Retour

Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast The Diabetes Podcast®

Plongez dans la liste complète des épisodes de The Diabetes Podcast®. Chaque épisode est catalogué accompagné de descriptions détaillées, ce qui facilite la recherche et l'exploration de sujets spécifiques. Suivez tous les épisodes de votre podcast préféré et ne manquez aucun contenu pertinent.

Rows per page:

1–50 of 66

TitreDateDurée
Episode 22 - Diabetes Myths, Misconceptions, and Marketing Scams01 Sep 202501:01:10

Diabetes Myths, Misconceptions, and Marketing Scams

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog


In this episode, we dig into diabetes myths, misconceptions, and marketing scams. We talk about what really works, what doesn’t, and how to protect yourself. If you live with type 2 diabetes, you’ve likely heard it all—from “it only gets worse” to “this miracle pill fixes everything.” We bring clarity, hope, and simple steps you can do today. No extremes. No gimmicks. Just truth you can use.

What You’ll Learn

  • The biggest myths that keep people stuck
  • Why remission can be possible for many with type 2 diabetes
  • How small habits beat extreme plans
  • Why medication is not failure
  • How supplement scams target people with diabetes
  • Practical steps that work in real life
  • A quick shout-out and resources for type 1 diabetes

Episode Highlights

“I can’t change this disease” — False

  • Many people can improve a lot. Some can reach remission, especially in the first 5–6 years after diagnosis.
  • Big studies show weight loss, especially around the belly, lowers insulin resistance and improves blood sugar.

You don’t need extreme diets

  • No starving. No “detox.” No all-or-nothing rules.
  • Even 5–10% weight loss can help blood sugar and energy.
  • Slow, steady, simple wins.

Don’t change everything overnight

  • All-or-nothing plans make people quit.
  • Start small:
    • Walk 2–10 minutes after meals
    • Swap one sugary drink for water or zero-sugar
    • Cook one extra meal at home
    • Add beans, peas, or lentils once this week
  • Progress, not perfection.

Medication is not failure

  • Meds are tools. They can protect your beta cells while you build habits.
  • As your habits improve, your doses may need to change.
  • Work with your healthcare team. Do not stop meds cold turkey.

Supplements are not safer or better

  • The supplement industry is huge and poorly regulated.
  • Some “diabetes” supplements are spiked with hidden drugs.
  • What we might recommend:
    • Vitamin D (if low or little sun)
    • Vitamin B12 (over 50 or strict vegan)
    • Maybe algae-based omega-3
    • Maybe curcumin
  • None of these replace medical care or lifestyle changes.

“It’s too late for me” — It’s not

  • Even after many years, you can still improve A1C, reduce meds, and feel better.
  • Remission rates are higher early, but better is always possible.

How scams hook you

  • Red flags:
    • “Doctors don’t want you to know”
    • “Reversal in days”
    • Exotic ingredients from faraway places
    • Stock photos, fake reviews, AI celebrity clips
    • Pricey subscriptions and “special labs”
  • If it sounds magical, it’s marketing. Don’t swap a prescription for a subscription.

What Actually Works (Simple and Science-Backed)

  • Move:
    • Walk after meals (2–10 minutes)
    • Add steps during the day
  • Eat:
    • Swap refined carbs for whole grains and legumes
    • Fill half your plate with non-starchy veggies
    • Choose high-fiber foods to support fullness and insulin sensitivity
    • Cut sugary drinks
    • Lower sodium with fresh or no-salt-added foods
  • Restore:
    • Aim for better sleep
    • Reduce stress with short walks, breathing, journaling, prayer, or nature
  • Team:
    • Tell your provider your goals
    • Adjust medications safely as habits improve
    • If your provider isn’t supportive, consider a new one

Type 1 Corner

  • Tech helps: CGMs + insulin pumps (automated insulin delivery) can make life easier.
  • Resource: Blue Circle Health (bluecirclehealth.org) in select states.

Time Matters (But Not Like You Think)

  • Type 2 builds over years.
  • Improvement can happen in months, not days.
  • Keep going with small steps. They stack up.

Key Quotes

  • “You are not powerless.”
  • “Medication is scaffolding, not failure.”
  • “Start small. Keep going.”
  • “Don’t swap a prescription for a subscription.”

Timestamps

  • 00:00 — Why myths and scams are so common
  • 02:00 — Quick note on sodium and smoked salmon
  • 04:00 — Type 1 advances: CGMs and pumps
  • 06:00 — Blue Circle Health resource
  • 07:00 — Type 2 remission: what studies show
  • 10:00 — Small changes that work
  • 14:00 — All-or-nothing thinking hurts progress
  • 21:00 — Meds are tools, not failure
  • 33:00 — How to reduce meds safely (with your provider)
  • 34:00 — Supplement industry risks
  • 40:00 — The short, safe supplement list
  • 46:00 — Scam red flags
  • 53:00 — What actually works: movement, food, sleep, stress
  • 58:00 — Healing timeline: months, not days
  • 60:00 — Takeaways and hope

Resources Mentioned

  • Blue Circle Health: bluecirclehealth.org
  • Studies referenced (by category): DIRECT, Look AHEAD, bariatric surgery trials, Japanese cohort studies, systematic reviews

Action Steps for This Week

  • Walk 2–10 minutes after one meal each day.
  • Swap one sugary drink for water or zero-sugar.
  • Add beans, peas, or lentils to one meal.
  • Fill half your plate with veggies once a day.
  • Set a bedtime to help you get more sleep.
  • Tell your provider you’re working toward remission or reduction in meds.

Connect With Us

  • Subscribe to The Diabetes Podcast for clear science, real talk, and simple steps.
  • Share this episode with someone who needs hope and a plan.

Final Takeaway
You don’t need extremes. You need simple steps, done often.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 21 - The Diabetes/Salt Connection: How Sodium Impacts Blood Pressure & Health25 Aug 202500:50:15
The Diabetes/Salt Connection: Why Sodium Matters More Than You Think

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode of The Diabetes Podcast, Amber and Richie dive deep into the diabetes/salt connection. Salt, or sodium, is often hidden in our everyday foods like bread, soups, pizza, and sandwiches. For people living with type 2 diabetes, too much sodium is not just about taste—it can raise blood pressure, damage kidneys, and raise the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

The hosts share the latest research, show how the average American eats nearly double the sodium they need, and give easy, realistic steps to cut back without giving up the foods you love.

Why This Matters
  • High blood pressure is twice as common in people with diabetes.
  • 70% of sodium in our diet comes from processed and restaurant foods—not the salt shaker.
  • Even small cuts in sodium lower risk. Dropping just 500–1000 mg a day can protect your heart, brain, and kidneys.

This is not about perfection. It’s about progress. Every small step helps.

Key Takeaways from the Episode1. How Much Sodium Is Too Much?
  • American Heart Association recommends 1,500 mg per day for most adults with diabetes or high blood pressure.
  • The general upper limit is 2,300 mg per day.
  • The average American eats 3,400 mg daily, more than double the healthy amount.
2. Where Is All This Salt Hiding?

Most sodium comes from foods you might not expect:

  • Bread and rolls – don’t taste salty but add up fast.
  • Cold cuts and processed meats – a top source of both sodium and cancer risk.
  • Pizza – a “sodium bomb” of crust, cheese, and sauce.
  • Canned soups – often 1,200–1,500 mg in a single can.
  • Fast food – a burger, fries, or fried chicken can pack a day’s worth of sodium in one meal.
3. Why the Diabetes Salt Connection Is So Serious
  • Raises blood pressure – already common in diabetes.
  • Increases stroke risk – strokes can happen suddenly and change life forever.
  • Hurts the kidneys – people with diabetes already face high kidney disease risk.
  • Damages the heart – too much sodium weakens heart function and raises the chance of heart failure.
4. Global Picture
  • The worldwide average is 3.95 grams (3,950 mg) per day.
  • In 2010, high sodium intake was linked to 1.65 million deaths from cardiovascular causes.
  • Target levels in studies: 1,200–2,400 mg per day.
Practical Steps to Cut Back on SodiumStep 1: Try the DASH Diet
  • DASH = Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension.
  • Focuses on: fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts, seeds, lean protein, and low‑fat dairy.
  • Backed by decades of research and proven to lower blood pressure.
Step 2: Become a Label Detective
  • Look for 140 mg or less per serving (“low sodium”).
  • Watch serving sizes—two or three servings can double or triple your intake.
  • Choose no salt added beans, fresh poultry, and fish.
Step 3: Flavor Without Salt
  • Use herbs, garlic, onion powder, lemon, and paprika instead of salt.
  • Avoid seasoning blends with hidden sodium.
Step 4: Eat More Plants
  • Fruits and veggies are naturally low in sodium.
  • Beans and leafy greens add potassium, which balances sodium and helps relax blood vessels.
Step 5: Smarter Restaurant Strategies
  • Ask for sauces and dressings on the side.
  • Dip your fork in dressing instead of pouring it on.
  • Choose grilled over fried.
  • Limit bread baskets, marinades, and salty toppings.
Step 6: Track and Replace
  • Keep a one‑week sodium diary.
  • Notice top sources and swap them out.
  • Replace canned beans with dried beans cooked in bulk. (Richie shares how an Instant Pot can make a week’s worth of beans with almost no added sodium.)
Step 7: Partner with Your Doctor
  • If you’re on blood pressure medicine, track your numbers at home.
  • Share your results with your doctor.
  • As your diet improves, you might be able to reduce medication safely.
The Silent Killer: Why You Don’t Feel High Sodium

High blood sugar makes you feel tired. But high blood pressure from sodium often has no symptoms. That’s why it’s called the silent killer. You may only notice small signs like swollen fingers or rings that don’t fit. But damage is happening even when you don’t feel it.

Real-Life Impact
  • Stroke: Can leave lasting problems with speech, walking, or independence.
  • Heart attack: Surviving one may still leave the heart too weak to pump well.
  • Kidney failure: Could mean dialysis three times a week, limiting your freedom.
Bottom Line from Amber and Richie
  • Awareness is the first step. You can’t change what you don’t track.
  • Progress, not perfection. Cutting even 500 mg a day helps.
  • Add before you subtract. Adding beans, greens, and fresh foods naturally pushes out processed, salty foods.
  • Every choice matters. Every meal is a chance to protect your future.
Final Thoughts

The diabetes salt connection is powerful. Too much sodium makes diabetes complications worse, but the good news is you are not powerless. With simple swaps, label reading, and more whole foods, you can lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, and kidney damage.

Remember:

  • Goal: 1,500 mg per day.
  • Even small cuts count.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 11 of 12 - Mitochondrial Dysfunction23 Jun 202500:42:15
Mitochondrial Dysfunction: Why Your “Cell Power” Matters in Type 2 Diabetes

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Welcome back to the Diabetes Podcast show notes. In this episode, Richie and Amber break down mitochondrial dysfunction in simple terms. We explain what mitochondria do, what goes wrong in type 2 diabetes, which meds may help, and the daily steps that power your cells back up.

If you’ve been doing “all the right things” but still feel tired, foggy, or stuck, this one is for you.

Episode Summary
  • Mitochondria are the “power plants” inside your cells. They turn food into usable energy called ATP.
  • In type 2 diabetes, mitochondrial dysfunction makes it hard to turn fuel into energy at the right time.
  • This leads to high blood sugar, fatigue, brain fog, and slow recovery.
  • The good news: mitochondria are very responsive. Movement, food, sleep, and stress care can build new mitochondria and make them work better.
  • Some medicines can also help.

This is part of our 12-core-defects series on type 2 diabetes. Next week is the last one: inflammation.

What Are Mitochondria?
  • Think of mitochondria like tiny engines or refineries in each cell.
  • Your body brings carbs (glucose) and fats to the refinery.
  • Mitochondria “refine” that fuel into ATP, your body’s energy currency.
  • When demand goes up (like after a meal or during a workout), healthy mitochondria match the demand.

This fuel-switching skill is called metabolic flexibility.

What Goes Wrong in Type 2 Diabetes
  • In mitochondrial dysfunction, the “refinery” gets stuck or slows down.
  • Even after meals, cells keep burning fat instead of switching to glucose.
  • That causes “traffic” inside muscle cells and leads to insulin resistance.
  • Blood sugar stays high because glucose can’t get into the cells well.
  • Your cells end up underpowered, even when fuel is available.

Amber calls this “metabolic gridlock.”

Fun (not so fun) fact: A study found people with obesity and type 2 diabetes had about 30% fewer mitochondria in muscle cells. The ones left were slow and less efficient.

How This Feels Day to Day
  • Low energy and afternoon crashes
  • Brain fog and low mood
  • Hard time recovering after workouts
  • Weight gain or stalled weight loss
  • Feeling “hangry”
  • High blood sugar after carb-heavy meals

Important: This is not a willpower problem. It’s a power problem.

The Analogies That Make It Click
  • Refinery: You can’t use crude oil in a car. You need gas. Mitochondria turn food into usable “gas” (ATP).
  • Battery/Charger: Mitochondria help “charge” your energy. If the charger is weak, everything feels harder.
  • Gridlock: Fuel is everywhere, but it’s stuck in traffic. It can’t get where it needs to go on time.
Medications That May Help Mitochondrial Function

Talk to your clinician before starting or changing any medicine.

  • Metformin (a biguanide)
    • May make mitochondria more efficient over time by activating AMPK, a key energy signal.
    • Common side effect: GI upset (start low, go slow up to 2000 mg/day).
  • Pioglitazone/Actos (a TZD)
    • Activates PPAR-γ, improves insulin sensitivity in fat and muscle, helps lipid handling, and supports mitochondria in muscle.
    • Side effects: weight gain (often fluid and subcutaneous fat), fluid retention; CHF warning applies.
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists
    • May help indirectly by improving insulin function and lowering glucose and inflammation.

Meds can help the “refinery” run better, but lifestyle is what builds more refineries.

How to Power Up Your Mitochondria (Lifestyle Wins)

You can build new mitochondria and make existing ones work better. Small steps add up fast.

Movement (your most powerful lever)
  • Take a 10–15 minute walk after meals (especially dinner).
    • Helps move glucose into muscle even when insulin is not working well.
    • Signals your body to build more mitochondria.
  • Strength train 2–3 days per week.
    • Builds muscle. More muscle = more “sockets” to plug in glucose and burn it.
  • Sprinkle in short bouts of movement during the day.
    • Climb stairs, quick bodyweight sets, or short walks.
  • Optional: brief, safe higher-intensity intervals if your doctor says it’s okay.

Tip: Movement tells your body, “We need more energy—build more power plants.”

Nutrition (feed and protect your power plants)

Focus on a fiber-rich, whole-food, plant-forward plate. These foods lower inflammation and protect mitochondria from “rust” (oxidative stress).

  • Antioxidant- and polyphenol-rich foods:
    • Colorful veggies and fruits, beans, herbs, spices, tea, coffee (unsweetened or lightly sweetened).
  • Fiber-rich foods (also great for your gut bugs → more short-chain fatty acids → happier mitochondria):
    • Beans, lentils, peas; oats and other whole grains; veggies; nuts and seeds.
  • Magnesium foods (needed to make ATP):
    • Beans, greens, seeds (pumpkin, sesame, chia), nuts, whole grains.
  • B vitamins (help run energy steps):
    • Whole grains, beans, leafy greens; B12 often needs fortified foods or supplements if plant-based.
  • CoQ10 (supports the electron transport chain):
    • Highest in organ meats and fatty fish; also in smaller amounts in spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, peas, soy, nuts, seeds, and whole grains.
    • Your body also makes CoQ10.
  • Omega-3s (support healthy mitochondrial membranes):
    • Flax seeds, chia seeds, walnuts; fatty fish like salmon, sardines, mackerel.

Simple plate example:

  • Half non-starchy veggies
  • Quarter beans or whole grains
  • Quarter lean protein
  • Add nuts or seeds
  • Water or unsweetened tea
Sleep (night shift repair crew)
  • Aim for 7–9 hours per night.
  • Deep sleep helps “wash” the brain and repair cells.
  • Poor sleep = less ATP, more inflammation, higher blood sugar.
  • If nighttime bathroom trips wake you, front-load fluids earlier in the day when possible, and discuss options with your clinician.
Stress Care (turn down the drain on your power)
  • Chronic stress raises cortisol, which hurts mitochondria and raises blood sugar.
  • Try:
    • Slow breathing (4 seconds in, 6 seconds out)
    • Prayer or mindfulness
    • Short nature breaks
    • Light stretching
    • Gratitude journaling
A Simple Starter Plan (This Week)
  • After each meal: 10–15 minute walk.
  • Two or three days: 20–30 minutes of strength training.
  • Daily: Build a fiber-rich plate (beans + greens + whole grains + nuts/seeds).
  • Add magnesium and omega-3 foods.
  • Lights down and screens off earlier; aim for 7–9 hours of sleep.
  • One stress tool each day: breathing, prayer, or a short nature walk.
  • Hydrate well during the day.
Key Takeaways
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction is a core driver of type 2 diabetes. It’s about cell power, not willpower.
  • You can build more and better mitochondria with movement, food, sleep, and stress care.
  • Some meds can help, but daily habits unlock the biggest gains.
  • When mitochondria wake up, energy rises, blood sugar improves, and progress gets easier.
What’s Next

Next week we finish the 12-core-defects series with inflammation. Don’t miss it.

If this episode helped you, please subscribe and share it with someone you love. Take a walk, take a breath, and remember: healing is powerful. You can do this—and we can help.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 10 of 12 - Gut Dysbiosis16 Jun 202500:33:00
Gut Dysbiosis and Type 2 Diabetes: A Simple Guide to a Happy Gut

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Richie and Amber break down Gut Dysbiosis, why your gut bugs matter for insulin resistance, and how simple foods can help. Learn easy wins, fun “Healthy Gut Bingo,” and what to eat this week.

Episode summary

Type 2 diabetes is driven by insulin resistance. One big, hidden driver is your gut. In this episode, Richie and Amber explain Gut Dysbiosis in plain words. We talk about “good bugs,” “bad bugs,” leaky gut, and what that means for blood sugar. You’ll learn how your gut bacteria make short‑chain fatty acids (SCFAs) that lower inflammation and help insulin work better. You’ll also get a grocery list to feed your good bugs.

We keep it real, simple, and a little funny. Yes, we even talk about fecal transplants. Yes, Richie asks about being a “donor.” And yes—leeks prevent leaks.

What we cover
  • What a healthy gut looks like
  • What Gut Dysbiosis is and why it matters
  • Leaky gut, inflammation, and insulin resistance
  • GLP‑1, SCFAs, and your gut lining
  • How meds like metformin and GLP‑1 RAs fit in
  • Foods that feed the “good guys”
  • Why food diversity is key
  • A simple weekly plan you can start today
Key takeaways
  • Gut Dysbiosis = an imbalance of gut bacteria. Too few “good guys,” too many “troublemakers.”
  • A healthy gut makes SCFAs (like butyrate) that calm inflammation, protect the gut lining, and help insulin work.
  • Leaky gut lets toxins (like LPS) into the blood. That sparks chronic inflammation and blocks insulin signals.
  • Dysbiosis can lower GLP‑1, raise insulin resistance, push fat storage, and worsen blood sugar.
  • Food is powerful. Feed your good bugs with fiber, polyphenols, resistant starch, and fermented foods.
  • Diversity matters. More plant variety = more microbe diversity = better gut health.
  • Move your body daily. Activity also helps a healthy microbiome.
Healthy gut 101
  • Your gut is home to trillions of microbes. They help with digestion, immunity, and metabolism.
  • Good bugs digest fiber and make SCFAs: butyrate, acetate, propionate.
  • These SCFAs reduce inflammation, support the gut barrier, and improve insulin sensitivity.
  • Certain stars:
    • Akkermansia muciniphila: supports the gut lining (barrier).
    • Roseburia intestinalis: makes butyrate; helps glucose uptake.
    • Some Bacteroidetes species are linked to leanness and better insulin sensitivity.
What is Gut Dysbiosis?
  • An imbalance of gut microbes. Not enough beneficial ones. Too many harmful ones.
  • Drivers: poor diet, low fiber, low plant variety, high added sugar, frequent antibiotics, chronic stress, low activity.
  • Effects:
    • Leaky gut: toxins slip into blood.
    • Inflammation rises and blocks insulin signaling.
    • GLP‑1 drops. Blood sugar rises. Fat storage goes up.
    • Over time, this can tie into kidney, nerve, and vessel issues.
Leaky gut, simply
  • Your gut lining should be tight. It should keep gut stuff in the gut.
  • With leaky gut, tiny gaps open. Toxins like LPS get into your blood.
  • Your immune system reacts. Inflammation grows.
  • Inflammation makes insulin’s job harder. That pushes insulin resistance.
Meds and tools we mention
  • Metformin: May help the gut microbiota balance. It can still cause tummy issues for some people.
  • GLP‑1 receptor agonists: Mimic the hormone that dysbiosis can lower. They can help insulin work and slow stomach emptying.
  • Antibiotics: Can wipe out good and bad bugs. Use only when needed.
  • Tests and transplants:
    • Stool tests exist, but use and access vary.
    • Fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) can help some gut conditions. It is not a DIY side hustle, Richie.
Eat to beat Gut Dysbiosis

We want foods that feed the right microbes, make SCFAs, and protect the gut lining. Aim for plants, fiber, polyphenols, resistant starch, and fermented foods.

Polyphenol‑rich foods (support Akkermansia and insulin sensitivity)

  • Cranberries
  • Pomegranate
  • Red/purple grapes
  • Green tea
  • Blueberries
  • Cocoa powder or dark cocoa (not candy bars)

Inulin‑rich prebiotics (gut barrier support)

  • Garlic
  • Onions
  • Asparagus
  • Leeks (“leeks prevent leaks!”)
  • Artichokes

Resistant starch and beta‑glucans (support Roseburia; more butyrate)

  • Potatoes and sweet potatoes
  • Green bananas (very little to no yellow)
  • Steel‑cut oats
  • Old‑fashioned oats
  • Barley

Fermented foods (boost Lactobacillus strains and diversity)

  • Sauerkraut (L. plantarum)
  • Kimchi (L. plantarum)
  • Kefir (L. casei)
  • Yogurt with live cultures (watch added sugar)
  • Sourdough (L. fermentum)
  • Fermented olives (harder to find, but a plus)

Omega‑3 plant sources (support a calm immune system)

  • Chia seeds
  • Flax seeds
  • Walnuts

Diverse fiber sources (help Bacteroides fragilis and balance the immune system)

  • Many colors of fruits and veggies
  • Many kinds of whole grains and beans
  • Dark leafy greens (kale, turnip greens)
Why food diversity matters

Eating the same thing every day feeds only a few bugs. Different plants feed different microbes. More plant variety = more microbe diversity. That brings:

  • Better gut lining
  • More SCFAs
  • Lower inflammation
  • Better insulin sensitivity

Tip: Think “dietary bingo.” Try to reach 30 different plants in a week. That includes fruits, veggies, beans, whole grains, nuts, seeds, herbs, and spices.

Start here: 7‑day “Healthy Gut Bingo” mini‑plan

Pick 1–2 ideas per day. Mix and match. Keep it simple.

Day 1

  • Breakfast: Plain yogurt + blueberries + ground flax
  • Add green tea

Day 2

  • Lunch: Barley or steel‑cut oats salad with cherry tomatoes, onions, and parsley
  • Side: Sauerkraut

Day 3

  • Snack: Green banana slices with peanut butter
  • Dinner: Roasted sweet potatoes + garlic and leeks

Day 4

  • Breakfast: Overnight oats with cocoa powder and strawberries
  • Drink: Water or unsweet tea

Day 5

  • Lunch: Kale salad with walnuts, grapes, and olive oil
  • Side: Kimchi

Day 6

  • Dinner: Bean chili with onions, garlic, and spices
  • Dessert: Pomegranate arils

Day 7

  • Breakfast: Kefir smoothie with cranberries
  • Walk: 20–30 minutes after a meal

Move daily. Even a short walk after meals helps.

