabetes because it shows that by losing weight i it is possible for most people to undo the damage.’

Knowing you need to take action is key. T To find out your risk try the quiz at riskscore.diabetes.org.uk. r If you’re in i a high-risk category or have symptoms, you can request a test from your GP. You can also buy a blood glucose home test kit online or from a chemist.

For advice on safe rapid weight loss, visit thefast800.com.

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