Fun lines we loved
  • “Leeks prevent leaks.”
  • “Healthy Gut Bingo” is live at TheDiabetesPodcast.net.
  • Richie asks about becoming a fecal transplant donor. Amber is…not sold.
Timestamps
  • 00:00 — Welcome and why the gut matters in type 2 diabetes
  • 01:30 — Healthy gut basics and SCFAs
  • 03:00 — GLP‑1, insulin sensitivity, and the gut lining
  • 04:30 — What is Gut Dysbiosis?
  • 05:30 — Leaky gut and inflammation explained
  • 09:30 — Why this adds up over years
  • 10:30 — Dysbiosis, GLP‑1 drop, and insulin resistance
  • 11:00 — Metformin, GLP‑1 RAs, and antibiotics
  • 13:00 — Prebiotics, probiotics, and food vs. pills
  • 16:00 — Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and what to encourage
  • 18:00 — What to eat: polyphenols, inulin, resistant starch
  • 21:00 — Fermented foods and sugar cautions
  • 24:00 — Diverse fibers, grains, and plant variety
  • 29:00 — Simple action steps and movement
  • 30:00 — Healthy Gut Bingo + free download
Notes and mentions
  • 2022 research suggests Dysbiosis contributes to insulin resistance and ties into diabetes complications (kidney, nerve, and vascular).
  • Metformin may help gut microbiota balance; it can still cause GI side effects.
  • GLP‑1 receptor agonists help mimic hormone signals that can be low in Dysbiosis.
  • Antibiotics can wipe out good and bad bugs.
Try “Healthy Gut Bingo”

Download the free Healthy Gut Bingo at here. Aim to hit more plant squares each week. If you got 10 last week, shoot for 11 this week. Small steps win.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 9 of 12 - Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity09 Jun 202500:36:46
Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity: When Amylin Turns Toxic and Hurts Beta Cells

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

This episode breaks down Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity in plain language. We explain what amylin does, how it misfolds into toxic amyloid, why that harms insulin-making beta cells, which meds may help, and the daily habits that lower risk. We keep it real, practical, and hopeful.

 Timestamps
  • 00:00 — Welcome and why IAPP toxicity matters
  • 01:00 — What amylin (IAPP) does in a healthy body
  • 02:00 — GLP-1s vs. normal hormones (clearing up the mix-up)
  • 04:00 — When amylin gets overproduced and misfolds
  • 05:00 — Toxic amyloid hurts beta cells and sparks inflammation
  • 06:00 — DeFronzo’s baboon study and the “bad soil” islet analogy
  • 08:00 — IAPP plaques and how this mirrors amyloid in the brain
  • 09:00 — Testing: fasting insulin and what it tells you about amylin
  • 10:00 — Meds that can help indirectly
  • 14:00 — Why pramlintide (Symlin) is rarely used now
  • 15:00 — Food first: fiber, plants, and lowering insulin demand
  • 17:00 — Fruit vs. juice, and not “gorging”
  • 18:00 — Time-restricted eating: 12/12 or 10/14 (not extreme)
  • 21:00 — Spread carbs through the day to blunt spikes
  • 26:00 — Anti-inflammatory foods and omega-3s
  • 27:00 — Move more: walking, strength, and cardio
  • 28:00 — Don’t obsess over the scale; focus on habits
  • 32:00 — Sleep and stress make IAPP toxicity worse
  • 33:00 — “Overnutrition” = too many calories + inactivity
  • 35:00 — Closing: take courage; you can do this
The Big Idea (in plain English)

Amylin (also called IAPP) is a partner hormone to insulin. Your pancreas releases both together.

In small amounts, amylin helps:

  • Slow stomach emptying (you feel full longer)
  • Lower glucagon when insulin is present
  • Smooth out after-meal blood sugars

In insulin resistance, your body makes more insulin — and more amylin. Too much amylin can misfold, clump, and create amyloid “plaques” inside the islets (where beta cells live).

These plaques are toxic. They damage beta cell membranes, trigger inflammation, and lead to beta cell death. Over time, you lose insulin-making power.

This starts early. It often begins before diabetes is diagnosed. In fact, up to 95% of people with type 2 diabetes have detectable islet amyloid at diagnosis.

Think of it like hair with knots: smooth strands are fine; tangled knots cause a mess. Misfolded amylin is the knot.

Why This Matters
  • Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity is not just a symptom. It drives beta cell failure and speeds up type 2 diabetes.
  • It looks a lot like the amyloid problem seen in the brain in Alzheimer’s (different place, similar kind of misfolding trouble).
How To Test
  • Ask your doctor for a fasting insulin test.
  • Because insulin and amylin are co-secreted, high fasting insulin usually means high amylin too.
  • There isn’t a simple, routine blood test for amylin. Fasting insulin is your best early clue.
Medications We Talked About

There is no FDA-approved drug that “unfolds” or clears IAPP amyloid plaques yet. But some meds can lower the pressure on beta cells and reduce insulin demand:

GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs)

  • Lower glucagon, help with satiety, help reduce insulin demand
  • Less insulin out = less amylin out
  • May support beta cell survival indirectly

DPP-4 inhibitors

  • A less powerful, pill-based incretin support
  • Can lightly reduce insulin demand

TZDs (like pioglitazone)

  • Improve insulin sensitivity
  • May lower amylin production by lowering insulin needs

Pramlintide (Symlin)

  • A synthetic amylin analog (injectable)
  • Can slow stomach emptying, reduce post-meal glucagon, and help satiety
  • Used far less now; can cause nausea; adds injection burden
  • Does not fix Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity or clear plaques
  • May be more relevant in type 1, where amylin can be low

Always work with your care team to decide what’s right for you.

Lifestyle: Your Daily Playbook

Goal: lower insulin demand and calm inflammation so you make fewer “knots” (misfolded amylin).

  1. Eat to reduce insulin demand
  • Focus on a whole-food, plant-forward pattern:
    • Fiber: aim for 25–35+ grams/day
    • Colorful fruits and veggies (5–9 servings/day if you can)
    • Lots of non-starchy vegetables (greens, broccoli, peppers, etc.)
    • Lower glycemic load foods
  • Fruit vs. juice:
    • Whole fruit is great; juice spikes fast
    • Don’t “gorge,” but it’s hard to overdo whole fruits/veggies because of fiber and water
  • Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant foods:
    • Dark berries, green tea, dark leafy greens
    • Omega-3 fats (e.g., from fish, flax, chia, walnuts)
  • Spread carbs through the day
    • Avoid one huge carb-heavy meal; steady wins the race
  1. Time-restricted eating (if it fits your life)
  • Gentle, sustainable windows work best:
    • 12 hours eating / 12 hours fasting (12/12), or
    • 10 hours eating / 14 hours fasting (10/14)
  • Skip extreme windows (like 4/20); they can drive cravings and disordered eating
  • Try to finish dinner a couple hours before bed when possible
  1. Move more (start simple)
  • Walking is step one (literally)
  • Add aerobic exercise and strength training over time
  • Reducing belly/visceral fat lowers inflammation and lowers insulin demand
  1. Sleep and stress
  • Poor sleep and high stress raise cortisol
  • That makes insulin resistance worse and can raise Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity risk
  • Aim for a steady sleep schedule and simple stress tools (walks, breath work, social support)
  1. Watch the “overnutrition + inactivity” trap
  • Overnutrition = too many calories (often too much sugar and fat) — not “too many vitamins”
  • The Standard American Diet (SAD) + sitting a lot can increase IAPP toxicity even before blood sugars rise
Key Takeaways
  • Amylin (IAPP) is helpful in small amounts. Too much, for too long, can misfold and turn toxic.
  • Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP) Toxicity hurts beta cells and speeds type 2 diabetes.
  • This often starts years before diagnosis.
  • No plaque-clearing drug exists yet, but we can lower insulin demand:
    • Whole-food, fiber-rich eating
    • Movement (walk, lift, cardio)
    • Better sleep and stress care
    • Gentle time-restricted eating
  • Meds like GLP-1 RAs, DPP-4 inhibitors, and TZDs can help indirectly.
  • Ask for a fasting insulin test. If insulin is high, amylin likely is too.
Simple Glossary
  • Amylin (IAPP): A hormone released with insulin; helps you feel full and smooths after-meal sugars.
  • Islet: A small “island” of hormone-making cells in the pancreas (beta cells live here).
  • Amyloid: Misfolded protein clumps that can harm cells.
  • Hyperinsulinemia: Too much insulin in the blood.
Try This This Week
  • Book a fasting insulin test with your doctor.
  • Add one serving of non-starchy veggies to lunch and dinner.
  • Walk 10–20 minutes after your biggest meal.
  • Swap one juice/soda for water or unsweet green tea.
  • Try a 12/12 eating window for 3–5 days.
  • Aim for a consistent bedtime.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 8 of 12 - Alpha Cell Dysfunction02 Jun 202500:24:35
Alpha Cell Dysfunction: Why Blood Sugar Rises When You Don’t Eat

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode of the Diabetes Podcast, Richie and Amber unpack Alpha Cell Dysfunction—the last stop in DeFronzo’s “ominous octet.” We explain why your blood sugar can rise overnight, what alpha cells do in a healthy body, how things go wrong in type 2 diabetes, and what you can do—today—to take back control. We also cover meds that target this defect and the simple “non‑prescription prescription” of food and movement.

If you’ve wondered why fasting blood sugar is high even when you skip a snack, this one is for you.

Episode at a glance
  • What alpha cells do and how glucagon works with insulin
  • What goes wrong in Alpha Cell Dysfunction (glucagon “gone rogue”)
  • Why fasting and after‑meal sugars run high
  • Where it fits on the timeline from insulin resistance to type 2 diabetes
  • Meds that can help: GLP‑1s, SGLT‑2s, and DPP‑4s (who, how, and cautions)
  • Food moves: fiber-rich carbs, intact grains, pairing, and what to limit
  • Movement that helps your liver and hormones: walking, aerobic, and strength
  • Simple action steps to start today
Chapter markers
  • 00:00 Welcome + why Alpha Cell Dysfunction matters
  • 01:20 What alpha cells do in a healthy body
  • 03:30 What goes wrong in type 2 diabetes
  • 06:00 When Alpha Cell Dysfunction shows up in the timeline
  • 10:45 Medications that can help
  • 14:00 Food strategies that support balance
  • 18:00 Movement that fixes the signal
  • 22:00 The “non‑prescription prescription”
  • 23:30 Closing and next steps
What is Alpha Cell Dysfunction?
  • Alpha cells live in your pancreas.
  • They make a hormone called glucagon.
  • Glucagon tells your liver to release stored sugar (glycogen).
  • This helps during fasting, exercise, and when blood sugar drops.
  • Insulin and glucose normally “turn down” glucagon after a meal.
  • Think of a seesaw: insulin on one side, glucagon on the other. That balance keeps your blood sugar steady.
What goes wrong in type 2 diabetes?

With Alpha Cell Dysfunction, the alpha cells stop listening. They become resistant to the normal “slow down” signal from insulin and glucose. So:

  • After you eat, insulin rises…but glucagon does not fall like it should.
  • The liver keeps making and releasing sugar even when blood sugar is already high.
  • Fasting sugars rise. After‑meal sugars rise too.

It feels like your pancreas is pressing the gas and the brake at the same time. Your liver gets mixed messages and keeps dumping sugar. Not helpful!

When does Alpha Cell Dysfunction show up?

It starts before diagnosis. Here’s the simple flow:

  1. Insulin resistance shows up first (muscle, liver, fat). Blood sugar may still be normal.
  2. The pancreas makes more insulin to keep sugars in range (compensation).
  3. Impaired glucose tolerance: after‑meal sugars start to spike. Early alpha cell issues can show here (glucagon not suppressed well after meals).
  4. Impaired fasting glucose: fasting sugars rise. Alpha Cell Dysfunction is now clear.
  5. Type 2 diabetes: fasting ≥126 mg/dL or random ≥200 mg/dL with symptoms.

Nerve damage and other changes can start years before diagnosis. So if you have prediabetes or type 2 diabetes, it’s safe to say your liver may be “not helping” and Alpha Cell Dysfunction is likely part of the picture.

Medications that help Alpha Cell Dysfunction

Talk to your clinician to see what is right for you. Here’s what we covered:

GLP‑1 receptor agonists

  • Examples: Ozempic, Trulicity; higher‑dose versions for weight loss include Wegovy.
  • Also: Mounjaro and Zepbound (work on similar hormone pathways).
  • How they help: they lower glucagon when sugars are high, in a glucose‑dependent way. They do not block glucagon when sugars are low.
  • Common side effects: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea.
  • Do not use if you or your family have a history of medullary thyroid C‑cell tumors.

SGLT‑2 inhibitors

  • May help overall control. Evidence on glucagon effects is mixed. Still can be useful for many people for other benefits.

DPP‑4 inhibitors (for example, Januvia)

  • Help preserve your own GLP‑1 activity so glucagon drops after meals.
  • Often work better in earlier stages.
  • Do not combine a DPP‑4 with a GLP‑1 since they act on the same pathway.

Meds can help. But lifestyle still moves the needle the most and fixes many defects at once.

Food strategies to calm Alpha Cell Dysfunction

Focus on simple changes you can keep doing.

  • Eat fiber‑rich, minimally processed carbs
    • Beans, lentils, peas
    • Non‑starchy veggies (broccoli, cauliflower, peppers, greens, mushrooms, onions if you like them)
  • Choose intact whole grains
    • Look for “whole wheat flour” or “whole grain” as the first ingredient.
    • Oats count. Steel‑cut or slow‑cooking oats are best.
  • Pair your carbs with protein and healthy fats
    • This slows digestion and smooths your sugar curve.
  • Limit refined grains and added sugars
    • White flour and sugary drinks can spike you fast and worsen the insulin‑glucagon mismatch.
  • Cooked vs raw
    • Cooking is not “bad processing.” Some veggies give more nutrition when cooked.
    • The best way is the way you will eat. Just eat the dang broccoli.
Movement that helps your liver and hormones

Movement makes your liver more sensitive to insulin. It also improves hormone signals that involve glucagon.

  • Walk after meals
    • Even 2 minutes helps blunt a spike. More is better if you can.
  • Aerobic activity
    • Moderate to intense sessions improve liver insulin sensitivity.
    • Build up slowly. If you have been inactive, do not jump into hard intervals.
    • HIIT or sprint intervals can help later, once you have a base. Avoid injury.
  • Resistance training
    • Start with body weight. Add load over time.
    • Helps lower fasting glucose and improves overall control.
  • Keep moving
    • Too much rest after a small tweak can make things worse. Gentle, smart movement helps you heal.

These same habits help insulin resistance, protect beta cells, and support Alpha Cell Dysfunction—all at the same time.

Simple action steps
  • After your next meal, walk for 2–10 minutes.
  • Add one serving of beans or lentils today.
  • Swap white bread for true whole‑grain bread (check the first ingredient).
  • Pair carbs with protein and healthy fat at each meal.
  • Do two short strength sets (bodyweight squats, wall push‑ups) 2–3 times this week.
  • If you and your doctor choose meds, learn how they affect glucagon and fasting sugar.
  • Build up your activity slowly. Aim to be consistent, not perfect.
Quotes we loved
  • “It’s like pressing the gas and the brake at the same time.”
  • “Simple, not easy. It doesn’t have to be complex to work—but it does have to be consistent.”
  • “People have more power to change this than they think.”
Resources and next steps
  • Work with our team: EmpoweredDiabetes.com
  • If this helped you, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a friend.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 7 of 12 - Brain Insulin Resistance26 May 202500:30:25
Brain Insulin Resistance: Why You’re Hungry, Foggy, and Tired — And How to Take Back Your Brain

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this Diabetes Podcast episode, Richie and Amber break down Brain Insulin Resistance in simple, clear language. If you feel hungry all the time, crave carbs, feel tired even after sleep, or struggle to stick with healthy habits, this one’s for you. We explain what insulin does in a healthy brain, what goes wrong with Brain Insulin Resistance, how it can change your memory and mood, and practical steps you can start today.

Episode Summary
  • Your brain does not need insulin to get glucose (sugar) into brain cells. But your brain does need insulin for signaling. That signaling helps with hunger, fullness, mood, motivation, memory, and focus.
  • When Brain Insulin Resistance shows up, the brain “can’t hear” insulin. You may feel constant hunger, strong cravings, brain fog, low motivation, and trouble sticking to healthy habits.
  • Over time, Brain Insulin Resistance can raise inflammation and stress in the brain. This can affect white matter, the hippocampus (memory), and even raise amyloid/tau changes seen in Alzheimer’s. That’s why diabetes raises risk for cognitive decline.
  • GLP-1 medicines can help hunger and cravings. But they often plateau after about a year if lifestyle doesn’t change. The real power is in daily habits: movement, sleep, stress care, and a plant-forward, high-fiber, anti-inflammatory diet.
  • Good news: when you lower insulin resistance in your whole body, you also help your brain. This is changeable. You can protect your energy, memory, and satiety.
What You’ll Learn
  • What insulin does in a healthy brain
  • Why you can feel hungry even after eating
  • How Brain Insulin Resistance drives cravings, brain fog, and low motivation
  • How it can change brain structure over time
  • When meds help (GLP-1s) and when lifestyle matters most
  • Simple steps to calm cravings, boost focus, and feel full
Key Takeaways
  • Brain Insulin Resistance = the brain stops responding to insulin signals.
  • Symptoms: constant hunger, carb cravings, brain fog, low motivation, trouble sticking to habits.
  • Causes include: high insulin/high blood sugar, inflammation, high saturated fat and ultra-processed foods, poor sleep, chronic stress, sedentary time.
  • Exercise is special: muscle contractions can pull glucose into muscle even without insulin (GLUT4 pathway). Moving your body helps your brain.
  • The brain uses about 20% of your resting energy. It prefers fast fuel (glucose).
  • Over time, Brain Insulin Resistance can raise oxidative stress and brain inflammation (microglia). This links to cortical thinning, reduced hippocampus volume, white matter changes, and more amyloid/tau — patterns also seen in Alzheimer’s.
  • GLP-1 medicines can lower hunger and food chatter. But results often fade if habits don’t change.
  • Daily basics work: move often, sleep well, manage stress, eat more plants and fiber, and cut ultra-processed foods.
Simple Science (kept simple)
  • Brain fuel: Most brain cells use GLUT1 and GLUT3 “doors” to bring in glucose. These do not need insulin.
  • Muscle fuel: Muscles use GLUT4 “doors.” GLUT4 opens with insulin — and also opens with exercise. So moving your body helps use sugar even when insulin is low or not working well.
  • What insulin does in the brain: It helps hunger and fullness signals (ghrelin, leptin), supports dopamine and serotonin (motivation and mood), calms inflammation, and helps memory and focus.
  • Brain Insulin Resistance: The insulin signal is there, but the brain can’t “hear” it well. You feel unsatisfied after eating. Cravings rise. Focus drops. Motivation drops. Over time, inflammation and oxidative stress go up.
Signs You Might Have Brain Insulin Resistance
  • Always hungry, even after meals
  • Strong carb and sugar cravings
  • Brain fog, poor focus, forgetfulness
  • Low motivation; hard to start or stick with habits
  • Feeling tired, but not refreshed
  • Feeling “not yourself” mentally

If this sounds like you, you’re not “weak.” Your brain signals may be off. You can change them.

What Can Drive Brain Insulin Resistance
  • Chronically high insulin and blood sugar
  • High saturated fat and ultra-processed foods
  • High-fructose corn syrup and sugary drinks
  • Poor sleep; late-night eating
  • Chronic stress
  • Sedentary time (not moving enough)
  • Systemic inflammation
How It Can Change the Brain
  • More oxidative stress (free radical damage)
  • Microglia (brain immune cells) stay “on,” causing low-grade inflammation
  • White matter connections get weaker
  • Hippocampus (memory center) shrinks
  • Cortical thinning (especially frontal and temporal lobes)
  • More amyloid and tau patterns (seen in Alzheimer’s)
  • More nerve cell loss over time (apoptosis)

This is why type 2 diabetes raises the risk of cognitive decline. But it’s not hopeless. You can act now.

Medications That May Help
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists: Often lower hunger, slow stomach emptying, and quiet food thoughts. Many people say, “I don’t think about food as much.”
  • But: Results often level off around one year if habits don’t change. Receptors can desensitize, and brain inflammation can continue if lifestyle stays the same.
  • SGLT2s may help indirectly.

Talk with your healthcare provider to see what’s right for you.

Daily Habits That Help Your Brain
  • Move your body most days
    • Aerobic and resistance training both help insulin signaling.
    • Movement boosts blood flow, lowers inflammation, and supports new brain cells (neurogenesis).
  • Eat a plant-forward, high-fiber, anti-inflammatory diet
    • Make plants the star: veggies, fruits, beans, lentils, whole grains, nuts, seeds.
    • Lower saturated fat and ultra-processed foods.
    • Cut sugary drinks and high-fructose corn syrup.
  • Try simple time-restricted eating
    • Example: Eat between 8 AM and 8 PM. Avoid late-night snacking.
    • Support your circadian rhythm.
  • Protect your sleep
    • Aim for a steady sleep schedule. Keep screens out of bed.
    • Good sleep improves insulin signaling in the brain.
  • Manage stress
    • Short daily breath work, meditation, or a quiet walk.
    • Chronic stress raises inflammation and worsens signaling.

These basics, done most days, protect both blood sugar and brain.

Action Steps You Can Start This Week
  • Walk 20–30 minutes most days. Add 2 short strength sessions.
  • Fill half your plate with plants at each meal.
  • Add 1–2 fistfuls of fiber-rich foods daily (beans, berries, oats, lentils).
  • Stop eating 2–3 hours before bed.
  • Set a steady sleep window (bed and wake time).
  • Do 5 minutes of slow breathing or meditation daily.
  • Review meds with your clinician; ask about GLP-1s if hunger is severe.
Glossary (plain words)
  • Insulin: A hormone that helps the body use food for energy and keeps signals in balance.
  • Brain Insulin Resistance: When the brain stops “hearing” insulin signals well.
  • GLUT1/GLUT3: Brain “doors” that let sugar in without insulin.
  • GLUT4: Muscle “door” that opens with insulin and with exercise.
  • Microglia: Brain immune cells that can get stuck “on.”
  • Amyloid/Tau: Proteins that build up in Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Apoptosis: Programmed cell death.
Timestamps
  • 00:00 — Why you may feel hungry, tired, and foggy: Brain Insulin Resistance
  • 01:00 — What insulin does in a healthy brain
  • 03:00 — The brain can get glucose without insulin (GLUT1/GLUT3)
  • 04:00 — Exercise “opens” muscle glucose doors (GLUT4) without insulin
  • 05:00 — The brain uses ~20% of resting energy
  • 07:00 — Insulin’s brain jobs: hunger, fullness, mood, memory, calm
  • 09:00 — What Brain Insulin Resistance feels like (hunger, cravings, fog)
  • 11:00 — Drivers: high insulin, inflammation, poor sleep, processed foods
  • 12:00 — Motivation drops; habit sticking gets hard
  • 13:00 — Oxidative stress and microglia (brain inflammation)
  • 15:00 — Structural brain changes; memory at risk
  • 17:00 — Amyloid/tau patterns; higher Alzheimer’s risk
  • 22:00 — GLP-1 meds: how they help and why they plateau
  • 24:00 — The real fix: daily movement, food, sleep, stress care
  • 25–28 — Plant-forward, high-fiber eating; time-restricted eating; sleep hygiene
  • 28:00 — Big idea: heal insulin resistance to heal your brain

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 6 of 12 - Decreased Beta Cell Function19 May 202500:33:23
Decreased Beta Cell Function: The Silent Start of Type 2 Diabetes

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Short version: Most people are told they have type 2 diabetes after years of quiet damage. By diagnosis, many have Decreased Beta Cell Function — often 50% to 85% gone. That sounds scary. But there is hope. With the right steps, you can lower the pressure on your pancreas, bring back some function, and in many cases reach remission.

Richie: This is the hard truth episode.
Amber: And the hopeful one, too.

Episode Summary
  • We dig into Decreased Beta Cell Function — what beta cells do, why they fail, and what you can do now.
  • We explain why the “crash” doesn’t start at diagnosis. It starts years before.
  • We cover medications that lower the workload (but don’t rebuild cells).
  • We lay out lifestyle tools that protect and may restore beta cell function.
  • We answer the big question: Can beta cells regenerate in type 2?

If you want to protect your body from the inside out, this one’s for you.

Time-Stamps
  • 00:00 — The silent storm: why diagnosis comes late
  • 02:00 — Beta cells 101 (and why they matter)
  • 04:00 — 50%–85% loss by diagnosis: how we get here
  • 06:00 — Why early action wins
  • 09:00 — Signs you may need to act now
  • 10:00 — What raises the pressure: glucose, fat, and insulin resistance
  • 11:30 — Meds that lower load vs. meds that rebuild (spoiler: none rebuild)
  • 13:00 — Lifestyle: the biggest lever
  • 14:00 — Food basics: fiber, glycemic load, and calories
  • 18:00 — Fiber: how much, how to ramp safely
  • 20:00 — Exercise: why muscle is your sugar sink
  • 21:00 — Can beta cells recover? What the data says
  • 22:00 — DIRECT trial: timelines that give hope
  • 24:00 — Why lifting matters for insulin sensitivity
  • 28:00 — Keep it off, keep it working
  • 29:00 — Act early: your step-by-step plan
  • 31:00 — Use meds as a bridge, not a crutch
  • 33:00 — Your body’s been fighting for you. Will you fight for it?
Key Takeaways
  • Decreased Beta Cell Function starts years before diagnosis.
  • By the time many people hear “type 2,” 50%–85% of beta cell function is already lost.
  • No drug regrows beta cells in type 2. But lifestyle can restore function in many people.
  • Exercise (especially strength training) and a lower-glycemic, higher-fiber diet reduce pancreatic stress.
  • Early action gives you the best shot at remission. The first 6 years after diagnosis are key.
  • Use medication when needed to lower the load; layer lifestyle to keep gains and step down meds with your clinician.
What Are Beta Cells (In Plain Words)?
  • Beta cells live in your pancreas.
  • Their job: make insulin when your blood sugar rises.
  • Insulin is the “key” that lets sugar into your body’s cells for energy.
  • When your body gets insulin resistant, beta cells have to work overtime. Over years, they tire out. That is Decreased Beta Cell Function.
Why This Starts Early (And Quietly)
  • Long before your A1C is high, the body is compensating.
  • High sugar and high fat around the organs (liver, pancreas, belly fat) raise stress and inflammation.
  • The pancreas tries to keep up. Over time, the beta cells weaken.
  • By diagnosis, many people have already lost half or more of their beta cell capacity.

Listen: this isn’t about blame. It’s about timing. The sooner you act, the more you can protect.

Signs It’s Time To Act
  • You’re overweight or carry belly fat.
  • You feel tired after meals.
  • You’ve been told you have prediabetes.
  • Diabetes runs in your family.
  • You haven’t had a fasting insulin test.

Ask your clinician for a fasting insulin test. This can flag issues earlier than A1C alone.

Medications: Helpful, But Not Rebuilders

These can reduce workload on beta cells and improve control:

  • Metformin
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., semaglutide/Ozempic, exenatide/Bydureon) and dual agonists (e.g., tirzepatide/Mounjaro)
  • TZDs (e.g., pioglitazone/Actos)

Important:

  • These help with insulin resistance and reduce pressure.
  • They do not regrow beta cells.
  • Use meds as a bridge while you build habits that last.

Always work with your clinician before changing medication.

Can Beta Cells Regenerate?
  • Type 2: Some recovery is possible. With weight loss, lower glycemic load, and exercise, studies show improved beta cell function and a return of the first-phase insulin response.
  • Type 1: Different story. It is autoimmune. New cells are attacked. Research is ongoing (e.g., stem cells), but broad, lasting replacement is not here yet.

What the DIRECT trial showed:

  • Fasting blood sugar can improve in about 7 days on a very low-calorie plan.
  • First-phase insulin response can return around 8 weeks.
  • Functional capacity improved over a year in people who lost weight and kept it off.
  • Remission was most likely when diabetes duration was under 6 years.
Food: Simple Rules That Help Your Beta Cells

Your goals:

  • Create a small, steady calorie deficit.
  • Lower glycemic load.
  • Raise fiber.

Fiber targets:

  • Aim for at least 35 grams per day.
  • Up to 50 grams per day can be even better for many people.

Go slow to avoid GI issues:

  • Week 1: Add 5–10 grams/day.
  • Week 2: Add another 5–10 grams/day.
  • Keep adding weekly until you reach your target.
  • Drink plenty of water.

What to eat more of:

  • Non-starchy veggies (broccoli, greens, peppers, cauliflower)
  • Beans, lentils, chickpeas
  • Whole fruits (berries, apples, pears)
  • Whole grains (oats, barley, quinoa)
  • Nuts and seeds

What to eat less of:

  • Sugary drinks, juices, sweets
  • Refined grains (white bread, pastries)
  • Ultra-processed snacks
  • High-saturated-fat foods

Why this works:

  • Fiber slows sugar spikes and helps you feel full.
  • Lower glycemic load and lower calories reduce stress on beta cells.
  • Over time, this supports function and can help remission.

Caution if you jump too fast:

  • Gas, bloating, discomfort
  • In rare cases, if you overdo fiber supplements without water, bowel obstruction
  • Build up gradually.
Exercise: Your Strongest Everyday Medicine
  • Skeletal muscle soaks up sugar after meals.
  • The more you move (and the more muscle you keep/build), the less insulin you need.

Quick-start plan:

  • Walk: 20–30 minutes most days.
  • Strength train: 2–3 days per week (full body).
    • Squats or sit-to-stands
    • Push-ups (against a wall if needed)
    • Rows (bands or light weights)
    • Hip hinges (deadlift pattern with light weight)
  • Work up slowly. Add a little each week.

Note: In strict low-calorie plans without lifting, people often lose muscle, which can stall progress. Keep or build muscle to keep insulin sensitivity high.

A 4-Week Action Plan

Week 1

  • Ask for labs: fasting insulin, fasting glucose, A1C, lipid panel.
  • Start walking 15–20 minutes/day.
  • Add 5–10 grams of fiber/day. Drink more water.

Week 2

  • Strength train 2x/week (15–25 minutes).
  • Swap refined carbs for whole foods at one meal/day.
  • Add 5–10 more grams of fiber/day.

Week 3

  • Walk 30 minutes/day on 5 days.
  • Strength train 3x/week.
  • Make half your plate non-starchy veggies.
  • Track simple calories for awareness (even 3 days helps).

Week 4

  • Hold steady.
  • Review numbers and how you feel.
  • If on meds, talk with your clinician about next steps if sugars are improving.

Repeat and progress gently. Consistency beats intensity.

FAQ

Is Decreased Beta Cell Function permanent?
Not always. In type 2, function can improve with lower glucose, lower fat in the liver/pancreas, weight loss, and exercise.

How fast can I see changes?
Some fasting glucose changes can appear in a week on a tight plan. Meaningful beta cell response often shows by 8 weeks, with bigger gains over months if weight stays off.

I’m already on medication. Should I stop?
No. Use meds to help while you build habits. As numbers improve, discuss lowering doses with your clinician.

I feel fine. Should I still test?
Yes. Ask for a fasting insulin test if you have risk factors. Problems start long before symptoms.

What happens if I wait?
More beta cell loss. When function nears zero, insulin shots are the only option.

Our Voice, Your Move

Richie: The time to act is not when you’re at a solid F. It’s when you’re at a C-.
Amber: Early action protects the beta cells you still have. Some can recover. Many can.

Your checklist for this week:

  • Email your clinician: request fasting insulin + A1C.
  • Start daily walks.
  • Add 5–10 grams of fiber.
  • Plan two strength sessions.
  • Use your medication as needed. Build the habits that let you need less.

Your beta cells have been fighting for you. Fight for them back.

If this gave you hope, share it with someone you care about. And if you’re ready for support on the road to remission, we’re here.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 5 of 12 - Increased Hepatic Glucose Production12 May 202500:33:32
Increased Hepatic Glucose Production — Why Your Morning Sugar Jumps (and What To Do). 

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

We’re back with Part 5 of our 12‑part series on the core defects in type 2 and prediabetes. Today we unpack Increased Hepatic Glucose Production. In plain words: your liver is making and releasing too much sugar. We explain why the liver does this, why it can go wrong, why your fasting glucose can be high even if you didn’t eat, and what you can do right now to calm it down. We also cover meds that target the liver and their pros and cons. Simple steps. Real talk. You’ve got this.

What is Increased Hepatic Glucose Production?

“Hepatic” means liver. Your liver is your body’s steady sugar pump. It:

  • Feeds your brain while you sleep.
  • Helps in “fight or flight” moments (think: run from a lion).
  • Smooths out the time between meals.

It does this in two ways:

  • Glycogenolysis: using stored sugar (glycogen) in the liver.
  • Gluconeogenesis: making new sugar from other stuff (like protein parts).

In a healthy system, insulin tells the liver, “We just ate, stop making sugar.” Glucagon (another hormone) tells the liver, “We need sugar, let some out.”

What goes wrong in insulin resistance

With insulin resistance, the “stop” message is weak. Insulin is high, but the liver doesn’t listen well. Glucagon often stays loud. Result: the liver keeps pushing out sugar when it shouldn’t. We call this Increased Hepatic Glucose Production.

We joke, “the liver did it.” That’s why you can go to bed at 90 and wake up at 180. This is also called the dawn phenomenon. Hormones in the early morning (like cortisol and glucagon) can push sugar up, and insulin resistance makes it worse.

Big idea: diabetes is a “communication” problem. Signals are sent, but cells don’t hear them right.

Why this matters

High liver sugar output is one of the big three drivers of high blood sugar:

  • Less sugar going into muscles (we covered this).
  • The pancreas not putting out insulin well (coming next).
  • Increased Hepatic Glucose Production (today).

Taming liver sugar helps your fasting numbers, protects your brain and heart, and moves you toward remission.

Meds that target the liver (what they do and trade‑offs)

Note: Always talk to your clinician before starting, stopping, or changing meds.

Metformin (a biguanide; brand: Glucophage)

  • What it does: Tells the liver to slow sugar output. Blunts the “make sugar” push from glucagon.
  • How it helps: Lowers fasting sugar; supports weight‑neutral to slight loss.
  • Common side effects: Gas, bloating, diarrhea. Some can’t tolerate it.

GLP‑1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide, Ozempic, etc.)

  • What they do: Help the pancreas’ alpha cells quiet glucagon. This lowers liver sugar release. They also help other defects (appetite, stomach emptying, insulin release).
  • How they help: Lower A1C, support weight loss, heart and kidney benefits in many.
  • Common side effects: Nausea, vomiting, “food sits” feeling (slower stomach emptying).

TZDs (thiazolidinediones; pioglitazone/Actos)

  • What they do: Flip a tiny cell switch (PPAR‑γ) to improve insulin sensitivity. Move fat out of the liver and into safer places under the skin.
  • How they help: Reduce liver fat, improve insulin action, support long‑term control.
  • Trade‑offs: Can cause fluid retention and weight gain. Long term (many years) may weaken bones (especially in women). The heart failure question is debated; talk with your clinician.

DPP‑4 inhibitors (sitagliptin/Januvia; “‑gliptin” drugs)

  • What they do: Help your own GLP‑1 last longer.
  • How they help: Modest A1C drop. Safe, often used in older adults.
  • Trade‑offs: Smaller effect, don’t fix core problems well over time.
Simple steps you can do now (anything meds can do, you can often help do better)

Our goal: lower insulin resistance, help muscles drink up sugar, and calm the liver’s sugar drip.

Move after meals (even 2 minutes helps)

  • Best: 10–15 minutes of easy walking right after you eat.
  • Why: Muscles pull sugar out of blood even without much insulin. This lowers the need for the liver to add more.

Add moderate‑intensity exercise most days

  • How it should feel: Warm skin, light sweat after ~10 minutes, you can talk but not sing. You breathe mostly through your nose; if you must mouth‑breathe hard, it’s too intense.
  • Examples: Brisk walking, easy cycling, light jogging, water aerobics.
  • Why: Improves insulin signaling and makes muscles better sugar sponges.

Keep carbs steady across the day

  • Spread your carbs. Many do better with smaller, steady amounts instead of one huge meal.
  • A simple pattern to try: alternate 30 g and 15 g of carbs by meal/snack (example: 30 at lunch, 15 mid‑pm, 30 at dinner, 15 in the evening). Your needs may differ.
  • Track to learn: apps like Lose It or MyFitnessPal can help you see your true portion.

Increase soluble fiber

  • Foods: oats, beans, lentils, peas, apples, citrus, chia, flax.
  • Why: Helps blood sugar, heart health, gut health, and can lower belly (visceral) fat.

Limit refined carbs and saturated fat

  • Swap ultra‑processed sweets and white flours for whole foods.
  • Keep saturated fat to less than 10% of calories to ease insulin signaling.

Sleep and stress care

  • Aim for regular, restful sleep. Manage stress. Both lower cortisol, which helps calm dawn highs.

Target visceral fat

  • Even small losses around the waist can boost hormones and improve liver signals fast.
Dawn phenomenon: “Why is my morning sugar high?”
  • It’s common. Hormones rise before you wake (cortisol, glucagon).
  • In insulin resistance, the “stop” signal to the liver is weak, so the liver releases sugar.
  • Tip: an easy post‑dinner walk, steady evening carbs (not a big carb blast), better sleep, and your overall plan can help.
Key terms made simple
  • Hepatic: liver.
  • Increased Hepatic Glucose Production: liver makes and releases too much sugar.
  • Glycogenolysis: using stored liver sugar (glycogen).
  • Gluconeogenesis: making new sugar.
  • Insulin: tells cells to take in sugar; tells the liver to stop making sugar.
  • Glucagon: the opposite helper; tells the liver to release sugar.
  • Beta cells: in the pancreas; make insulin.
  • Alpha cells: in the pancreas; make glucagon.
  • Dawn phenomenon: morning sugar rise from hormones.
  • Visceral fat: fat deep in the belly around organs; causes hormone trouble.
  • PPAR‑γ: a tiny cell switch that helps cells respond to insulin.
  • DPP‑4: an enzyme that breaks down helpful gut hormones.
Episode timeline
  • 00:00 Welcome, Mother’s Day love, series reminder (12 core defects)
  • 00:02 Topic intro: Increased Hepatic Glucose Production
  • 00:03 What the liver does and why it releases sugar
  • 00:05 Big words made simple: glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis
  • 00:07 Insulin resistance = broken “off switch” to the liver
  • 00:09 “The liver did it” and dawn phenomenon
  • 00:13 Alpha vs. beta cells; glucagon’s role
  • 00:14 Meds that help the liver: metformin, GLP‑1s, TZDs, DPP‑4s
  • 00:19 Side effects and trade‑offs
  • 00:22 Behaviors that beat meds: movement, carbs, fiber, sleep, stress
  • 00:23 What is moderate intensity?
  • 00:25 How to spread carbs; simple 30/15 idea; tracking apps
  • 00:28 Visceral fat, cortisol, and better sleep
  • 00:30 Why drug design is hard; kidneys and SGLT‑2s note
  • 00:32 Next week: impaired insulin secretion teaser
Real talk takeaways
  • Your liver is not “bad.” It’s doing its job. The signals are messy.
  • Increased Hepatic Glucose Production is a core defect you can influence daily.
  • Walk after meals. Train moderately most days. Keep carbs steady. Eat fiber. Sleep well.
  • Meds can help, but your habits drive lasting change.
  • Remission is real. Step by step wins the day.
Resources and next steps
  • Work with your care team before changing meds or exercise.
  • Try a post‑meal walk today.
  • Pick one fiber food to add this week.
  • Track carbs for three days to see your true baseline.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 4 of 12 - Increased Lipolysis and Lipodystrophy05 May 202500:41:28
Increased Lipolysis and Lipodystrophy: Fat Spillover, Insulin Resistance, and What You Can Do

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we break down Increased Lipolysis and Lipodystrophy in simple terms. Learn how fat spillover blocks insulin, when TZDs help or harm, and the food and exercise steps that work.

This is Part 4 of our 12-part series, “Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better.” Today we dig into Increased Lipolysis and Lipodystrophy—what they mean, why they drive insulin resistance, how certain meds work, and the simple steps you can start now.

Remission from type 2 and prediabetes is real. Let’s go.

Episode in one sentence

When fat breaks down and spills into places it doesn’t belong, it gums up your muscles and liver, blocks insulin and GLUT4, and pushes blood sugar up—but food choices, movement, and smart habits can turn the tide.

What we cover
  • What “increased lipolysis” really means (extra fat breakdown and spillover)
  • How fat inside muscle makes the “sponge” greasy and insulin can’t work
  • Toxic fat byproducts (diacylglycerols and ceramides) and how they block insulin and GLUT4
  • Lipodystrophy in plain English (fat stored in the wrong places)
  • Fatty liver and why it’s so common with type 2 diabetes
  • TZDs (pioglitazone/Actos; rosiglitazone/Avandia): how they work, pros, and serious cons
  • Food and exercise that improve insulin sensitivity and PPAR-gamma naturally
  • Simple, safe action steps you can start this week
Timestamps
  • 0:00 Welcome + series recap
  • 1:00 What is increased lipolysis? (fat spillover into muscle)
  • 4:00 Toxic fat byproducts block insulin and GLUT4
  • 7:00 The “sponge and bacon grease” picture for insulin resistance
  • 8:30 Fatty liver (NAFLD) and oxidative stress
  • 10:00 Meds: TZDs/Thiazolidinediones and PPAR-gamma
  • 14:30 Pros of TZDs (insulin sensitivity, fatty liver support)
  • 16:00 Cons of TZDs (fluid retention, heart failure risk)
  • 20:00 Who is at higher risk (HF, long diabetes, high A1C, HTN, CAD, CKD, obesity)
  • 21:30 Bone loss risk, osteoblasts, and why this matters, especially for women
  • 26:00 Food tools: omega-3s, fiber, polyphenols, olive oil, nuts, beans
  • 30:00 Saturated vs monounsaturated fats; real peanut butter 101
  • 34:30 Exercise: aerobic + resistance, GLUT4, mitochondria, bone health
  • 38:00 Your one action for the week
  • 39:00 Next episode: increased hepatic glucose production (liver)
Key ideas in simple words
  • Increased lipolysis = extra fat breakdown. Lots of free fatty acids (FFAs) float in your blood. They can move into muscle and liver.
  • Lipodystrophy = fat stored in the wrong places (like liver, muscle, heart, pancreas) instead of mainly under the skin. That “fat spillover” hurts insulin action.
  • Inside muscle, fat droplets break into “toxic byproducts” called diacylglycerols (DAGs) and ceramides. These block insulin signals and stop GLUT4 (the sugar door) from opening. Blood sugar rises.
  • Think of muscle as a sponge. Sugar is water. When the sponge is greasy (fat inside), water runs off. The muscles say, “We’re full.” Sugar stays in the blood.
  • Fatty liver (NAFLD) is very common with type 2 diabetes. It ties to oxidative stress and the whole “metabolic syndrome” picture.
Meds: the good and the bad (TZDs)
  • Names: Thiazolidinediones (TZDs) like pioglitazone (Actos). Rosiglitazone (Avandia) is used less.
  • How they work: They turn on a switch in your cell nucleus called PPAR-gamma. This helps:
    • Improve insulin sensitivity
    • Lower FFAs and lipotoxicity
    • Store fat under the skin, not around organs
    • Increase GLUT4 in muscle and fat
    • Ease fatty liver
    • Some studies show fewer repeat strokes/heart attacks in high-risk folks
  • Serious cons to know:
    • Fluid and sodium retention → can worsen heart failure
    • Not advised in NYHA class III–IV heart failure (and used with caution in many others)
    • Weight gain
    • Bone loss over time (shifts stem cells toward fat cells, away from bone-building cells, called osteoblasts). This is a big deal for older adults, especially postmenopausal women, due to hip and spine fracture risk.
  • Reality check: Many with type 2 diabetes already have heart problems or risk factors (long duration, high A1C, hypertension, CAD, kidney disease, obesity). For a large slice of people, risks may outweigh benefits. Always talk with your clinician.
Natural ways to support PPAR-gamma and improve insulin sensitivity

These are straight from the science and fit real life.

  • Omega-3 fats
    • Eat: salmon, sardines, mackerel
    • Or use a quality fish oil (third-party tested for purity)
    • Also: chia seeds, freshly ground flaxseeds
  • Polyphenols (colorful plants)
    • Berries (deep red/blue), green tea (EGCG), coffee, dark chocolate/cocoa, turmeric/curcumin
    • Resveratrol (also found in red wine—enjoy mindfully)
    • Quercetin (onions, apples)
  • Fiber and short-chain fatty acids
    • Beans and lentils, vegetables, whole grains, seeds (flax, chia)
    • Your gut turns fiber into short-chain fats that help the gut and fat tissue work better
  • Monounsaturated fats (heart-helping fats)
    • Olive oil, avocados, almonds, walnuts
    • They improve lipids, calm inflammation, and help insulin work
  • Saturated vs. monounsaturated: a quick tip
    • Saturated fats are often solid at room temp (think bacon fat, shortening)
    • Monounsaturated fats are liquid (like olive oil)
    • Nuts are “solid” because of their structure, but their oils (like in natural nut butters) separate and stay liquid
    • Natural peanut or almond butter should list just “nuts” and maybe “salt”—the oil on top is normal. Stir, then refrigerate. Watch out for “natural” jars with added coconut oil (a saturated fat).
Exercise: your daily “GLUT4 button”
  • Aerobic exercise (like walking) helps sugar enter muscle even without insulin by moving GLUT4 to the cell surface.
  • Resistance training (weights or bands) builds muscle so you can store and burn more glucose. It also helps bones.
  • Bone health tip: Lifting heavier (safely) puts helpful stress along bones and wakes up osteoblasts (bone-building cells). This is key for women after menopause.
  • Mitochondria (your cell “powerhouses”) work better with regular exercise.
  • Good news: Exercise helps even without weight loss. A 5–10% weight loss, if needed, can make fatty liver and insulin resistance much better.
Quick glossary
  • Increased Lipolysis and Lipodystrophy: extra fat breakdown and fat stored in the wrong places
  • FFAs: free fatty acids from fat breakdown
  • DAGs/Ceramides: toxic fat byproducts that block insulin signals
  • GLUT4: the “door” that lets sugar into muscle cells
  • PPAR-gamma: a cell “switch” that controls fat and sugar genes
  • TZDs: meds (like Actos) that turn on PPAR-gamma
  • NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Richie and Amber’s highlights
  • “Muscles are like sponges. When they’re greasy, water (sugar) just runs off.”
  • “I love exercise because GLUT4 can work without insulin.”
  • “If you can’t walk, health can fall fast. Protect bone with resistance training.”
  • “Pick one thing to do this week. Small steps add up.”
Pick one action for this week

Choose one and start today:

  • Walk 20 minutes every day
  • Eat fatty fish twice this week (or take a quality omega-3)
  • Swap butter/shortening for olive oil
  • Add 1–2 tablespoons of freshly ground flaxseed to yogurt or oats
  • Add 1 cup of beans to meals 3 times this week
  • Drink green tea daily
  • Do 2 short resistance sessions (whole body), even 15 minutes each
  • Switch to natural nut butter (just nuts + salt)
Who this helps
  • People with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes
  • Anyone with signs of insulin resistance (belly fat, high triglycerides, low HDL, high fasting glucose)
  • Folks worried about fatty liver or bone health
Next up

Part 5: Increased hepatic glucose production (your liver and sugar output).

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 3B of 12 - Insulin Resistance in the Muscles (continued)28 Apr 202500:23:31
Insulin Resistance in the Muscles (cont.): Metformin, Movement, and Simple Wins

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

We cover Metformin, side effects, and why short walks after meals beat meds for many people.

Episode summary

Today we pick up where we left off on Insulin Resistance in the Muscles. We talk about Metformin (a biguanide), what it does, how it’s used, and the real-life side effects many people feel. Then we share the step-by-step lifestyle moves that work even better than meds for many listeners. You’ll hear why even a 2-minute walk after meals can lower post-meal blood sugar, how to make new habits stick, what to eat more of (and less of), and how the body clears fat from the liver when you change your routine. We keep it simple, real, and doable.

What you’ll learn
  • The first line for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles: diet and exercise
  • What Metformin does and how it’s usually dosed
  • Common side effects (and how to lower the chance of “bathroom runs”)
  • Why lifestyle changes beat medicine in a major diabetes trial
  • The easiest “switch” you can flip after meals to lower blood sugar
  • Foods that help: fiber, beans, greens, lean protein, healthy fats
  • Why ultra-processed sugar and flour make things harder
  • How movement pulls sugar into muscles even without insulin
  • A simple plan you can start today in under 5 minutes
Timestamps
  • 00:00 Welcome back and why this matters
  • 01:00 Medications for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles: biguanides (Metformin)
  • 02:00 First line should be diet and exercise (not a surprise script)
  • 06:00 What Metformin can do: diabetes risk down 31% in a big trial
  • 07:00 What’s not so fun: nausea and inopportune diarrhea
  • 08:30 Dosing tips that matter (start low, go slow; extended release)
  • 10:30 Why many people quit and how to avoid that
  • 11:00 Lifestyle beats meds: 58% vs 31%
  • 12:00 The simple fix: walk 2–5 minutes after meals
  • 13:00 Habit stacking so it actually happens
  • 14:00 What to eat more of; what to cut back on (ultra-processed sugars)
  • 18:00 Protein, fiber, and the “chew” idea
  • 19:00 Fatty liver can improve in weeks with changes
  • 20:00 Shrinking visceral fat with food, sleep, stress tools, and muscle
  • 21:00 Why movement works: muscle “gates” pull in sugar without insulin
  • 22:00 Next week’s teaser: lipolysis and beta cell stress
Key takeaways
  • Diet and exercise should come first for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles. Metformin is helpful for many, but it’s not the first step.
  • In the Diabetes Prevention Program, Metformin cut type 2 diabetes risk by 31%. Lifestyle changes cut it by 58%.
  • Start movement small and often. A 2–5 minute walk after meals can lower post-meal blood sugar and help with triglycerides.
  • If you and your doctor choose Metformin, reduce side effects by starting low (often 500 mg), going slow, taking with food, and asking about extended release.
  • Eat more nutrient-dense, high-fiber foods (beans, veggies, greens, lean protein, healthy fats). Cut back on ultra-processed sugars and refined flour foods (sugary drinks, white bread, pastries).
  • Your liver can clear fat within weeks of better food choices and movement. That helps cholesterol and triglycerides.
  • Muscle contractions move sugar into muscle even without insulin. Movement gives you control in minutes.
Meds for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles: what to know
  • The class is called biguanides. Metformin is the most common.
  • What it can do:
    • Helps your body use insulin better
    • Lowers liver sugar output
    • In the DPP trial: 31% lower risk of type 2 diabetes vs placebo
  • Side effects:
    • Many do fine
    • Some have nausea and diarrhea (often at bad times)
  • How to lower side effects:
    • Start at 500 mg, take with food
    • Increase slowly (every ~2 weeks) toward 1,500–2,000 mg/day if needed
    • Ask about extended release (ER) if your doctor agrees
    • Jumping to the max dose on day one can be a disaster for your gut
  • Big picture:
    • Meds can help
    • But first-line is diet and exercise per expert guidelines
    • Real change needs real tools, time, and support
Why lifestyle wins for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles
  • In the same DPP study:
    • Lifestyle (food + movement) cut diabetes risk by 58%
    • Metformin cut it by 31%
  • Movement after meals:
    • Even 2 minutes helps
    • 2–5 minutes is great; up to 30 minutes is even better
    • Lowers post-meal blood sugar spikes
    • Helps blunt the triglyceride surge from the liver
  • Walking is enough:
    • If you’re sedentary, this is the perfect start
    • Indoors works too (hallway laps, stairs, marching in place)
Make it stick: habit stacking (easy start plan)
  • Week 1: Pick your biggest meal. Walk 2 minutes right after you eat.
  • Week 2: Add a second meal. Walk 2 minutes after that one too.
  • Week 3: Add the third meal. Bump your walk to 3–5 minutes if you can.
  • Tips that work:
    • Keep shoes by the table or door
    • Set a timer when you put your fork down
    • Walk inside when it’s hot, cold, or rainy
    • Pair it with music or a short phone call
    • Track checkmarks to see wins add up
Food choices that help
  • Aim for nutrient density: more nutrition per calorie
  • Eat more:
    • Vegetables and greens
    • Beans and lentils (fiber and “resistant starch” that slows spikes)
    • Lean protein (fish, chicken, eggs, tofu)
    • Healthy fats: mostly monounsaturated and omega-3s (olive oil, avocado, nuts, seeds, fatty fish)
  • Cut back on:
    • Ultra-processed sugars and refined flour foods: sugary drinks, white bread, cakes, donuts, candy
  • About “white foods”:
    • It’s a simple rule some use, but not perfect
    • Some white foods are great (onions, garlic, cauliflower, white peaches)
  • A simple cue:
    • Foods that need more chewing often have more fiber and help you feel full
  • What changes in your body:
    • Fat can clear from the liver within weeks of better eating
    • HDL can go up; triglycerides can come down
    • LDL particles can get “fluffier,” which is less risky
    • Less visceral fat means less internal “fire” around organs
How movement lowers sugar fast
  • When your muscles contract, they open tiny “gates” that pull sugar in
  • This can happen even without insulin
  • That’s why a short walk after meals works so quickly
Quick start checklist
  • After each meal, walk 2–5 minutes (indoors is fine)
  • Drink water instead of sugary drinks
  • Fill half your plate with veggies or salad
  • Add beans a few times per week
  • Choose lean protein and healthy fats
  • Sleep 7–9 hours when you can; lower stress with simple breaths or a short walk
  • Be consistent, not perfect
Friendly reminder
  • This podcast is for education. It’s not medical advice.
  • Don’t start, stop, or change medication without your clinician.
  • If Metformin is part of your plan, talk with your doctor about dosing and extended release.
Next episode

We’ll dig into increased lipolysis (fat breakdown), rising free fatty acids, and how this can stress beta cells over time. We’ll keep it simple and practical.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 3A of 12 - Insulin Resistance in the Muscles21 Apr 202500:28:19
The Diabetes Podcast — Insulin Resistance in the Muscles (Part 1 of 2)

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we dig into Insulin Resistance in the Muscles. This is Part 1 of a two-part deep dive.

We keep it real, simple, and helpful. If you want clear steps to lower blood sugar and feel better, you’re in the right place.

Episode Summary
  • Insulin is a hormone. Think of it like a key. It opens your cells so sugar (glucose) can get in and be used for energy.
  • When cells don’t respond well to insulin, that’s insulin resistance. Your body then makes more insulin to push sugar into cells. Over time, this is hard on your body and can raise weight.
  • Insulin Resistance in the Muscles matters a lot. Your muscles take up about 80% of the sugar after you eat. When muscle cells resist insulin, blood sugar stays higher.
  • Good news: exercise gives your muscles a second door for sugar that does not need insulin. Even a short walk after meals helps. The benefits can last up to 48 hours.
What You’ll Learn
  • What insulin does in your body (in simple words)
  • How high insulin makes fat loss harder
  • What causes insulin resistance
  • How to test insulin resistance (fasting insulin)
  • Why muscle is the main player for blood sugar control
  • How movement opens a second pathway for sugar to get into muscle
  • Easy walking tips that lower blood sugar fast
Key Topics and Timestamps
  • 00:00 — Welcome to The Diabetes Podcast
  • 00:01 — Insulin 101: the “key and lock” idea
  • 00:03 — Where sugar goes: energy now or stored as glycogen or fat
  • 00:04 — High insulin = storage mode (harder to burn fat)
  • 00:05 — Causes of insulin resistance: too much refined food, too little movement, visceral fat, poor sleep, stress
  • 00:08 — How to test: fasting insulin; why doctors don’t always order it
  • 00:11 — High insulin can be there 10–20 years before a diabetes diagnosis
  • 00:13 — The ripple effect: triglycerides, VLDL, HDL, and blood vessel risk
  • 00:16 — Visceral fat is active tissue; it sends signals and raises inflammation
  • 00:17 — Big point: muscles handle ~80% of post-meal glucose
  • 00:18 — The exercise “second door”: AMPK, GLUT4, and RAC1 (simple explainers)
  • 00:21 — The 48-hour window after exercise; real client story
  • 00:24 — Research highlights: 30-min brisk walk, 2–5 min movement, and 10 min after meals
  • 00:27 — Part 2 teaser: meds for muscle insulin resistance and what to do next
Insulin, Made Simple
  • Insulin is made by your pancreas.
  • It helps sugar (from carbs like glucose, fructose, lactose) move from your blood into your cells.
  • Cells use sugar for energy to breathe, move, and live.
  • Sugar can also be stored in your liver and muscles as glycogen. Extra can be stored as fat.
  • Insulin also tells your liver to stop making more sugar when you have enough.

When insulin is high for a long time, your body is in “storage mode.” That makes fat loss harder.

What Causes Insulin Resistance?
  • Too much refined food (white bread, sweets, sugary drinks, ultra-processed snacks)
  • Too little movement (a sedentary day)
  • Visceral fat (fat around your belly and organs)
  • Poor sleep and chronic stress (raises cortisol and lowers insulin sensitivity)

In short: too much energy in, not enough energy out, and stress on the system.

How Do I Know If I Have It?

You often can’t feel it. It’s happening at the cell level. You can ask your doctor for a fasting insulin test.

  • Test: Fasting insulin (after 8–12 hours without food)
  • A red flag: fasting insulin above about 10–12 micro-units per milliliter
  • Why it’s not ordered a lot:
    • Not part of basic labs
    • Results can vary day-to-day (stress, sleep, exercise)
    • It’s a snapshot, not a 3-month average like A1C

Important: high insulin can be present 10–20 years before type 2 diabetes shows up on A1C or fasting glucose.

  • Diabetes diagnosis criteria often include:
    • A1C ≥ 6.5%
    • Fasting glucose ≥ 126 mg/dL
    • Or a random glucose ≥ 200 mg/dL with symptoms

Catching insulin resistance early matters.

The Ripple Effect: Triglycerides, VLDL, and HDL

When insulin isn’t working well:

  • Fat cells get “leaky” and release more free fatty acids.
  • The liver turns these into triglycerides and sends them out in VLDL (very low-density lipoprotein) particles.
  • VLDL are small and dense. They can slip into blood vessel walls and oxidize (like a rusty chair in the rain). That can start plaque problems.
  • HDL (the “cleanup crew”) can get tossed off their normal job when triglycerides are high. This can lower their helpful action.

More visceral fat = more inflammation = more insulin resistance. It becomes a loop.

Why Muscles Are The Big Deal

Skeletal muscle takes in about 80% of the sugar after a meal. That means Insulin Resistance in the Muscles is a huge driver of high blood sugar.

If the “insulin key” doesn’t open the door well, sugar stays in your blood. But your body has a backup plan during movement.

Exercise Opens a Second Door (No Key Needed)

When you move, your muscles contract. That tells your muscle cells: “We need energy now!”

  • AMPK: Think of this as an “energy alarm” inside the cell. It turns on during exercise.
  • GLUT4: These are sugar “gateways” that move to the cell surface to let sugar in.
  • RAC1: Helps move those gateways into place.

Together, they let sugar enter your muscles even if insulin isn’t working well. Bonus: this effect can last up to 48 hours after you stop moving.

Walking After Meals Works (Even 2 Minutes)

Research findings we discussed:

  • A 30-minute brisk walk can lower post-meal blood sugar spikes, even after higher-carb meals (Nutrients).
  • Just 2–5 minutes of light walking after a meal can improve blood sugar (Sports Medicine).
  • Ten minutes of walking after each main meal lowers post-meal blood sugar better than one 30-minute walk at another time of day (Diabetologia).

Who should not walk for 2 minutes after eating? Pretty much no one. If you’re safe to walk, it helps.

Try This This Week
  • After each meal, walk for 2–10 minutes. Around the room counts. Down the hall counts.
  • On days you can, add a 30-minute brisk walk.
  • Space your movement around meals for best results.
  • Aim to move at least every other day to catch the 48-hour window.
  • Ask your doctor about a fasting insulin test.

Small moves add up. Two minutes is enough to start.

Simple Glossary
  • Insulin: A hormone that helps sugar move from blood into cells.
  • Insulin resistance: Cells don’t respond well to insulin; sugar stays in the blood; insulin levels go up.
  • Glycogen: Stored sugar in your liver and muscles.
  • Triglycerides: Fats in your blood.
  • VLDL: Tiny fat packages that can raise risk when they oxidize.
  • HDL: “Good” cholesterol that helps clean up.
  • AMPK: An energy sensor turned on by movement.
  • GLUT4: Sugar doorways on muscle cells.
  • RAC1: A helper that moves those doorways into place.
SEO Keywords
  • Insulin Resistance in the Muscles
  • fasting insulin test
  • post-meal walking
  • GLUT4 and AMPK
  • visceral fat and blood sugar
  • type 2 diabetes remission
  • lower post-meal glucose
 Next Up (Part 2)

We’ll cover:

  • Medications used for Insulin Resistance in the Muscles
  • Downsides and trade-offs
  • What you can do to beat meds at their own game

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 20: The Diabetes / Cancer Connection18 Aug 202500:51:46

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

The Diabetes–Cancer Connection: What No One’s Talking About

Episode summary:
Amber Wilhoit (RD/LD, CDCES) and Richie Wilhoit (TRS-C) unpack the diabetes cancer connection in clear, simple language. We look at why type 2 diabetes and cancer often show up together, what’s happening inside the body, and what you can do this week to lower risk. Amber also shares highlights from her recent talk for the Florida Society of Clinical Oncology, focused on Veterans living with cancer.

What you’ll learn:

  • The diabetes cancer connection in plain English
  • Why people with type 2 diabetes have a 20–25% higher risk of certain cancers (liver, pancreatic, endometrial, colorectal, breast, bladder)
  • How insulin, insulin resistance, and inflammation can drive cancer growth
  • What hyperinsulinemia and IGF-1 do in the body
  • How oxidative stress damages DNA and why that matters
  • Why “normal labs” can be misleading early on
  • The real role of Metformin in cancer risk (with data)
  • Why processed meat is a problem and what to swap instead
  • Simple steps to lower risk for both diabetes and cancer

Key takeaways:

  • It’s not just “high blood sugar.” The diabetes cancer connection is about a whole-body metabolic storm: insulin resistance, high insulin, chronic inflammation, and oxidative stress.
  • When insulin stays high for a long time (hyperinsulinemia), it acts like a growth signal. That can help damaged cells survive and multiply when they should die (apoptosis).
  • Chronic, low-grade inflammation (think IL-6, TNF-alpha) and oxidative stress from high glucose can damage DNA and set the stage for cancer.
  • Veterans are hit hard by type 2 diabetes and cancer risk. Age plays a role, but metabolic health does too.
  • Obesity is not the whole story. A meta-analysis showed higher cancer incidence and mortality in people with type 2 diabetes independent of obesity.
  • Metformin stands out. Studies show:
    • 54% lower pancreatic cancer risk among Metformin users (Lancet Oncology)
    • 30% lower cancer-related death rate in people with diabetes taking Metformin (systematic review)
    • Likely mechanisms: lower insulin and activation of AMPK (the body’s energy sensor)
  • Ultra-processed foods raise risk. A 10% increase in ultra-processed food intake was linked to a 12% higher overall cancer risk (BMJ, 2018).
  • “Normal” tests can miss early problems. Insulin resistance starts years before a diabetes diagnosis—and risk rises early, too.

Food and lifestyle that help:

  • Eat the rainbow:
    • Cruciferous veggies (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, cabbage) are rich in sulforaphane. This compound supports detox enzymes, lowers inflammation, and helps damaged cells die on time.
    • Mix colors for different phytonutrients: orange (carotenoids), blue/purple (anthocyanins), reds/greens (varied flavonoids).
  • Fiber is your friend:
    • Aim for 30–50 grams daily. Men: ~36g minimum; women: 25g minimum (more is great).
    • Fiber supports gut health, binds excess estrogen, lowers inflammation, and steadies glucose.
    • Beans are a power food. They add fiber, support healthy gut bugs (bacteroidetes), and contain saponins that may inhibit tumor growth and boost immune function.
  • Choose less-processed proteins:
    • American Institute for Cancer Research: avoid processed meats (group 1 carcinogen). Limit red meat.
    • Better swaps: beans, lentils, tofu, tempeh, fish, poultry, and plant-forward options. Some plant-based burgers can be a “less-bad” choice—check ingredients.
  • Move most days:
    • Goal: 150 minutes per week (AICR). Easy start: walk 2 miles a day (can split morning/evening), especially after meals to blunt glucose spikes.
  • Sleep and stress:
    • Aim for 7–9 hours per night. Reduce late-night screens, practice breath work, join a support group, and manage daily stressors.
  • Reduce extra exposures:
    • Use glass instead of plastic when heating food. Be mindful of microplastics and heavy metals (choose seafood wisely).

Medication mindset:

  • Meds can be a helpful “crutch” while you rebuild habits. Don’t stop cold turkey.
  • If you’re on Metformin and working toward remission, great. Once blood sugars are steady, talk with your clinician about next steps.

Common pitfalls we see:

  • Trusting “normal labs” while symptoms persist
  • Thinking “my A1C is only 6.3, so I’m fine”
  • Relying on “diabetic friendly” labels on ultra-processed foods
  • Underestimating years of quiet insulin resistance before diagnosis
  • Tying food choices to events/emotions without a plan for better swaps

Action plan for this week:

  • Add one half-cup of beans to your day. That’s it. Sprinkle on salads, mix into soups, fold into tacos, or blend into dips.
  • Bonus points:
    • Add one serving of cruciferous veggies daily.
    • Walk 10–20 minutes after your largest meal.
    • Swap one processed meat item for a whole-food protein.

Quotes from the episode:

  • “It’s not just about blood sugar. It’s the metabolic storm.”
  • “Hyperinsulinemia acts like a growth signal.”
  • “Ultra-processed foods aren’t just empty—they drive risk.”
  • “Metformin shows strong evidence for lowering certain cancer risks.”

Who this episode is for:

  • Anyone living with prediabetes or type 2 diabetes
  • Veterans and their families
  • People wanting simple, real-world steps to lower cancer risk
  • Caregivers and clinicians looking for practical language for patients

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" - Part 2 of 12 - Renal Glucose Reabsorption14 Apr 202500:24:12
Renal Glucose Reabsorption 

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Renal Glucose Reabsorption, SGLT2 Inhibitors, and Simple Steps You Can Take
Learn Renal Glucose Reabsorption in plain language. Amber and Richie explain SGLT2 meds, side effects, costs, and easy lifestyle tips for type 2 diabetes.

Episode Snapshot

In this episode, we break down Renal Glucose Reabsorption. That is how your kidneys handle sugar. We keep it simple and real. We talk about what happens in a healthy body, what changes in prediabetes and type 2 diabetes, how SGLT2 drugs work, side effects to watch for, costs, and what you can do today. We also share why building muscle helps insulin resistance, and why food and movement still matter.

What Is Renal Glucose Reabsorption?
  • “Renal” means kidneys.
  • “Glucose” means sugar.
  • “Reabsorption” means your body takes it back in.

Your kidneys filter your blood all day long. They are like smart strainers. They filter out waste. They keep the good stuff. One “good stuff” is glucose. In a healthy state, your kidneys pull most of the sugar back into your blood so your body can use it. This is Renal Glucose Reabsorption.

Fun fact from Amber: your kidneys normally pull about 180 grams of glucose back into the blood each day. That is normal and helpful.

There is also a “spill point.” If blood sugar goes above about 180 mg/dL, some sugar starts to spill into the urine.

What Changes in Type 2 Diabetes and Prediabetes

In type 2 diabetes and prediabetes, insulin resistance shows up. That means:

  • Blood sugar in the bloodstream is high.
  • But your cells cannot use that sugar well.
  • Your cells “feel” hungry even when sugar is there.

Your kidneys “listen” to these hungry cells. The kidneys make more SGLT2 transporters (think: more vacuums). These SGLT2s pull even more sugar back into your blood. This is one of Ralph DeFronzo’s “dirty dozen” core defects in type 2 diabetes.

So:

  • Blood sugar is high.
  • Cells are still “starving.”
  • Kidneys reabsorb more sugar.
  • The problem gets worse.

Richie put it simply: it’s a communication fail. The body is trying to help, but it backfires.

SGLT2 Inhibitors: What They Are and How They Help

SGLT2 inhibitors are a class of medicines. Common ones:

  • Farxiga
  • Jardiance
  • Invokana

What they do:

  • They block (inhibit) the SGLT2 “vacuums” in the kidney.
  • That lowers Renal Glucose Reabsorption.
  • More sugar leaves the body in urine.

Main benefits:

  • Lower blood sugar.
  • Help with weight loss (you pee out extra calories).
  • Can protect the heart and kidneys in people who already have heart disease or kidney disease.

Amber’s take: these meds can help the core defect. They also work best alongside lifestyle changes.

Side Effects and Safety: What to Watch For

Most common:

  • Urinary tract infections (UTIs). Sugar in urine can feed bacteria.
  • Genital yeast infections (female genital mycotic infections). Sugar can feed yeast.

Rare but serious:

  • Fournier’s gangrene (a very serious infection of the area between the genitals and the anus). If anything feels wrong “down there” on these meds, seek care now.

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), including “euglycemic DKA”:

  • DKA is when your body cannot use glucose well, so it burns fat fast and makes ketones. Ketones can build up and make your blood acidic.
  • Signs can include nausea, vomiting, belly pain, lightheadedness, and fruity or nail polish remover breath.
  • With SGLT2s, DKA can happen even if your blood sugar is not super high (it might be around 200–250 mg/dL).
  • Higher risk if you are insulin-deficient (some people with long-standing type 2) and in type 1 diabetes.
  • SGLT2 inhibitors are not FDA-approved for type 1 diabetes.

What to do:

  • If you feel sick, have the signs above, or something “down there” is painful, red, swollen, or hot, get medical help right away and tell them you take an SGLT2 inhibitor.
Cost Talk
  • Copays vary by insurance. Many people pay about $30–$80 per month.
  • That is about $650 per year at the median estimate Amber shared.
  • Over 10 years, that adds up.
  • This is one reason we aim for remission when possible and work on the root cause.
Why Lifestyle Still Matters (A Lot)

You can out-eat any diabetes medicine. We see it. Even on max doses of SGLT2s, metformin, GLP-1s, and insulin, blood sugar can still be high if eating patterns and movement do not support insulin sensitivity.

Big levers you control:

  • Lose extra weight if you have it. This reduces insulin resistance.
  • Build metabolically active tissue:
    • Muscle mass
    • Bone density
      More muscle = better insulin sensitivity. You burn more energy even at rest.
  • Move more. Walk, lift, stretch. Sit less.
  • Eat more non-starchy vegetables and fruits. They add antioxidants. They help lower oxidative stress. They help calm the “bad signals” from visceral fat (fat around your organs).

Simple starter tips:

  • Add a veggie to every meal.
  • Take a 10–15 minute walk after eating.
  • Do two days a week of strength work. Bodyweight counts.
  • Drink water through the day.
Quick Q&A (Based on Our Chat)

What is Renal Glucose Reabsorption?
It’s how kidneys pull sugar back into the blood after filtering. It’s normal and helpful—until insulin resistance shows up.

Why do kidneys reabsorb more sugar in type 2?
Cells send a “we’re starving” signal. The kidneys respond by making more SGLT2s and reabsorbing more sugar. It backfires.

How do SGLT2 meds help?
They block those sugar “vacuums,” so sugar leaves in urine. This lowers blood sugar and can help with weight and heart/kidney protection.

Who should not use SGLT2s?
Not for type 1 diabetes. Use caution if you are insulin-deficient. Talk with your provider.

What are warning signs to act on?
UTI or yeast symptoms, new pain/swelling/redness in the perineum, nausea/vomiting, fruity breath, or feeling very ill. Seek care now and say you take an SGLT2.

Can I lower insulin resistance by building muscle?
Yes. More muscle usually means less insulin resistance. Strength work helps.

Plain-Language Glossary
  • Renal Glucose Reabsorption: kidneys taking sugar back into the blood.
  • SGLT2: tiny kidney “transporters” that pull sugar back in.
  • SGLT2 inhibitor: a drug that blocks those transporters so sugar leaves in urine.
  • Glycosuria: sugar in urine.
  • Insulin resistance: your cells do not respond well to insulin, so sugar stays in the blood.
  • Visceral fat: fat around your organs inside your belly.
  • Oxidative stress: damage from “free radicals”; antioxidants from fruits and veggies help.
  • DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis): dangerous acid build-up from high ketones. Can happen even with normal-ish sugars on SGLT2s (euglycemic DKA).
  • Fournier’s gangrene: rare, severe infection of the area between the genitals and the anus.
Takeaways You Can Use Today
  • Renal Glucose Reabsorption is normal, but in type 2 diabetes it can keep blood sugar high.
  • SGLT2 inhibitors lower reabsorption and help sugar leave the body in urine.
  • Watch for UTIs, yeast infections, DKA signs, and any severe pain/redness in the perineum.
  • Lifestyle is powerful: build muscle, move more, and eat more plants.
  • Aim to treat the root cause: insulin resistance.
Talk With Us

We want this to be a two-way conversation. Send your questions to support@empowereddiabetes.com we’ll talk about them on the podcast. Tell us what you need help with, and what topics you want next.

Next episode: muscle insulin resistance and metformin. We’ll talk about what it is, what metformin does, and how it fits with your goals.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 1 of 12 - Decreased Incretin Effect06 Apr 202500:22:17
Decreased Incretin Effect: What It Is, How GLP-1/GIP Meds Work, Side Effects, Costs, and Natural Ways to Help

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Welcome to our first full-length episode in our 12-part series, “Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better.” Today we talk about Decreased Incretin Effect. This is a core problem in type 2 diabetes. We break down what it means, why GLP-1 and GIP medicines are so popular, what they do in your body, side effects, cost, and simple ways you can boost your incretin effect without meds.

Hosts:

  • Amber Wilhoit, RD/LD, CDCES
  • Richie Wilhoit, TRS-C

Note: This episode focuses on type 2 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is different. Type 1 is an insulin deficiency from an autoimmune process.

Episode Summary (in plain language)
  • The incretin effect is your gut telling your pancreas, “Food is coming—make insulin now.”
  • In type 2 diabetes, the incretin effect is weaker. This is called Decreased Incretin Effect.
  • GLP-1 and GIP medicines (like Ozempic, Mounjaro, and Wegovy) help by slowing stomach emptying, calming hunger, and helping the pancreas release insulin when food is present.
  • These meds can help with blood sugar and weight. But there are side effects and costs.
  • You can also boost your incretin effect with food and lifestyle.
  • The goal: use meds wisely (if needed), then build habits so your body does it better over time.
What Is the Incretin Effect?
  • When you eat, your gut releases hormones called GLP-1 and GIP.
  • These hormones tell your pancreas to release insulin quickly and more efficiently.
  • Fun fact: The body makes more insulin when sugar is eaten by mouth than when sugar is given by IV. That’s because the gut hormones kick in when you eat.
What Is Decreased Incretin Effect?
  • In type 2 diabetes, the incretin effect is not as strong.
  • Your body may make less GLP-1 and GIP or not respond to them well.
  • Result: slower insulin release after meals and bigger blood sugar spikes.
GLP-1/GIP Medicines We Discuss
  • Brand names mentioned: Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro
  • What they do:
    • Slow gastric emptying (food leaves the stomach more slowly)
    • Help your pancreas release insulin when glucose is present (glucose-dependent)
    • Act on brain hunger and fullness signals (ghrelin and leptin)
  • Why this can be helpful:
    • Lower after-meal blood sugar spikes
    • Less hunger, more fullness
    • Possible weight loss
    • Possible protection of beta cells (insulin-producing cells)
    • Some heart and kidney benefits have been shown in people with type 2 diabetes
Why Are These Meds So Popular Right Now?
  • Weight loss effects and appetite control make them appealing.
  • Social media and celebrity buzz add to demand.
  • There were shortages of FDA-approved products. That opened the door for a 503A exemption, where compounding pharmacies can make versions. These may vary in purity and potency and are not FDA-approved versions.

Note: We are sharing what we discussed on the show. Always talk with your own healthcare team about risks and benefits.

How They Work in Your Body (simple science)
  • Brain: Less hunger. You feel full sooner.
  • Stomach: Food empties more slowly. This can reduce after-meal blood sugar spikes.
  • Pancreas: Releases more insulin, but only when food/glucose is present. This is why these drugs have a lower risk of causing low blood sugar in people not using insulin.
Common Side Effects
  • Nausea and vomiting (most common)
  • Diarrhea
  • Dehydration (can stress the kidneys)
  • Slow stomach emptying can be a risk if you are going under anesthesia (talk to your care team before procedures)

Amber shared a serious case reported where slowed gut movement led to backup and aspiration during anesthesia. This is rare but important to know. Always tell your surgical team if you take these meds.

Will I Need to Stay on These Meds Forever?
  • Some people see “rebound” weight gain when they stop, especially if they did not build strong habits while on the meds.
  • You can lose muscle mass if you eat too little protein/calories, which can slow metabolism and make weight regain more likely.
  • There is a concern that your body may downregulate its own GLP-1 production while on the medicine. If you stop, you may need time and habits to rebuild your natural signals.
  • Best path: Use meds (if needed) plus nutrition, movement, sleep, and stress tools. The goal is to transition to lifestyle as your main therapy when safe and possible.
Cost Talk (what we discussed)
  • With type 2 diabetes and insurance: many pay about $25–$200/month.
  • Without coverage: list price can be about $950–$1,350/month.
  • Compounded versions (during shortages) may be offered at lower prices, like ~$270–$400/month or ~$4,500/year. These are not FDA-approved versions and can vary in purity and potency.
  • Actual costs vary a lot. Your doctor may need prior authorization.
How to Boost Your Incretin Effect Without Meds

Remember our series theme: “Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better.” These habits can support GLP-1 and GIP, lower after-meal spikes, and improve insulin sensitivity.

Food:

  • Fermented foods: kimchi, kombucha, sauerkraut
  • High fiber: whole grains, beans, lentils, veggies, fruit with skin
  • Resistant starches: cooled potatoes, green bananas, cooled rice, oats
  • Protein at each meal: eggs, fish, poultry, tofu, Greek yogurt, beans
  • Healthy fats: omega-3s (salmon, chia, flax), nuts, seeds, olive oil
  • Colorful, antioxidant-rich foods: berries, leafy greens, peppers

Lifestyle:

  • Move daily: walking, strength training, and activity after meals help lower glucose spikes
  • Build muscle: muscle is metabolically active and improves insulin sensitivity
  • Sleep 7–9 hours: poor sleep raises hunger and insulin resistance
  • Manage stress: breathing, prayer, mindfulness, or time in nature

Weight loss (if advised by your care team) can restore insulin sensitivity and improve Decreased Incretin Effect.

Pro tip: Combine protein + fiber + healthy fat at meals. Eat slowly. These steps can reduce big after-meal sugar spikes.

Who Is This For?
  • This episode is about type 2 diabetes and Decreased Incretin Effect.
  • People with type 1 diabetes usually have very low insulin production from an autoimmune process. In some rare cases, a person can have type 1 and also develop type 2 features. Work closely with your care team.
Key Takeaways
  • Decreased Incretin Effect is a core defect in type 2 diabetes.
  • GLP-1/GIP meds can help blood sugar, fullness, and weight, with some added heart and kidney benefits shown in type 2 diabetes.
  • Side effects can include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dehydration, and risks with anesthesia. Always tell your provider.
  • Costs can be high. Insurance coverage varies. Compounded versions are not the same as FDA-approved products.
  • Habits are the foundation. Build food and lifestyle skills so you are not dependent on the medicine long term.
What To Ask Your Healthcare Provider
  • Do I have Decreased Incretin Effect?
  • Would a GLP-1/GIP medicine help me now?
  • What dose and what side effects should I watch for?
  • How should I change my eating, protein, and strength training to protect muscle?
  • Do I need to stop this medicine before a procedure or anesthesia?
  • What is my plan to step down off the medicine in the future?
Next Episode Teaser

Part 2 in the core defects series: renal glucose reabsorption. We’ll talk about SGLT-2 medicines like Farxiga, Jardiance, and Invokana—and how lifestyle can help here too.

Connect With Us
  • Drop your questions in the comments. We’ll do our best to answer.
  • Like and subscribe so more people can learn at no cost.
  • Our mission: to shift the national focus from type 2 diabetes management to remission
About the Hosts
  • Amber Wilhoit, RD/LD, CDCES: Registered dietitian and certified diabetes care and education specialist.
  • Richie Wilhoit, TRS-C: Co-host and curious question-asker, learning right along with you.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

The Diabetes Podcast Launch Announcement05 Apr 202500:07:28

Welcome to The Diabetes Podcast. This is a podcast for people with Type 1, Type 2, or Pre-Diabetes where we will speak to the behaviors that work and the behaviors that do not work to combat this disease. Amber is a Licensed and Registered Dietitian (RD/LD) and Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialist (CDCES) with over 20 years of experience in the field of Diabetes care, so if you or a loved one have been diagnosed with diabetes and what to know what to do, this is the place to start.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 19 - The Remission Mindset11 Aug 202501:08:19
The Remission Mindset: 5 Truths to Move From Managing Diabetes to Remission

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

This no-fluff episode gives you the remission mindset you need to go from coping to conquering. We share five truths that help you stop the slide, take charge, and put type 2 diabetes into remission. It’s bold. It may feel uncomfortable. It could change your life.

What You’ll Learn
  • Why the remission mindset beats “management”
  • The 5 truths that make remission possible and sustainable
  • How to stop fueling the disease so it withers
  • How common diabetes and prediabetes are (it’s half of US adults)
  • What late-stage diabetes really looks like (so you don’t go there)
  • The hidden costs (money, mood, time, family, freedom)
  • The key checks that protect your eyes, feet, kidneys, and heart
  • Why you need help and how to get it
  • A simple 5-year plan to guide your next steps
Quick Stats We Discuss
  • 1 in 2 US adults has diabetes or prediabetes (many don’t know it).
  • Type 2 diabetes raises heart attack and stroke risk 4–5 times.
  • Diabetes is the #1 cause of non-accidental amputations.
  • Nearly 1 in 5 teens (12–18) and 1 in 4 young adults (19–34) have prediabetes.
  • Annual US diabetes cost: $413 billion.
  • People with diabetes pay about $4,800 more out-of-pocket each year (not counting ER or hospital stays).
The 5 Truths of the Remission Mindset
  1. You are responsible for your health
    Your doctor cares, but you are with you all day. Most primary care visits are short. Generic advice won’t cut it. You must lead. This is not about blame. It is about power. When you lead, you win.

How to act:

  • Treat your health like your top job.
  • Know your numbers. Track them.
  • Learn fast. Apply faster.
  1. Managing diabetes is a losing strategy
    “Management” means living with the disease. Remission means moving away from it. You don’t want an “okay” level of harm. You want the harm gone. Patch the hole in the boat, don’t just bail water.

How to act:

  • Stop fueling the disease. Cut the inputs that drive high blood sugar.
  • Make food, sleep, movement, and stress habits work for you.
  • Aim for progress every week. Momentum matters.
  1. Diabetes is that bad
    We say this with love. The risks are real: blindness, kidney failure, amputations, stroke, heart disease, and more. Most people say, “No one told me.” We are telling you now—so you can act now.

How to act:

  • Take this seriously before a crisis hits.
  • Do the checks that prevent the worst (see “Protective Checks” below).
  • Build your “why”: family, freedom, years of good life.
  1. Diabetes is expensive
    Not only money, but time, energy, and joy. Missed trips. Skipped parties. Worry at every meal. Complex med regimens. ER visits for highs and lows. It adds up.

How to act:

  • Spend now on prevention and skills, not later on crisis care.
  • Simplify your regimen by changing your habits.
  • Ask, “Is this choice worth a year of my life?”
  1. You need help
    This is hard to do alone. Not because you’re weak, but because life, food, stress, and systems are stacked against you. The right team and plan make the road shorter, safer, and faster.

How to act:

  • Get expert coaching focused on remission (not just “management”).
  • Use a clear plan, simple rules, and steady support.
  • Keep going when it gets tough. You are worth it.
important note: Type 2 vs Type 1

This episode speaks about type 2 diabetes remission. Type 1 is an autoimmune condition and is different. We love our type 1 community. This show’s remission content is for type 2.

Protective Checks That Save Vision, Feet, Kidneys, and Heart
  • Annual dilated eye exam: Prevent up to 90% of diabetes-related blindness with early treatment.
  • Regular foot exams and education: Prevent up to 85% of amputations.
  • Blood pressure control: Cut kidney decline by about one-third.
  • Cholesterol improvement: Reduce heart risks by 20–50%.
  • Smart insulin use: If you are on insulin, learn how food, timing, and doses work together to avoid dangerous lows.

Note on lows and highs: Many ER visits happen when insulin does not match food. Complex regimens make this more likely. A simpler path, with better habits, reduces that risk.

How to Starve the Disease and Feed Your Health
  • Food: Choose foods that do not spike blood sugar. Eat enough protein. Favor fiber. Cut ultra-processed foods.
  • Sleep: Keep a steady sleep schedule. Poor sleep drives insulin resistance.
  • Movement: Move daily. Walk after meals. Build strength.
  • Stress: Lower stress where you can. Use simple resets: breath work, short walks, sunlight, journaling.
  • Environment: Make the healthy choice the easy choice at home and work.

Remember: When you stop fueling the disease, it starts to wither.

Your Action Step This Week

Do the 5-year plan exercise:

  • If you could not fail, where do you want your health to be in 5 years?
  • Are yesterday’s habits taking you there? Be honest.
  • If yes, keep going and level up.
  • If no or not sure, get help and get a plan.

Take one step today:

  • Book your dilated eye exam if you haven’t this year.
  • Schedule a foot check.
  • Plan your next 3 dinners with protein, fiber, and fewer carbs.
  • Walk 10–15 minutes after your next meal.
  • Go to bed 30 minutes earlier tonight.

Small steps, done daily, lead to big change.

Timestamps
  • 00:00 – Why the remission mindset matters now
  • 01:00 – Amber’s takeaways from the ADCES conference
  • 05:00 – The “1 in 2 adults” wake-up call
  • 06:00 – The five truths overview
  • 08:00 – Truth 1: You are responsible for your health
  • 14:00 – Truth 2: Managing is a losing strategy
  • 20:00 – Truth 3: Diabetes is that bad (real-world outcomes)
  • 35:00 – Truth 4: Diabetes is expensive (money and more)
  • 55:00 – Truth 5: You need help (why support changes outcomes)
  • 1:05:00 – Your 5-year plan and first steps
Quotes
  • “Managing diabetes is a losing strategy. Aim for remission.”
  • “There isn’t an acceptable amount of a disease you want to live with.”
  • “If you stop fueling the disease, it starts to wither.”

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 18 - Ultra-Processed Foods04 Aug 202501:07:29
Ultra Processed Foods: Clarity Over Confusion 

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

This episode is all about ultra processed foods—what they are, why they matter for cravings, insulin resistance, and blood sugar, and how to spot them fast. No shame. Just clarity. If you’ve ever felt “the more I try, the worse it gets,” you are not broken. You are surrounded by food designed to overpower your biology. Let’s get you back in the driver’s seat.

Quick Summary
  • We explain the NOVA system (Groups 1–4) so you can name what you’re eating.
  • We show how ultra processed foods change hunger and fullness.
  • We cover why some foods make you eat more without meaning to (+508 calories/day in a study).
  • We walk through high fructose corn syrup, seed oils, tallow fries, and processed meat with plain language.
  • We end with simple swaps and a “workable” way to start.
The NOVA System, Made Simple
  • Group 1: Unprocessed or minimally processed food.
    • Examples: fresh or frozen fruits and veggies, plain meat or fish, eggs, dried beans, lentils, whole grains, milk, plain yogurt.
  • Group 2: Processed culinary ingredients.
    • Examples: olive oil, butter, sugar, salt, vinegar.
  • Group 3: Processed foods (Group 1 + Group 2, using simple methods).
    • Examples: simple bread (flour, yeast, salt), cheese, pickles, canned beans, canned fish, jarred tomato sauce.
  • Group 4: Ultra processed foods (industrially made with additives you don’t cook with at home).
    • Common flags: artificial colors and flavors, preservatives, emulsifiers, gums, isolated starches/proteins, sugar substitutes (like sucralose or acesulfame potassium), high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated or inter-esterified oils.
    • Examples: flavored yogurts, protein bars with long labels, soda and energy drinks, many breakfast cereals, frozen pizzas and meals.

Working tip:

  • Short ingredient list (5–6 items you know)? More likely Group 1–3.
  • Long list with words ending in “-ose,” “-ate,” or “-ide,” plus artificial sweeteners or gums? Likely Group 4.
Why Ultra Processed Foods Matter (Especially With Diabetes)
  • They can hijack metabolism, increase visceral fat, and raise inflammation.
  • They are engineered to be super tasty and easy to overeat.
  • In a controlled study, people eating ultra processed foods ate about 508 more calories per day on average when allowed to eat as much as they wanted.
  • In 2 weeks, that group gained about 2 pounds.
  • A 2023 BMJ paper: for every 10% increase in ultra processed foods in the diet, type 2 diabetes risk rose by 15%.
  • Sugar can hit the brain’s dopamine system in ways that drive cravings. It’s not “you”—it’s design.
“Out of a Package” vs. Ultra Processed

Not all packaged food is bad. Canned beans, canned fish, simple bread, and jarred tomato sauce can be Group 3. The issue is the level of industrial processing and the additives used.

High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) vs. Sugar: What We Said
  • History: Farm policy and corn subsidies made HFCS cheap and common. Tariffs made cane/beet sugar pricier. HFCS is stable in acidic drinks and easy to ship as a liquid.
  • How HFCS is made: corn starch → enzymes → glucose → more enzymes → part of it becomes fructose (HFCS-42 or HFCS-55).
  • Table sugar (from cane) is crushed, boiled, and crystallized. Fewer steps. No enzymatic reshaping.
  • Americans still consume around 40 pounds of HFCS per person per year (down from ~60 pounds in the early 2000s).
  • Marketing tried to rebrand HFCS as “corn sugar.” FDA said no.
  • If you want the “old school” soda once in a while, Mexican Coke uses sugar, not HFCS. Still soda—just different sweetener.
Oils: Seed Oils, Trans Fats, and Tallow Fries
  • Hydrogenated oils (trans fats) were pushed in when saturated fat got blamed for heart disease. That didn’t end well.
  • Inter-esterified oils were later used to replace trans fats in many ultra processed foods.
  • Beef tallow has a higher smoke point than many seed oils. That doesn’t make a basket of fries a health food.
  • Beware “one villain” marketing (like “100% beef tallow = 100% better fries”). A fried meal with white buns, processed meat, and soda is still not a health meal.
Processed Meat, Safety Scares, and What Changed
  • Mad cow disease (BSE) taught us about prions—misfolded proteins that are very hard to destroy.
  • Risk rose when mechanical separation pulled spinal/brain tissue into meat products.
  • Reforms followed: bans on feeding cattle-to-cattle (1997), removal of high-risk tissues in older cattle, tighter rules on separation and inspections.
  • Bottom line: the system was built for speed and profit, then patched after problems. It’s better, but still opaque. The burden of choice lands on you.
How To Spot Ultra Processed Foods Fast
  • Ingredient list longer than 5–6 items.
  • Additives you wouldn’t cook with at home.
  • Sweeteners: sucralose, acesulfame potassium, erythritol.
  • Isolates: soy protein isolate, modified food starch.
  • Colors: Red 40, Blue 1 (note: “natural flavors” doesn’t mean much).
  • “Enriched” refined flour often points to Group 4 versions.
  • Suffix clues: “-ose,” “-ate,” “-ide” can signal more industrial chemistry.
Simple Swaps (That We Actually Use)
  • Flavored yogurt → plain yogurt + a pile of fruit. If you need, drizzle a small teaspoon of honey at first.
  • Breakfast cereal → oats with fruit and nuts, or eggs with veggies.
  • Soda/energy drinks → water, sparkling water, or coffee/tea you sweeten less (or not at all).
  • Protein bars with long labels → nuts, fruit, cheese, hard-boiled eggs, or a simple homemade bar.
  • Frozen meals → batch-cook a simple chili, stew, or roasted tray bake you portion and freeze.

Planning beats panic:

  • You will get hungry every 3–5 hours. Plan for it. Pack something simple so you aren’t stuck with a drive-thru decision.
A Working Definition (Our Episode’s Version)

Ultra processed foods are industrial products made with ingredients and techniques you don’t use at home—like artificial sweeteners, flavors, colors, emulsifiers, gums, isolated starches and proteins, and engineered oils. They’re built to be shelf-stable, cheap, and super tasty. And they often lead to overeating, bigger glucose spikes, and more risk over time.

Try This Awareness Exercise
  • For one week, jot down what you eat.
  • Label each item: 1, 2, 3, or 4 (NOVA groups).
  • No judgment. Just notice the pattern.
  • Aim for more Group 1, some Group 2 and 3, and fewer Group 4.
  • See how you feel as Group 4 goes down.
Memorable Quotes
  • “This episode is about clarity over confusion.”
  • “You’re not alone and you’re not broken. You’re surrounded by food that was engineered to overpower your biology.”
  • “Ultra processed foods can hijack your metabolism.”
  • “In a study, people on ultra processed diets ate about 508 more calories a day—without trying.”
  • “A basket of tallow-fried potatoes next to a refined bun and soda is not a health food.”
  • “Plan for hunger. It’s coming every 3–5 hours.”
FAQ About Ultra Processed Foods
  • What are ultra processed foods?
    • Industrially made products with additives and techniques not used at home. Think long labels, artificial sweeteners, colors, flavors, gums, and engineered oils.
  • Are ultra processed foods always unhealthy?
    • The problem is how they’re engineered and how they affect hunger, blood sugar, and overeating. Less is better. No shame—just reduce when you can.
  • How do I spot them?
    • Long ingredient lists, artificial sweeteners (sucralose, acesulfame K), “modified” starches, isolates, and color additives (like Red 40).
  • Is high fructose corn syrup worse than sugar?
    • HFCS is more industrial, cheaper, and common in drinks. It’s stable, easy to use at scale, and overused. Sugar isn’t a “health food” either, but HFCS took over for cost and convenience.
  • Do ultra processed foods make me eat more?
    • In a study where people could eat as much as they wanted, the ultra processed group ate ~508 more calories per day and gained about 2 pounds in 2 weeks.
  • Is there a special “diabetes diet”?
    • A healthy diet for type 2 diabetes looks like a healthy diet for most people: more real food (Group 1), fewer ultra processed foods.
Key Takeaways
  • Ultra processed foods change how hungry and how full you feel.
  • They can lead to higher blood sugar swings and overeating without trying.
  • Don’t fall for “one villain” marketing. Look at the whole meal.
  • Plan your food. If you plan, you win.
  • Start small. Swap one thing. Then another.
Call to Action
  • If this helped, share it with someone who feels stuck with cravings.
  • Want help making the shift? Visit EmpoweredDiabetes.com. Real remission is possible.
  • Take courage. You can do this—and we can help.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 17: Nutrient Density of Foods28 Jul 202500:57:33
Nutrient Density: The Simple Way To Eat Better And Steady Your Blood Sugar

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Learn what Nutrient Density is, why it matters for blood sugar and type 2 diabetes, and easy ways to add more Nutrient Density to every meal. Simple tips, real talk, and doable swaps from Richie and Amber.

Slug: nutrient-density-diabetes-podcast

Episode Summary

Richie: Ever think, “I’m eating less… so why don’t I feel better?”
This episode is for you.

Amber: Today we talk about Nutrient Density. What it means. Why it helps your health and your blood sugar. And how to make it work in real life.

In this show, we explain:

  • What Nutrient Density means in plain words
  • Why “empty calories” leave you tired and still hungry
  • How to build meals that keep you full and steady
  • The most common nutrient gaps we see
  • Easy swaps you can make this week

What Is Nutrient Density?

Amber: Nutrient Density means how many good things you get in a food for the calories it has.
Those good things include:

  • Vitamins and minerals
  • Fiber
  • Protein
  • Plant nutrients (the colorful stuff in plants)

Nutrient-dense foods give you a lot of nutrition with fewer calories. They are often:

  • Rich in vitamins and minerals
  • High in fiber and/or protein
  • Lower in added sugar and refined grains
  • Less processed

Empty Calories vs. Nutrient Density

Some foods give you calories but not much else. That’s what we mean by “empty calories.”
Examples:

  • Soda
  • Chips
  • Pastries
  • Sugar-loaded coffees and teas

Amber: These spike blood sugar, then crash it. They can leave you hungry again fast.

Richie: The stat that shocked me—about 40% of the average American’s calories come from added sugar and fat. That’s a lot of energy with not much nutrition.

Why Nutrient Density Matters For Blood Sugar
  • You feel full longer (thanks to fiber and protein).
  • You get a steadier blood sugar curve.
  • You stop chasing energy with caffeine and sugar.
  • You help your body use insulin better over time.

Richie: Is there a difference between being hungry for calories and being hungry for nutrients?
Amber: Yes. You can eat a lot of calories and still be undernourished. Your body keeps asking for more.

The Donut vs. Beans Picture
  • A donut and a cup of beans can have similar calories.
  • But beans bring fiber, protein, minerals, and slow, steady energy.
  • Donuts bring sugar and fat, and hunger comes back fast.

Richie: Two donuts? Easy. Two cups of beans? That takes time. And I’d be full.

If You Eat Less, You Need More Nutrient Density

If you eat fewer calories (small appetite, GLP-1 meds, or after surgery), your body still needs the same vitamins, minerals, fiber, and protein. So every bite needs to count.

Signs you may be missing key nutrients:

  • Low energy, poor sleep
  • Hair thinning
  • Strong cravings
  • “I ate, but I’m still hungry”

Common Nutrient Gaps We See (and how to fill them)
  1. Magnesium
  • Why it matters: Helps blood sugar, blood pressure, nerves, and sleep.
  • Low may look like: Cramps, restless legs, poor sleep, “wired but tired,” cravings.
  • Foods: Beans, seeds, leafy greens, whole grains, dark chocolate.
  1. Potassium
  • Why it matters: Helps blood pressure, heart, kidneys, and hydration inside your cells.
  • Low may look like: High blood pressure, muscle weakness, fatigue, heart flutters.
  • Foods: Bananas, apricots, sweet potatoes, beans, leafy greens.
  1. Vitamin D
  • Why it matters: Bones, immune health, mood, insulin sensitivity.
  • Low may look like: Brain fog, joint pain, frequent illness, low mood in winter.
  • Where from: Sunlight, fortified foods (like milk), and often a supplement.
  • Note: Many people benefit from a modest daily dose. Vitamin D is fat‑soluble, so don’t megadose without guidance. Choose a third‑party tested brand.
  1. Iron
  • Why it matters: Oxygen in the blood, energy, focus, temperature control.
  • Low may look like: Pale skin, tiredness, cold hands/feet, dizziness, hair loss.
  • Foods: Beans, lentils, tofu, tempeh, leafy greens. Pair with vitamin C for better absorption.
  1. Vitamin B12
  • Why it matters: Nerves, DNA, red blood cells, mood and focus.
  • Low may look like: Numbness/tingling, brain fog, fatigue, mouth sores, glossy red tongue.
  • Who’s at risk: Vegans, adults 50+, people on PPIs, and some long‑term metformin users.
  • Tip: A B12 supplement can help if you’re at risk.
  1. Fiber
  • Why it matters: Blood sugar control, gut health, cholesterol, fullness.
  • Foods: Beans/legumes, whole grains, fruits, veggies, nuts, seeds.
  • Note: Avocados are a great fiber food.

Same Calories. Different Results. (A simple look)

Two days at about 1,600 calories:

Day A (lower Nutrient Density):

  • Granola bar
  • Frozen “diet” entrée
  • 100-cal popcorn
  • Grilled chicken + white rice + broccoli
  • Sugar-free pudding

Day B (higher Nutrient Density):

  • Steel-cut oats + flax + berries + almond butter
  • Lentil soup + quinoa-kale salad + roasted veggies (fresh‑frozen is great)
  • Greek yogurt + chia + walnuts
  • Tofu stir-fry + mixed veggies + brown rice
  • Apple + natural peanut butter or almonds

What changes with Day B?

  • More fiber
  • More protein
  • Less sodium
  • More vitamins, minerals, and plant nutrients

Result: You feel fuller. Your energy is steadier. Your blood sugar curve is kinder.

“Eat Food That Rots” (What we mean)

Richie: Wait—you’re not saying eat rotten food, right?
Amber: No! Eat food that would go bad in a few days or a week. That means it’s real food.

  • Fresh or fresh‑frozen fruits and veggies are great.
  • If bread never molds, ask why. Fewer additives often means a shorter shelf life.

Can Coke Zero help with Nutrient Density?

Richie: Coke Zero has no calories. Is that “better”?
Amber: It may save sugar and calories. But it adds no nutrients. Neutral at best. Focus on foods and drinks that add value (water, tea, smoothies with fruit and seeds, etc.).

Diet Culture vs. Real Life
  • Diet culture pushes extremes.
  • We push doable steps.
  • Nutrient Density is about inclusion, not restriction.

Amber: Ask, “How can I add nutrients to this meal?” Not, “How little can I eat?”

Simple Ways To Add Nutrient Density Today
  1. Add, don’t subtract
  • Toss spinach, peppers, onions, tomatoes, and garlic into eggs.
  • Add beans to salads, soups, tacos, pasta, and grain bowls.
  • Top oats or yogurt with chia, flax, walnuts, or almonds.
  1. Use color on purpose
  • Eat the rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue/purple.
  • Each color brings different plant nutrients.
  1. Plate method for steady blood sugar
  • Half plate: non‑starchy veggies
  • Quarter plate: protein (plant-forward works great)
  • Quarter plate: fiber-rich carbs (beans, lentils, brown rice, quinoa, sweet potato)
  • Add a little healthy fat (nuts, seeds, avocado, olive oil)
  1. Fresh‑frozen is your friend
  • Frozen veggies and fruits are fast, affordable, and nutrient-dense.
  1. Low appetite? Make every bite count
  • If you eat less (GLP‑1 meds or small appetite), focus on protein + fiber + key micronutrients each time you eat.

Richie’s “Jar Trick” For Cravings

Richie: Picture a jar. Big rocks are your nutrient-dense foods. Sand is the treats.
Put the rocks in first. The sand can still fit, but not as much. You’re full of the good stuff first.

One Small Thing This Week (Pick One)
  • Add, don’t subtract: Add one veggie and one bean to a meal you already eat.
  • New color: If you eat only red/yellow fruit, add one green or orange fruit this week.
  • Eat food that rots: Choose two fresh or fresh‑frozen produce items and use them up.

Pull Quotes
  • “The fewer calories you eat, the more wisely you need to spend them.”
  • “Nutrient Density is about adding more of what helps you feel good.”
  • “Fill up on the good stuff first.”

Timestamps
  • 00:00 — What is Nutrient Density?
  • 03:00 — Empty calories and the “40%” stat
  • 08:00 — Donut vs. beans
  • 10:00 — Eating less means you must eat better
  • 20:00 — Common nutrient gaps (magnesium, potassium, vitamin D, iron, B12, fiber)
  • 39:00 — Two 1,600-calorie days compared
  • 46:00 — “Eat food that rots” and fresh‑frozen tips
  • 50:00 — Nutrient Density and blood sugar control
  • 54:00 — Real-life “displacement” strategy
  • 57:00 — Key takeaway and how we help

Your Takeaway

Richie: Make every bite count.
Amber: Lead with Nutrient Density. Add color, fiber, and protein. Fill up on the good stuff first.

If you’re trying to shift toward eating for more nourishment—not just numbers—you’re not alone. This is what we do at Empowered Diabetes. We make it practical, doable, and tailored to you.

Have questions? Email support@empowereddiabetes.com and we’ll answer them on a future show.

Note: This podcast is for education only and not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider about changes to supplements or medicines.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 16 - Fiber is the New Protein21 Jul 202500:42:22
Fiber Is the New Protein — The Diabetes Podcast Show Notes

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Protein gets all the hype, but Fiber is the real star for blood sugar, heart health, weight, and hunger. In this episode, we show you simple ways to add more Fiber to your day and why it works.

The Big Idea
  • Most of us do not have a protein problem. We have a Fiber problem.
  • 95% of Americans get enough protein.
  • 95% of Americans do not get enough Fiber. Most people only get 10–15 grams a day.
  • Aim for at least 25–35 grams a day. For blood sugar and heart health, 50 grams a day is even better. About 30 grams a day helps lower the risk of getting type 2 diabetes.
Why Fiber Matters (and why we’re so excited about it)

Richie: Protein bars, protein milk, protein cookies… it’s everywhere.
Amber: But Fiber is the thing most people are missing. And it does a lot.

Fiber helps your heart

  • Fiber forms a thick gel in your gut.
  • That gel traps bile (which has cholesterol) so your body poops it out.
  • Your liver then pulls LDL (“bad” cholesterol) from your blood to make more bile.
  • Result: lower LDL, less inflammation, better blood pressure, lower risk of heart attack and stroke.

Fiber steadies blood sugar

  • It slows how fast food leaves your stomach.
  • You get a smoother rise in blood sugar, not big spikes and crashes.

Fiber helps hunger and weight

  • It fills your stomach and tells your brain, “I’m full.”
  • It turns on fullness hormones like GLP-1, PYY, and CCK (the same pathway many GLP-1 meds use).
  • Your gut works a bit harder, so you burn a few more calories.
  • Some calories get trapped in plant cell walls, so you absorb a little less.
    • Cool nut study: people pooped out more fat from whole nuts than from nut butter or nut oil. Whole > butter > oil for fullness and Fiber.

Fiber feeds your good gut bugs

  • They make short-chain fatty acids that help your gut, blood sugar, and brain.
  • Your gut and brain “talk” through your vagus nerve and hormones. Fiber supports that healthy chat.
Wait… so where did the Fiber go?

Richie: Processed foods.
Amber: Yep. Milling and refining strip away Fiber and many nutrients. Then companies “enrich” the flour to add some vitamins back. But the Fiber is still gone. Choose whole foods when you can.

Protein: what’s “enough”?
  • For most non-athlete adults, the RDA is 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight.
  • Many older adults and women in perimenopause may need more.
  • In the U.S., about 95% of people already meet protein needs. Fiber is the real gap.
How Much Fiber Should You Eat?
  • Most people today: 10–15 g/day (too low).
  • Good minimum: 25 g/day for women, 35–38 g/day for men.
  • Great for blood sugar and heart health: around 50 g/day.
  • To lower type 2 diabetes risk: about 30 g/day.
  • Amber’s personal stretch goal is 100 g/day, but that’s advanced and not needed for most. Start with 50 g if you have type 2 diabetes or want strong benefits.

Richie: Fiber is like a low-cost, natural way to get some of the same effects as GLP-1 meds. Try Fiber first.

Start Here: Simple, Safe, Doable
  • Add 1/2 cup of beans to your day. That’s it. Do it daily.
  • Or track your Fiber for one day to see where you’re starting from.
  • Increase slowly: add about 5 grams more Fiber per day each week.
  • Drink more water as you add Fiber. The “gel” needs water to work well.
  • Cook beans and lentils well to reduce gas. Your gut will adjust.

Important note: This is education, not medical advice. Amber is a dietitian and diabetes educator, but not your personal clinician. Check with your care team if you have GI disease or special needs.

Best Fiber Foods (easy wins)

Think “beans, greens, grains, nuts, seeds, and fruit.”

  • Beans, peas, lentils, legumes
    • Black beans, kidney beans, chickpeas, lentils, split peas
    • Hummus is good, but whole chickpeas have more Fiber
  • Whole grains
    • Oats/steel-cut oats/groats, barley, bulgur, farro, quinoa
    • Popcorn (air-popped, go easy on oils and butter)
  • Nuts and seeds
    • Chia seeds (tiny spoon, big Fiber)
    • Ground flaxseed
    • Pumpkin seeds
    • Almonds (whole nuts beat nut butters and oils for Fiber)
  • Fruit
    • Raspberries, blackberries, prunes
    • Kiwi (golden kiwi is great; eat the skin for extra Fiber)
  • Veggies
    • Artichokes, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower
  • Avocado
    • Has a little Fiber; still a nice add

Tip: Whole foods beat powders. Fiber supplements can help, but food-based Fiber works better for most outcomes in studies.

Label Hacks to Find Real Fiber
  • Look for “100% whole grain” or “100% whole wheat” as the first ingredient.
  • Use the 5-to-1 rule:
    • Total carbs ÷ Fiber
    • If the number is under 5, that’s a higher-Fiber choice.
Common Questions
  • Will I get bloated? Maybe at first. That’s normal. Go slow, add water, cook beans well. Your gut will adapt.
  • Do artificial sweeteners affect hunger? Some can. Amber tends to avoid them because they may confuse hunger/fullness cues for some people.
  • Is 50 grams too much? Not if you build up to it. Many people feel great at 30–50 grams. Go at your pace.
What To Do This Week

Richie: Keep it simple.
Amber: Add a half cup of beans every day.

  • Step 1: Track your Fiber for one day (just get curious).
  • Step 2: Add 1/2 cup of beans daily.
  • Step 3: Add one more easy Fiber win:
    • 2 tbsp chia at breakfast, or
    • A cup of berries, or
    • A bowl of oats, or
    • A veggie side at dinner.
  • Step 4: Drink more water.
Why This Works (the short story)
  • Fiber fills you up.
  • Fiber slows digestion and helps your fullness hormones.
  • Fiber smooths blood sugar.
  • Fiber lowers LDL and supports your heart.
  • Fiber feeds good gut bugs.
  • Fiber is cheap, simple, and available.
Share Your Win
  • Tag us @EmpoweredDiabetes and show how you’re adding Fiber to your plate.
  • Follow the show and tell a friend who wants better blood sugar or wants to prevent type 2 diabetes.

You can do this. Start with beans. Keep adding Fiber. Feel the difference.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 15 - Charcot Foot - An Interview with Wayne Walker of The Trouble aFoot Podcast14 Jul 202500:39:44
Charcot Foot: Hope, Help, and Real Talk with Wayne Walker (Trouble aFoot Podcast)

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode of the Diabetes Podcast, we talk with Wayne Walker, host of the Trouble aFoot podcast. We dig into Charcot Foot, what it is, who is at risk, what to watch for, and how to find help and hope. This show is for anyone with diabetes, and for loved ones who want to support them.

Wayne blends lived experience with heart, humor, and straight talk. He shares the hard parts, the choices, and the path forward. You are not alone.

SEO keywords: Charcot Foot, diabetic neuropathy, neuropathic arthropathy, foot ulcers, osteomyelitis, diabetes foot complications

Episode at a Glance
  • What Charcot Foot is (in simple words)
  • Why it can happen without pain
  • Who is at higher risk
  • Early signs you should never ignore
  • Real stories that show how sneaky this is
  • Treatment paths: bracing, surgery, amputation
  • How to talk to your doctor
  • Why there is hope and community
What Is Charcot Foot?
  • Charcot Foot (medical name: neuropathic arthropathy) is a serious foot problem.
  • The bones in the foot and ankle get weak and soft.
  • The bones can shift and collapse. They can form a hard lump on the bottom of the foot. This is called a “rocker bottom.”
  • Many people feel little or no pain because of nerve damage (neuropathy). That is why it is so risky.

Wayne says it plain: the bones don’t just vanish—they move. They move down. That lump becomes the new “bottom” of the foot. People keep walking on it because they can’t feel it. Then sores and infections start. Infection in the bone (osteomyelitis) can spread fast and can be life-threatening if not treated.

Why It Sneaks Up on People
  • Neuropathy means your nerves don’t send pain signals like they should.
  • You can step on a nail and not feel it.
  • You can twist your ankle and keep walking.

Two true stories from the show:

  • A man worked all day with a nail through his boot. He only found out when he saw blood inside the boot.
  • Wayne once pulled the two metal prongs of a power cord out of his foot. He thought it was a leaf stuck there. He had almost no pain.

When you don’t feel pain, you don’t pull back. You keep going. That’s when damage grows.

Who Is at Higher Risk?

Many people with Charcot Foot share three things:

  • They have diabetes.
  • They have severe neuropathy (loss of feeling in the feet).
  • They have obesity, which adds more force to the bones.

Other notes from the conversation:

  • Some people without diabetes can get Charcot Foot if they have neuropathy from other causes.
  • Younger, more active people with good blood flow can be at risk because the foot gets hot and inflamed, and they keep walking on it.
  • Long hours on hard floors (like retail or factory work) and years of high-impact activity may add stress to the foot.

How common is it? The numbers vary by study. Estimates discussed in the episode:

  • About 1 to 4 in 1,000 people with diabetes may get Charcot Foot.
  • Among people with neuropathy, some reports suggest it could be higher (numbers mentioned up to around 13%).
  • If someone has diabetes, neuropathy, and obesity, the risk may rise further. Exact numbers differ. Ask your doctor about your risk.
Early Signs to Act On Now

Call your doctor right away, or go to urgent care/ER for fever and fast changes. Watch for:

  • A foot that is warmer than the other foot
  • Swelling that starts suddenly, even after a small twist
  • Redness
  • A sudden change in foot shape
  • A new bump or “rocker bottom”
  • A sore or ulcer on the bottom or side of the foot
  • A shoe that suddenly fits different
  • Fever, chills, or feeling unwell

Tip: If you feel “off” and have diabetes or neuropathy, check your feet first.

What To Do If You Suspect Charcot Foot
  • Stop putting weight on that foot. Sit down. Use crutches, a scooter, or a wheelchair if you have them.
  • Call your doctor or podiatrist now. If you have a fever or fast swelling, go to the ER.
  • Say the words “I am worried about Charcot Foot.” Ask for an exam and imaging.
  • Ask about “offloading” (keeping weight off the foot) to protect the bones.

Early action can save your foot shape and help prevent infection.

Treatment Paths We Talked About

Your care team should explain all options. A good doctor will walk you through each one:

  • Bracing/orthotics and offloading
    • Custom boots, casts, or braces to protect the bones
    • Goal: reduce pressure, prevent ulcers, and help the foot settle
  • Reconstructive surgery
    • Wayne chose this path
    • Aim: rebuild and stabilize the foot so it can bear weight more safely
  • Amputation (often below the knee)
    • Some people choose this to remove the problem and pain risk
    • It is a personal choice; many do well with a prosthesis

Wayne’s surgeon told him: “I’ll give you a feasible foot, not a perfect foot.” You may not run or play high-impact sports. But you can walk your dog around the block. That hope matters.

Foot Care and Everyday Tips From the Conversation
  • Wear good shoes that support your feet. Cheap, thin shoes can add stress.
  • Check your feet every day. Look and feel for heat, redness, swelling, or sores.
  • If you cannot see the bottom of your feet, ask for help or use a mirror.
  • If you feel sick or have a fever, check your feet first.
  • Talk to your podiatrist about your work and activity. Be honest.
  • If your foot shape changes, or a shoe suddenly feels “off,” stop and get help.
How to Talk With Your Doctor

Good care starts with good questions. Try these:

  • Am I at risk for Charcot Foot?
  • Do I have neuropathy, and how severe is it?
  • If my foot gets hot, red, or swollen, what should I do the same day?
  • Should I have a plan for offloading and bracing?
  • What shoes or orthotics are best for me?
  • If this is Charcot Foot, what are my options: bracing, surgery, or amputation?
  • How will we watch for ulcers and infection?

One more: Ask your podiatrist to talk about Charcot Foot even if it is rare. Knowing the signs can change the outcome.

Mindset, Support, and Hope
  • You are not alone. There is a growing community.
  • You still have a life to live. As Wayne says, “It’s just a foot.” You have a heart, a mind, and a future.
  • Your choices today can protect your tomorrow.
  • Whether you pick bracing, surgery, or amputation, there is a path forward.

Some of Wayne’s messages we loved:

  • “Pain is a gift.” It tells you to stop. Without pain, you must be your own alarm.
  • “Take charge. Take your life back.”
  • “You are not alone.”
About Our Guest: Wayne Walker, Trouble aFoot Podcast

Wayne hosts the Trouble aFoot podcast, a warm, honest space for people living with Charcot Foot. He brings lived experience, humor, and care. Listeners from the U.S., Canada, the U.K., New Zealand, India, and more connect there for stories, tips, and support.

Find Trouble aFoot by searching your podcast app (Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc.).

Who This Episode Is For
  • People with diabetes
  • Anyone with neuropathy in their feet
  • Caregivers, partners, and family
  • Clinicians who want to hear real stories
Key Takeaways
  • Charcot Foot is serious and can happen without pain.
  • Neuropathy is the key risk. No pain does not mean no problem.
  • Early signs: heat, swelling, redness, shape change, sudden “full” feeling in the foot, or fever.
  • Stop weight-bearing and call your doctor fast if you suspect it.
  • There are options: bracing, surgery, or amputation. It’s a personal choice.
  • There is hope. There is community. You are not alone.
Call to Action
  • If your doctor has ever said “Charcot Foot,” listen to this episode and share it.
  • Subscribe to the Diabetes Podcast for more on prevention, remission, and living well.
  • Check out the Trouble aFoot podcast for support from people who get it.
  • Share this with someone who needs to hear it today.

Note: This episode and show notes are educational only and are not medical advice. If you notice signs of Charcot Foot, seek care right away

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 14 - Clinical Inertia07 Jul 202500:39:25
Clinical Inertia and Type 2 Diabetes: Why Care Gets Stuck and How to Unstick It

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this Diabetes Podcast episode, Richie and Amber break down Clinical Inertia in type 2 diabetes—why care stalls, why A1C goals get missed, and simple steps you can start today to protect your health and aim for remission.

Keywords: Clinical Inertia, type 2 diabetes, A1C, remission, insulin resistance, beta cells, primary care, diabetes education, lifestyle change

Episode summary

You leave the doctor’s office scared. You hear “eat better, move more,” and “see you in three months.” No plan. No help. Then your A1C is higher, and you get another med. You feel stuck.

In this episode, we name the problem: Clinical Inertia. It’s when treatment does not start or does not get stronger when the A1C says it should. It’s common. It is not your fault. It is not because doctors do not care. It is the system, short visits, too many problems to cover, and not enough time for real support.

We explain why this happens, what it costs, and what actually works. We talk about the best window for remission. We give simple actions you can start today. You can take back control. You can change your story.

What we cover
  • What Clinical Inertia is, in plain words
  • Why short visits (about 16 minutes) lead to missed care steps
  • Why so many people leave visits without a clear plan
  • How delays hurt A1C goals and long-term health
  • Why “more meds” without lifestyle change is not enough
  • The best time window for type 2 diabetes remission
  • Simple daily steps that help right now
  • How to own your health outside the clinic
Timestamps
  • 00:00 — The scary first visit, and why people feel lost
  • 00:02 — How most people find out they have type 2 (a quick call, then Google chaos)
  • 00:04 — Short visits, many problems, and “triage” in primary care
  • 00:05 — Clinical Inertia defined
  • 00:09 — Where lifestyle help breaks down; insurance and “info dump” classes
  • 00:14 — Classes lower A1C a bit, but overload is real
  • 00:16 — 1 in 3 misunderstand the plan; 60% leave without clear “what to eat/do”
  • 00:18 — Clinical Inertia drives about 80% of missed A1C goals
  • 00:20 — Med stacking vs fixing insulin resistance; why lifestyle is powerful
  • 00:23 — Why higher A1C = higher risk (simple stats you should know)
  • 00:25 — How fast meds pile up for many people
  • 00:26 — The best window for remission is early (1–3 years post-diagnosis)
  • 00:27 — Your beta cells need urgent help; delays matter
  • 00:29 — When doctors say “I can’t help more,” and why that happens
  • 00:30 — The big system problem vs what you can do now
  • 00:31 — Own your health like your money: day-to-day is on you
  • 00:35 — Hope: remission is real; behavior change works
  • 00:35 — Simple steps to start today
  • 00:38 — When A1C is “flat, flat… then jumps,” that’s inertia
  • 00:38 — Free resources and fast-track help at EmpoweredDiabetes.com
  • 00:39 — Closing: You deserve a plan, a partner, and real change
Clinical Inertia: what it is and why it happens
  • Simple meaning: care does not start or does not ramp up when your A1C shows it should.
  • Why it happens:
    • Primary care doctors care for 1,800–2,000 patients.
    • Visits are short (about 16 minutes).
    • About six problems per visit. Diabetes competes with other urgent issues.
    • Real life happens: floods, stress, pain. Doctors are human and try to help with what’s most urgent.
    • Group classes are often “info dumps.” People leave overwhelmed.
    • Insurance pays for very limited visits. Not much for ongoing support.
What Clinical Inertia costs
  • About 80% of people who miss their A1C goals do so because care was delayed, diluted, or dismissed.
  • Many leave visits confused:
    • 1 in 3 misunderstand the plan after a standard visit.
    • Over 60% leave without clear steps on what to eat or do.
  • Risks rise as A1C rises (UKPDS 1% rule):
    • For each 1% A1C above 7:
      • 21% higher risk of death due to diabetes
      • 14% higher risk of heart attack
      • 37% higher risk of small blood vessel damage (eyes, kidneys, nerves)
    • An A1C of 9 can double the risk of kidney failure, blindness, and stroke over time.
Why “more meds” alone is not the fix
  • What often happens: metformin → add-ons (like DPP-4, SGLT2) → more meds → insulin.
  • These can help, but many do not fix insulin resistance, the core problem.
  • Without lifestyle change, meds pile up while the root issue stays.
  • Data shows:
    • Within 5 years, about 50% are on multiple meds.
    • About one-third are on three or more.
The best window for remission
  • Remission is most likely in the first 1–3 years after diagnosis.
  • Every 6–12 month delay lowers the chance.
  • Why? Your beta cells (the insulin-making cells) get tired and fewer over time.
  • Early action protects these cells. That helps long-term control.
What your doctor sees (and why they push meds)
  • Doctors see the whole road: from first A1C rise to ulcers, eye damage, and amputations.
  • They know many people cannot make big changes fast. So they push meds to protect you now.
  • They are not the enemy. The system is hard. The time is short. The stakes are high.
How to fight Clinical Inertia: take charge outside the clinic

Your health is too important to leave to short visits. Think of your health like money: daily choices matter most. You have power. Start small. Start now.

Simple steps you can start today
  • After each meal, walk for 2 minutes. Yes, just two. It helps your blood sugar.
  • Track one number daily: before-and-after meal blood sugar or a step count.
  • Cut one source of added sugar today (soda, sweetened coffee, juice).
  • Build a “default plate”:
    • Half non-starchy veggies
    • A palm-size serving of protein
    • A small portion of smart carbs or swap for extra veggies
  • Drink water first. Keep a bottle near you.
  • Sleep 7–8 hours. Poor sleep raises blood sugar.
  • Lower stress in simple ways:
    • 5 deep breaths
    • 10-minute walk
    • Short stretch before bed
  • Make it easy:
    • Set shoes by the door for post-meal walks.
    • Prep 2–3 go-to meals you like.
    • Keep a veggie and a protein ready to grab.
  • Do a quick self-check each week:
    • What went well?
    • What was hard?
    • What is one tiny change I will try next week?
Signs you’re beating inertia
  • Your post-meal numbers trend down.
  • A1C drops over 3–6 months.
  • You need fewer meds, or lower doses.
  • You feel more energy and move more without forcing it.
  • Your plan feels doable most days.
Real talk moments we shared
  • “It’s not laziness. It’s Clinical Inertia.”
  • “We can’t fix it all in 16 minutes.”
  • “Your beta cells are urgent. Early action protects them.”
  • “Ignore your health, and it will go away.”
  • “Remission is real. Behavior change works.”
Who this episode helps
  • Newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes
  • “Stuck” at the same A1C or creeping higher
  • On more meds and want a different path
  • Clinicians who want plain-language ways to support patients
Resources and next steps
  • Free: Keep listening to the Diabetes Podcast for step-by-step help.
  • Fast-track help: EmpoweredDiabetes.com for a guided plan and support.
  • Share: Someone you love is dealing with this. Send this episode to them.
Call to action
  • Subscribe, rate, and review the show so more people can find help.
  • Try one step today. Walk two minutes after your next meal.
  • If you’re ready for a plan and a partner, visit EmpoweredDiabetes.com.
Disclaimer

This podcast is for education, not medical advice. Work with your healthcare team before changing your meds, diet, or exercise.

You deserve more than a rushed visit. You deserve a plan, a partner, and real progress. Take courage. You can do this—and we can help.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

"Anything Meds Can Do, You Can Do Better" Part 12 of 12 - Inflammation and Oxidative Stress30 Jun 202500:48:36
Show Notes: Inflammation and Oxidative Stress — The Final Piece of the Diabetes Puzzle

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we close the Dirty Dozen series with the big one: Inflammation and oxidative stress. Inflammation isn’t just in the background. It speeds up every core defect in type 2 diabetes. The good news? You can cool this fire with simple, daily steps.

Listen in as Richie and Amber break it down in plain language, tie it to the 12 core defects from Dr. Ralph DeFronzo’s work, and give you a clear plan.

Episode Summary
  • Inflammation: what it is, why it happens, and why chronic inflammation is a problem
  • Oxidative stress: how “cell rust” forms and how your body fights it
  • How Inflammation weaves through all 12 core defects in type 2 diabetes
  • What labs and signs may point to chronic low-grade inflammation
  • Meds that can help (and what they can’t do)
  • A simple, real-life plan to lower Inflammation with food, movement, sleep, and stress care
  • Why 5–10% weight loss is powerful, and the role of adiponectin
  • Foods and habits that raise adiponectin and lower Inflammation
Quick Guide (Timestamps)
  • 00:00 — Welcome + why Inflammation matters in type 2 diabetes
  • 02:00 — Acute vs. chronic inflammation (short-term vs. long-term)
  • 04:00 — Oxidative stress: what it is and why balance matters
  • 06:00 — Low-grade inflammation: common causes (obesity, sleep, stress)
  • 10:00 — How to spot risk: waist-to-hip, fatigue, central fat
  • 11:00 — How Inflammation hits each core defect (muscle, liver, fat, gut, brain, kidneys, pancreas, mitochondria)
  • 20:00 — Meds that help: metformin, GLP-1s, TZDs, SGLT2s, statins; NSAIDs caution
  • 24:00 — Food plan to calm Inflammation (plant-rich, fiber, omega-3s; avoid ultra-processed)
  • 32:00 — Movement lowers Inflammation even in small doses
  • 33:00 — Sleep and stress: why they’re non‑negotiable
  • 37:00 — Weight loss and adiponectin: why 5–10% matters
  • 41:00 — Your simple action plan + next steps
What Is Inflammation?
  • Acute Inflammation: short-term and helpful (like a swollen thumb after a hit or an infection). Your body heals and the swelling goes down.
  • Chronic Inflammation: long-term, low-grade. This is the problem. It can build for years and push insulin resistance and high blood sugars.

Oxidative stress is like “cell rust.” Your body makes it every day (even just breathing), and your built-in defenses (antioxidants, enzymes, repair systems) keep it in check. When the balance breaks, damage builds.

How Inflammation Touches All 12 Defects

Inflammation and oxidative stress weave through every system:

  • Muscle: fat buildup sparks inflammatory signals that block insulin.
  • Liver: fat in the liver drives “new sugar” making at night → fasting highs.
  • Fat tissue: overfilled fat cells leak inflammation and pull in macrophages (immune cells).
  • Gut hormones (incretins): gut inflammation lowers GLP‑1 effect.
  • Alpha cells: inflammation blunts glucose sensing → more glucagon → higher sugars.
  • Beta cells: insulitis (inflamed islets) harms and lowers insulin-making cells.
  • Brain: cytokines jam hunger/fullness signals (leptin, insulin) → more cravings.
  • Kidneys: inflammation can raise SGLT2 activity → kidneys reabsorb more sugar.
  • Amyloid toxicity: misfolded proteins + free fatty acids + ROS hurt islets.
  • Microbiome: “leaky gut” lets toxins in → low-grade Inflammation.
  • Mitochondria: stressed engines leak ROS → more oxidative stress.
  • Net result: Inflammation fuels insulin resistance and beta cell loss across the board.
How Do I Know If I Have Low-Grade Inflammation?
  • Common signs: tired, more belly fat, poor sleep, high stress.
  • Risk check: waist-to-hip ratio (ranges differ for men and women).
  • Labs to ask your clinician about:
    • C‑reactive protein (CRP): a general inflammation marker
    • Fasting insulin (not perfect, but can hint at early insulin issues)
    • Note: Research tests like IL‑6 and TNF‑α exist but aren’t standard at big labs.

Chronic Inflammation can start 10–15 years before diabetes is diagnosed.

Meds That Can Help (But Don’t Replace Lifestyle)
  • Metformin: can lower CRP and TNF‑α (inflammation markers).
  • GLP‑1 receptor agonists: reduce systemic Inflammation, often via weight loss.
  • TZDs (pioglitazone/Actos): act on fat tissue to lower inflammatory signals.
  • SGLT2 inhibitors: may reduce oxidative stress and help mitochondria.
  • Statins: not diabetes drugs, but can lower inflammation and protect vessels.
  • NSAIDs (like ibuprofen): can ease pain, but they’re a short-term band-aid and can cause gut bleeds. Not a long-term fix for chronic Inflammation.

Meds help. Lifestyle heals the source.

Your Anti-Inflammation Action Plan
  1. Build a plant-rich plate
  • Make plants the star; meat the side.
  • Aim for 5–9 servings of fruits and veggies daily.
  • Eat more fiber: beans, peas, lentils; whole grains (try quinoa, farro, steel-cut oats).
  • Go for color: greens, reds, oranges, purples = antioxidants.
  1. Add anti-Inflammation fats
  • Omega‑3s: flax, chia, walnuts, hemp seeds; fatty fish; algae oil (look for USP/NSF third‑party tested; 250–500 mg EPA+DHA/day if supplementing).
  • Olive oil over ultra-processed oils.
  1. Focus on polyphenols and carotenoids
  • Polyphenols: blueberries, apples, pears, plums, green tea, coffee, olives/olive oil, turmeric, herbs (cloves, oregano, rosemary).
  • Carotenoids (vitamin A family): carrots, bell peppers, leafy greens, sweet potatoes.
  1. Move your body most days
  • Even short walks help lower Inflammation (IL‑6, TNF‑α) over time.
  • Start where you are. Add 5–10 minutes after meals. Build from there.
  1. Protect your sleep and lower stress
  • Aim for a steady sleep schedule and a calm wind-down.
  • Poor sleep spikes inflammation and blood sugar.
  • Try simple stress tools: breathing, light stretching, short walks.
  1. Aim for 5–10% weight loss if advised
  • Even this small loss can reduce inflammatory markers and improve insulin sensitivity.
  • Slow and steady. Modest calorie deficit + daily movement works.
Adiponectin: A Quiet Hero
  • Adiponectin is a hormone made by fat cells. Higher levels help protect beta cells and improve insulin sensitivity.
  • Levels are often lower in obesity and type 2 diabetes.
  • How to raise it naturally:
    • Gentle, steady weight loss
    • Omega‑3s (flax, chia, walnuts, fatty fish, algae oil)
    • Polyphenols (berries, green tea, coffee, herbs, olive oil)
    • Carotenoids (carrots, bell peppers, leafy greens)
Foods To Put On Repeat
  • Daily: leafy greens, berries, beans/lentils, oats/quinoa/farro, nuts/seeds (flax/chia/walnuts), olive oil, herbs/spices
  • Often: colorful veggies (carrots, peppers, broccoli), apples/pears/plums, green tea or coffee (if tolerated)
  • Sometimes: fatty fish or algae oil (for omega‑3s)
  • Limit: ultra-processed foods with long ingredient lists and added sugars
Simple Weekly Targets
  • Plants: 5–9 cups fruits/veggies/day
  • Fiber: 30+ grams/day (work up slowly)
  • Movement: 150 minutes/week (or start with 10 minutes after meals)
  • Sleep: 7–9 hours, consistent schedule
  • Weight: aim for slow loss if needed (5–10% over time)
Glossary (Plain Words)
  • Inflammation: your body’s “fire alarm.” Short-term helps. Long-term harms.
  • Oxidative stress (ROS): “cell rust.” Your body can clean it up unless it builds too high.
  • Cytokines (like IL‑6, TNF‑α): tiny signals that can raise Inflammation.
  • CRP: a blood test that can show Inflammation.
  • Insulitis: inflamed insulin-making cells in the pancreas.
  • SGLT2: a kidney “sugar re-uptake” pathway.
  • Adiponectin: a fat-cell hormone that protects beta cells and helps insulin work better.
Key Takeaways
  • Inflammation and oxidative stress are not side stories. They drive type 2 diabetes at every step.
  • You can lower Inflammation with what you eat, how you move, and how you sleep.
  • Meds help, but lifestyle changes target the source.
  • Even 5–10% weight loss can shift your body back toward health.
  • You are not stuck. Small daily steps work.
Resources and Next Steps
  • Keep learning with The Diabetes Podcast. Follow, rate, and share to help others.
  • Want the fastest path to remission? Visit EmpoweredDiabetes.com for coaching tailored to you.

You’re not broken. You’re not alone. Take courage. You can do this—and we can help

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

7 Sneaky Tricks Diabetes Supplement Ads Use to Scam You20 Apr 202601:02:57

Have you ever wondered why diabetes supplement ads are so convincing, even when they fail to deliver real results? In Part 2 of our series on "The Grift," Amber and Richie expose the hidden marketing tactics used by the wellness industry to sell fake cures for Type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance.

By breaking down a viral advertisement for an "aged garlic parasite cleanse," we reveal the 7-step psychological formula designed to lower your defenses. From casting a wide "symptom net" to creating a "hidden villain" and using out-of-context scientific language, these companies know exactly how to manipulate exhausted patients looking for answers.

Type 2 diabetes is a complex network issue. It is not one broken thing; it is a whole lot of things interacting across your liver, muscles, pancreas, fat tissue, gut, and brain. Elevated blood sugar is simply the output—the fever—not the disease itself. Because of this complexity, no single pill, cleanse, or miracle ingredient can fix the root cause. We explain why relying on these supplements not only costs you thousands of dollars but also delays the crucial, evidence-based lifestyle interventions needed to protect your remaining beta cells and lower your A1C.

Follow the podcast to make sure you never miss an episode of our ongoing series on the diabetes grift, and join us next time as we explore the world of celebrity medicine.

Need help NOW? Reach out to our support email at support@empowereddiabetes.com

Chapters:
00:00 Welcome to The Diabetes Podcast: Exposing the Supplement Grift
01:45 The Late-Night Scroll: How Supplement Ads Hook You
05:00 Do Diabetes Supplements Actually Work?
10:50 The 7-Step Formula of a Scam: The Symptom Net
14:15 The Hidden Villain: Are Parasites Causing Your Symptoms?
17:40 Emotional Release: Why It's Not Your Fault
21:10 Authority Disruption: Why Ads Tell You Not to Trust Doctors
23:30 Science Washing: Using Real Terms to Sell Fake Cures
29:20 The Miracle Ingredient: Aged Garlic Extract Exposed
31:00 The Real Biology of Type 2 Diabetes (It's Not Just One Broken Thing)
35:40 The Psychology of Scams: Why Smart People Buy Fake Cures
45:40 The Real Cost of Supplements: Money, Time, and Blame
53:30 A Better Way to Manage Type 2 Diabetes and Lower A1C
01:00:20 Next Time: Celebrity Doctors and the Medical Grift

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Managing Type 1 Diabetes in Kids: A Parent's Guide to Tech, Food & Freedom13 Apr 202601:11:59

Welcome to The Diabetes Podcast®, where real stories meet real science. In this episode, hosts Richie and Amber are joined by Dr. Patrick Rowe, a professor of Health Sciences who brings a unique, 360-degree perspective to diabetes management. Living with Type 1 diabetes for nearly 40 years and raising two children who also live with T1D, Dr. Rowe offers an honest look at the daily balancing act of managing blood sugars while ensuring kids still get to be kids.

Throughout our conversation, we explore the critical differences between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, emphasizing that elevated blood sugar is the output of complex system changes, not just a single broken mechanism. Dr. Rowe breaks down the concept of homeostasis using a brilliant "cockpit" analogy and explains why insulin should be understood as a powerful hormone rather than just a medication.

Listeners will also get practical, actionable advice on utilizing Automated Insulin Delivery (AID) systems, managing insulin during sports and endurance exercises, and the importance of removing shame from childhood food choices. We discuss why a curious mindset and connecting with a strong diabetes community can drastically shorten the learning curve for newly diagnosed families.

Follow the podcast so you never miss an episode of real life diabetes management and science-backed strategies.

Need help NOW? Reach out to our support email at support@empowereddiabetes.com.

Episode Chapters:
00:00 Welcome Dr. Patrick Rowe: T1D Dad & Anatomy Professor
01:45 The Reality of Managing Type 1 Diabetes in Kids
04:30 Avoiding Food Shame and Building Healthy Habits
09:30 The "Cockpit" Analogy: Understanding Homeostasis
16:00 Type 1 vs. Type 2 Diabetes: Key Differences Explained
26:45 Why Insulin is a Hormone, Not Just a Medication
33:30 Automated Insulin Delivery (AID) Systems & Family Life
43:20 Making Good Health Choices Easier for Kids
51:45 Pro Tips for Exercise and Sports with Type 1 Diabetes
57:20 Essential Advice for Newly Diagnosed T1D Parents
01:06:00 The Power of Curiosity in Chronic Disease Management
01:10:55 Episode Takeaways & Outro

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 45: Sexual Dysfunction and Diabetes09 Feb 202601:11:40

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

We talk straight about erectile dysfunction and sexual changes in diabetes. This is not about desire. It’s about circulation. ED and reduced arousal/lubrication are often the first sign of endothelial dysfunction—sometimes years before other problems. We cover how nitric oxide works, why diabetes turns that signal down, and why PDE5 drugs help but don’t repair vessels. Good news: blood vessels are living tissue and respond fast. In days to weeks, movement and better glucose habits improve function. We share real steps: a 2–10 minute walk after meals, steady “zone 2” cardio, simple resistance work, and foods that boost nitric oxide (arugula, spinach, beets, berries, olive oil, omega‑3s, seeds). We cover men’s and women’s symptoms, the shame spiral, and why open talk matters. 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 44: An Interview with Dr. Cheri Ogwo, MD02 Feb 202601:07:20

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, Richie and Amber talk with diabetes doctor Dr. Cheri Ogwo. She shares a simple, strong plan: listen first, act fast, and tailor care to you. We go beyond A1C to look at urine protein, creatinine, GFR, cholesterol, and after-meal spikes. We dig into insulin resistance, inflammation, and how low-carb steps can help without going extreme. We cover CGMs (Dexcom, Libre), pump pros and cons, alarm anxiety, and real costs. We talk stress, sleep, and morning highs. We discuss metformin facts, prior authorizations, and how to handle insurance hurdles. Dr. Ogwo explains why two people with the same A1C can have very different risks, and why time-in-range matters. You’ll hear clear wins you can start today: one food swap, one 10-minute walk, and using your data to guide change. Diabetes is not a death sentence. With the right plan and team, you can feel better fast.

You can find Dr. Ogwo on TikTok @cheri.o.md

or her practice at SugarPros.com

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 43: Focus on Healing26 Jan 202600:34:07

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode of The Diabetes Podcast®, we focus on healing when life is loud and stressful. Amber opens up about feeling shaken by the world and how chronic stress impacts blood sugar, insulin resistance, cravings, sleep, and mood. We share simple anchors to protect focus: shrink the frame (one meal, one walk, one early bedtime), remove decision fatigue (same breakfast, same grocery list, same movement window), regulate before you learn (protein and fiber first meal, morning light, gentle movement, slow breathing), and treat focus as an act of resistance. We also use the Eisenhower Matrix to redirect time from “urgent but not important” to what truly heals. Whether you’re aiming for type 2 diabetes remission or managing type 1 or other diabetes, you are not alone. Healing is possible—one day at a time.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 42: An Interview with Philip Pape of the Wits and Weights Podcast19 Jan 202601:02:55

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we talk with Philip Pape of the Wits and Weights podcast about diabetes strength training and how muscle changes blood sugar. We cover why lifting boosts insulin sensitivity for up to 72 hours, how walking after meals lowers spikes, and how to start safely with chair squats, goblet squats, and deadlifts. We dig into reps in reserve, progressive overload, and bracing. We talk pain, past injuries, and why movement is medicine. We unpack carbs, protein, GLUT4, CGMs, and why context matters. We share our simple system: one big lever at a time and three plans—optimal, minimum, and bailout—so you never hit zero. Sleep and stress? Huge. Results come faster when you stack walking, lifting, and sleep.

Listen to the Wits and Weights Podcast here

The Diabetes Podcast® listeners can get 20% off the Wits and Weights App here

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 41: Lymphatic System Function and Diabetes12 Jan 202600:37:52

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we unpack lymphatic system function and why it matters for diabetes. Lymph moves when you move. We cover how calves act like a second heart, why posture and deep breathing boost flow, and how post-meal walks lower glucose and clear inflammation. No pill or detox can replace daily movement.

What you’ll learn:

  • Why the lymphatic system is your “third heart”
  • How lymph, blood vessels, and lymph nodes work together
  • Calves as a pump to move fluid against gravity
  • The river vs. pond analogy: movement vs. stagnation
  • How lymph flow helps insulin resistance and glucose control
  • The impact of visceral fat and high glucose on lymph vessels
  • Simple habits: hydrate, break up sitting, walk after meals, breathe deeper, do toe raises

Action plan:

  • Move every 30–60 minutes
  • Walk 10–15 minutes after meals
  • Use your calves daily
  • Practice slow, full rib breaths
  • Aim for a movement-rich day, not just one workout

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 40: An Interview with Dr. Pavi Kundhal MD, author of Shift Your Mind to Shift Your Weight05 Jan 202600:55:32

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we dig into the weight loss mindset with Dr. Pavi Kundhal, author of “Shift Your Mind to Shift Your Weight.” We talk about bariatric surgery and GLP‑1s as tools—not magic—and why habits, mindfulness, and environment design drive long-term results. Learn simple steps: protein first, veggies next, carbs last; cut liquid calories; start with 5–10 minute walks; and collect small, daily wins. We cover weight gain enablers (delivery apps, screens, ultra‑processed foods), how to handle plateaus, and building trust with your care team. We also share non‑scale victories and a 7‑day starter plan. If you’ve ever said “I know what to do, I just can’t do it,” this talk gives you clear, simple actions to get unstuck and support type 2 or prediabetes goals.

Website: https://www.peelweightlossclinic.com

Book: Amazon      Barnes and Noble

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/peelweightlossclinic/

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 39: What Produces High Cholesterol29 Dec 202501:11:51

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

What produces high cholesterol? In this episode, we break down the real drivers: insulin resistance, fatty liver, visceral fat, stress, poor sleep, and ultra-processed foods. We explain why your liver makes most cholesterol, how LDL, HDL, VLDL, and ApoB shape risk, and why triglycerides and a high TG:HDL ratio are early warning lights—often years before diabetes. We share family stories, why low HDL is a red flag, and how stress can tip stable plaque into a heart attack. We also clear up myths about eggs and seed oils. Tools that work: fiber (25–50g/day), daily movement, strength training, weight loss when needed, better sleep, stress care, and meds when needed (statins, ezetimibe, PCSK9s, bempedoic acid). Meds are scaffolding—lifestyle builds the house.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 38: An Interview with Fitz Koehler, Author of You-Supercharged22 Dec 202501:07:31

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

High-energy episode with Fitz Koehler, author of You – Supercharged. We dig into simple fitness for diabetes: strength, cardio, flexibility, and balance—done your way, starting today. Fitz calls out diet scams, explains why muscle is “free medicine,” and shows how 1% daily gains beat every crash plan. We talk Morning Mile in 400+ schools, GLP‑1 pros/cons, starting from a chair or bed, and how races welcome walkers too. Plus: sleep, mindset, and why intramural sports can change schools and lives.

What you’ll learn:

  • Four pillars: strength, cardio, flexibility, balance
  • Why muscle boosts metabolism and protects bones
  • The truth about diets, supplements, and GLP‑1 side effects
  • How to start: chair/bed moves, walking, simple strength
  • Morning Mile impact and how to bring it to your school
  • Community wins: walk a 1‑mile or 5K at your pace
  • Minimum system: nutrition, exercise, sleep

Links:

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 37: Lipids and Diabetes15 Dec 202500:37:13

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we break down lipids function in diabetes in plain language. We explain the “boats” (lipoproteins) that carry fat: chylomicrons, VLDL, IDL, LDL, and HDL. We share why LDL can look “okay” while risk stays high, and why ApoB particle number matters more than LDL-C. We cover the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio as a simple insulin resistance marker, fatty liver without alcohol, and how insulin resistance rewires lipid metabolism. We talk about ceramides as “danger signals,” adiponectin, and diabetes dyslipidemia. Then we give practical steps: move daily, eat more fiber, choose a Mediterranean-style pattern, reduce saturated fat and simple sugars, sleep better, and consider testing ApoB and Lp(a). Small changes can lower VLDL, remnants, ApoB, and raise HDL. Lipid overload is reversible. 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 36: Childhood Obesity with Dr. Evan Nadler, MD, MBA08 Dec 202500:55:45

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Dr. Evan Nadler:

Website: https://www.obesityexplained.com

                https://www.procaretelehealth.com

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@obesityexplained

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/obesity_explained

Childhood obesity levels are rising, but there is hope. In this episode, Dr. Evan P. Nadler, a pioneer in pediatric obesity care, explains why words matter (“child with obesity”), how genetics and epigenetics shape risk, and why two teens at the same BMI can have very different health. We cover people-first language, type 1 vs. type 2 diabetes in kids, monogenic vs. polygenic obesity, and the power of removing sugar-sweetened drinks at home. Learn how to build an “in‑home biodome,” why family support beats blame, when medicines or surgery help, and how schools, SNAP policy, and walkable spaces fit in. Dr. Nadler shares clear, practical steps for parents, pediatricians, and young adults planning a family. 

 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Do Blood Sugar Supplements Actually Work? The Truth About Berberine & Cinnamon06 Apr 202601:01:42

Welcome to Year Two of The Diabetes Podcast! To kick off our second year, we are starting a four-part series called "The Grift," where we tackle modern health marketing and separate metabolic science from snake oil. If you live with Type 2 diabetes or are trying to lose weight, you’ve probably been targeted by ads promising a natural, effortless fix for your metabolism. But do weight loss and blood sugar supplements actually work in the real world?

In this episode, Amber (RD/LD/CDCES) and Richie dive deep into the biology of diabetes to explain why no single capsule can fix a multi-system condition. Elevated blood sugar is the output—not the disease itself. Blood sugar is the fever. Type 2 diabetes is a complex network issue involving your liver, muscles, pancreas, fat tissue, gut, and brain. Because it’s not one broken thing, but a whole lot of things, any one single intervention from the supplement aisle often can't break the cycle.

We break down the real science behind your liver's overnight glucose production, how your skeletal muscle acts as your body's biggest glucose sink, the inflammatory nature of visceral fat, and why your gut microbiome needs to be fed with diverse fiber rather than "detoxed." We also review the actual clinical evidence behind popular supplements. Does cinnamon or chromium actually lower A1C? Is berberine truly "nature's metformin"? And what is the truth behind green tea extract, garcinia cambogia, and apple cider vinegar?

Finally, we discuss the "scale of effect." You'll learn how small supplement changes compare to the massive, compounding impact of movement, fiber, sleep optimization, stress management, and, when appropriate, real pharmacotherapy.

Follow the podcast so you never miss an episode of our series on "The Grift" and other deep dives into metabolic health!

Need help NOW? Reach out to our support email at support@empowereddiabetes.com.

Episode Chapters:
00:00 Welcome to Year 2 & The Diabetes Grift Series
00:04:45 Why We Fall for Supplement Marketing
00:10:00 The $60 Billion Unregulated Supplement Industry
00:13:30 The Biology of Type 2 Diabetes: It's a System Issue
00:15:50 Muscle: Your Body's Biggest Glucose Sink
00:18:40 Visceral Fat & Chronic Inflammation
00:26:00 The Gut Microbiome: Feed It, Don't Detox It
00:29:30 Do Cinnamon and Chromium Lower Blood Sugar?
00:33:30 The Truth About Berberine vs. Metformin
00:38:00 Supportive Supplements: Magnesium & Omega-3s
00:42:50 Weight Loss Supplements That Don't Work
00:48:00 The Scale of Effect: Lifestyle vs. Medication vs. Supplements

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 35: Neuropathies in Diabetes01 Dec 202501:05:22

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we break down neuropathies in diabetes in clear, real-life terms. We cover what nerves need to stay healthy, why high and unstable blood sugar hurts nerves, and the four types: peripheral, autonomic, proximal, and focal. We talk real symptoms—burning feet, numb toes, pins and needles—and the emotional side, too.

You’ll learn simple, proven steps to slow nerve damage: daily foot checks, shoes that fit, high fiber meals (yes, beans!), Mediterranean-style eating, plant omega-3s, and short walks after meals. We explain how movement snacks, strength training, and good sleep help nerves heal. We also discuss meds that reduce pain and meds that improve metabolism, and how to pair them with lifestyle for better results.

Takeaway: smoother glucose curves = calmer nerves. Early action can improve symptoms. Later stages can be slowed. You’re not alone—and there is real hope.

How to Row Video: https://youtu.be/4zWu1yuJ0_g?si=xkVQeZ7RwN45w2Zo

 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 34: An Interview with Lynne Bowman, Author of Brownies for Breakfast24 Nov 202501:07:27

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Looking for diabetes dessert recipes easy enough for busy nights? In this episode, we talk with Lynne Bowman, author of Brownies for Breakfast. Lynne shares her journey from gestational diabetes to joyful habits that last. We cover greens three times a day, simple swaps to cut sugar, and why allulose shines for pies and brownies. Learn Lynne’s Genius Soup method to clean your fridge and feed your family all week, a 2‑ingredient tahini balsamic dressing, and “popcorn of the gods” with truffle salt and nutritional yeast. We talk inflammation, ultra‑processed foods, metformin and longevity, and why strong muscles protect aging bones. Plus, holiday help: silken tofu pumpkin pie and sugar‑free apple pie the whole family will love. No separate “diabetic” meals—eat together and make it fun.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 33: Post-Meal Blood Glucose Levels17 Nov 202500:48:09

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

We dig into diabetes after meal blood glucose levels and what “normal” looks like on a CGM. Learn why a healthy peak is usually under 140 mg/dL and back down by 2 hours, and why repeated 160–200 spikes point to early insulin resistance or a meal–metabolism mismatch. We break down the big levers: muscle mass (your #1 glucose sink), mixed meals (protein, fiber, healthy fats), non-starchy veggies first, and simple walks after eating. We also cover sleep, stress, hormones, and genetics, plus the waist-to-hip ratio to spot hidden visceral fat. Get clear, simple steps to flatten spikes fast: pair carbs with protein, add fiber, choose intact whole grains, walk 10 minutes after meals, strength train 2–3x/week, sleep 7+ hours, and limit refined carbs. Real talk, real science—take action now to lower postprandial glucose and protect your health.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 32: An Interview with Dr. Sajid Khan, MD, MPH10 Nov 202500:40:52

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we talk with Dr. Sajid Khan about insulin therapy for type 2 diabetes and why tech matters. We cover automated insulin delivery, tubeless pumps like Omnipod, and CGMs that turn numbers into daily choices. Dr. Khan shares why many patients are moving from multiple daily shots to pumps, how to talk about insulin without shame, and what truly prevents complications in the heart, kidneys, eyes, and feet.

We dig into GLP-1s and SGLT2s for cardiorenal protection, when insulin is the right move, and how pumps cut dosing errors and stress. We also discuss remission—what helps, what gets in the way, and how motivation and environment play a role. Plus: inhaled insulin options, ADA guidance on AID for insulin users, and practical tips for access and referrals.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 31: The Law of 80/20 for Diabetes Remission03 Nov 202500:48:55

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Most people do diabetes backwards. They pour energy into tiny things that don’t matter. In this episode, we break down the law of 80/20 (Pareto principle) for type 2 diabetes remission. We call out common traps—organic hype, cutting all fruit, berberine over metformin, seed oils, and fancy salts. Then we show the real 20%: balanced meals built on protein, fiber, color, and smart carbs; walking after meals; lifting when you can; better sleep; and simple stress tools. We explain refined vs whole grains, why fruit helps (hello, fiber and phytonutrients), and why walking is a daily superpower. No detox. No miracle pill. Just proven habits you can repeat. Start small: a 10–20 minute walk after dinner, one more veggie and bean serving, or 30 minutes more sleep. Consistency beats intensity. That’s how you lower A1C, steady blood sugar, and build real health that lasts.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 30: An Interview with Danielle Batiste, Author of Diabetes Made Better27 Oct 202500:40:21

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we talk with Danielle Batiste—mom, veteran, and author of the book on diabetes, Diabetes Made Better. Danielle opens up about fear, denial, and the moment her hands shook and she said, “Not me. Not today.” She shares how walking daily, reading labels, and tracking labs helped her lose 40+ pounds and lower her A1C—from 8.6 down to 4.0, and now at a strong 5.7. We cover real tools: understanding highs and lows, foot care (get a monofilament test), not putting lotion between toes, and why follow-up visits should be more than numbers. We talk family risk, stress, and how schools and doctors can teach earlier and better. Danielle’s workbook and planner make care simple and doable. Her message: diabetes is not a death sentence. With the right plan—and a good book on diabetes—you can take control.

Links:

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 29 - Natural Hunger Suppressants: Work With Your Body, Not Against It20 Oct 202500:44:43

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we break down hunger in plain talk. Hunger isn’t a flaw—it’s biology. We explain ghrelin and leptin, and how sleep, stress, and hydration change cravings. You’ll learn why soda fails and veggie soup wins, and how GLP-1, PYY, and CCK help you feel full for hours. We share easy plate tips: half non-starchy veggies, solid protein, high fiber, and healthy fats. Start with water or soup, eat slowly, chew more, and wait before seconds. Try beans daily, chia, oats, and omega-3s. Use a hunger–fullness scale, don’t eat from the bag, and shop when you’re not hungry. We cover diabetes-friendly swaps and introduce “The Incredible Bulk” idea for busy days. Simple, natural, and proven.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 28 CORRECTED - Symptoms of Type 2 Diabetes: Your Wake-Up Call to Remission13 Oct 202501:00:09

Sorry for this publishing hiccup. This is the correct episode. Hope you enjoy!

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Feeling tired, thirsty, hungry, gaining weight, or just “off”? In this episode, we unpack the early symptoms of type 2 diabetes symptoms and what they really mean. Richie and Amber explain why these warning lights—fatigue, thirst, blurry vision, frequent peeing—happen when insulin resistance keeps sugar in your blood and out of your cells.

We walk through the emotions after diagnosis (fear, shame, denial) and give hope: type 2 diabetes remission is possible. You’ll learn our 5-step Empowered Remission Algorithm:

  • Awareness: Understand the real problem
  • Audit: Gather simple daily data
  • Action: Think cellular repair—fiber, protein, walking, strength
  • Accountability: Support without shame
  • Adaptation: Keep improving as numbers get better

We cover movement after meals, sleep and stress basics, and why fiber and balanced meals calm spikes. This is your roadmap—simple, clear, and science-based—to turn symptoms into healing. You’re not broken. Your body can heal.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 27 - Sliding Scale Insulin: Why It Feels Like You’re Chasing Sugar (And What To Do Instead)06 Oct 202501:00:38

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode, we break down insulin sliding scale in real life. Why does it feel like you’re always chasing your sugar? We explain basal vs. bolus, why timing matters, and what over basalization is. Learn how to move from a reactive sliding scale to a proactive plan: basal for fasting, bolus for meals and corrections, and prebolus 15–20 minutes before you eat. We share simple wins like short walks after meals, how correction factors work, and when to talk to your doctor about adding mealtime insulin. We also cover common long- and rapid-acting insulins and a safety tip if you can’t get your prescription. Small changes can steady your day and lower A1C.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 26 - Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults29 Sep 202500:39:08

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

In this episode of The Diabetes Podcast, Richie and Amber dig into Diabetes 1.5, also called LADA (latent autoimmune diabetes in adults). If you were told you have type 2 but meds aren’t working, this is for you. We explain why LADA looks like type 2 at first, why it’s often missed, and how to get the right tests and treatment fast.

What we cover:

  • What Diabetes 1.5 (LADA) is: an autoimmune diabetes that starts in adults and moves slower than classic type 1.
  • Why it’s misdiagnosed: normal BMI, younger age, and “type 2” meds that don’t work.
  • Red flags to watch: rising A1C, thirst, fatigue, frequent peeing, weight loss, normal BMI, autoimmune family history.
  • The tests to ask for: GAD65 antibodies and a C‑peptide test to check insulin production.
  • Why early insulin matters: protects beta cells, lowers A1C sooner, and helps prevent DKA.
  • Tools that help: CGMs (Dexcom, Libre) and automated insulin delivery systems, including tubeless options.
  • Insurance basics: some pumps are pharmacy benefit, others are DME and may require a C‑peptide level.
  • What to do if your plan isn’t working: after 3–6 months of real effort, ask for LADA testing and an endocrinology referral.
  • Mindset and support: drop the shame, build your care team, and find your people.

Key takeaway: About 10% of adults labeled “type 2” actually have Diabetes 1.5 (LADA). If lifestyle and meds aren’t moving the needle, ask for GAD and C‑peptide tests. Early, correct care can protect your pancreas and your peace of mind.

Questions? Email support@empowereddiabetes.com. Share and subscribe for more real‑world diabetes guidance.

 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

How to Lose 200+ lbs WITHOUT Surgery: Stanley Bronstein’s Weight Loss Journey30 Mar 202601:12:01

In this episode of The Diabetes Podcast, Richie and Amber sit down with Stanley Bronstein, founder of the Million Pound Weight Loss Challenge, to discuss his life-changing transformation. Stanley shares how he successfully lost over 200 pounds—dropping from 367 pounds to 145 pounds—without the use of weight loss surgery or medication.

Throughout the conversation, Stanley opens up about overcoming the emotional hurdles of obesity, breaking the habit of late-night eating, and shifting his identity to prioritize long-term health. Listeners will discover actionable strategies for weight loss and Type 2 diabetes management, including the power of visualization to curb cravings and why abstinence from certain trigger foods can sometimes be easier than moderation.

When managing Type 2 diabetes, it is crucial to understand that it is not just one broken thing; it is a whole lot of things. It is a complex system involving the liver, muscles, pancreas, fat tissue, gut, and brain. Elevated blood sugar is simply the output—the fever—not the disease itself. Stanley’s holistic approach to daily movement and whole-food nutrition perfectly illustrates how addressing the entire system can lead to lasting wellness and better blood sugar control.

Whether you are trying to lower your A1C, stop emotional eating, or simply find the motivation to start exercising, Stanley’s "beat yesterday" philosophy proves that small, consistent actions compound over time.

Follow the podcast so you never miss an episode filled with real stories and real science to help you take charge of your health.

Need help NOW? Reach out to our support email at support@empowereddiabetes.com.

Resources:

Chapters:

[00:00] Welcome Stanley Bronstein: Losing 200+ lbs Without Surgery
[02:11] The Emotional Roots of Obesity & Food as Comfort
[06:28] How to Stop Late-Night Binge Eating with Visualization
[12:15] The True Purpose of Food vs. Emotional Eating
[16:47] The Turning Point at Age 50: Stopping "Slow Suicide"
[24:41] Setting Boundaries & The Power of "Healthy Selfishness"
[32:15] The "Beat Yesterday" Mindset: Progress Over Perfection
[38:15] Walking Across the Country: Discovering Your True Potential
[44:48] The "Walk 20" Rule & Simple Daily Habits for Health
[48:47] Why Fruit Doesn't Have to Spike Your Blood Sugar
[56:56] Abstinence vs. Moderation for Addictive Personalities
[01:04:30] Genetics vs. Lifestyle: Taking Control of Your Health
[01:10:48] Episode Takeaways & Action Steps

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 25 - The Case for Carbohydrates22 Sep 202500:43:49

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Carbs aren’t the villain. In this episode, we make the case for whole, fiber-rich carbs—especially for people living with diabetes. We break down keto history, why it can “work” short-term, and why most people aren’t actually in ketosis. We explain metabolic flexibility, the difference between ketosis and dangerous ketoacidosis (DKA), and why carbs from whole plants bring nutrients you can’t get anywhere else. We close with the three best-researched eating patterns for long-term health: Mediterranean, DASH, and Whole Food Plant-Based. Takeaway: Don’t avoid carbs. Reclaim them—by choosing whole, colorful, fiber-rich foods.

What You’ll Learn

  • Keto’s origin: a medical therapy for childhood epilepsy—not a weight loss plan.
  • Why early “keto weight loss” is often water, not fat (glycogen holds water).
  • Most “keto” diets aren’t true ketosis (and why that matters).
  • DKA vs nutritional ketosis: warning signs and when to seek care.
  • Metabolic flexibility: how to switch smoothly between fat and glucose for energy.
  • Why long-term low carb can reduce your ability to handle carbs later.
  • Fiber boosts natural GLP-1 for fullness and steady blood sugar.
  • 90% of protective phytochemicals come from carb-rich plant foods.
  • Why high saturated fat, animal-heavy low carb can raise LDL and heart risk.
  • The best evidence-based diets for diabetes and longevity include carbs:
    • Mediterranean
    • DASH (great if you also have high blood pressure)
    • Whole Food Plant-Based

Key Takeaways

  • Carbs are not the problem. Ultra-processed foods are.
  • Whole carbs deliver fiber, vitamins (B, folate), minerals (magnesium, potassium), and powerful phytochemicals.
  • For insulin users: long-term carb restriction can raise insulin per gram when carbs return—this is an adaptation, not failure.
  • Build metabolic flexibility with balanced meals and mixed exercise (aerobic + anaerobic).

Simple Action This Week

  • Step 1: Spot one ultra-processed food you eat daily (soda, pastry, chips, ice cream).
  • Step 2: Swap it for a high-fiber whole carb:
    • Soda → sparkling water with citrus
    • Chips → veggies and hummus
    • Pastry → whole grain toast with nut butter
    • Ice cream → frozen berries with plain Greek yogurt
    • Add 1/2 cup beans to a salad or soup

Helpful Terms

  • Low carb diabetes: managing diabetes on fewer carbs—don’t forget fiber-rich plants still matter.
  • Nutritional ketosis: mild, measured ketones from very low carb, high fat intake.
  • DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis): medical emergency—nausea, vomiting, fruity breath, fast breathing, extreme thirst/urination. Seek care now.
  • Metabolic flexibility: your body smoothly uses both fat and glucose for fuel.

Resources Mentioned

  • Mediterranean, DASH, and Whole Food Plant-Based eating patterns
  • Fiber and GLP-1 for fullness
  • Large studies linking plant-forward, carb-inclusive diets to longer life


If this helped, subscribe to The Diabetes Podcast. Get clear science, real steps, and support for better blood sugars and type 2 diabetes remission. Or if you have additional questions or need additional support, please reach out to us at support@empowereddiabetes.com.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 24 - Diabetes and GLP-1: The Real Story Behind Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro (Part 2)15 Sep 202501:10:35

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Amber Wilhoit (RD/LD, CDCES) and Richie Wilhoit (TRS-C) continue our Diabetes GLP1 deep dive with clear, real-world steps. We show you how to raise GLP-1 naturally with food, movement, and timing. We explain who may benefit from GLP-1 meds, how to protect muscle, and how to build an exit plan from day one. You’ll walk away with a simple 90-day plan, shopping tips, and smart tracking tools you can use this week.

What you’ll learn

  • GLP-1 basics: It helps hunger, blood sugar, and stomach emptying. Your body can make more of it.
  • Natural GLP-1 boosters:
    • Intact grains (not flour): barley groats, oat groats, steel cut oats, quinoa
    • Fermentable fibers: beans, lentils, apples, citrus, green bananas, cooled potatoes
    • Beta-glucans: oats and barley
    • Leafy greens: spinach, kale, collards (thylakoids slow fat digestion and trigger GLP-1)
  • Study spotlight: Eating barley groats at dinner raised GLP-1 by 43% the next morning and led to 100 fewer calories at lunch—without trying.
  • Spinach effect: About 1/2 cup cooked spinach boosted GLP-1 ~40% and cut cravings up to 11 hours.
  • Exercise stack:
    • Walk 10 minutes after meals
    • Resistance training 2–3x/week (legs, glutes, major movers)
    • Add short HIIT later (build up slowly)

Shopping and cooking tips

  • Look for: hulled barley, oat groats, steel cut oats. Avoid pearled barley and most instant oats.
  • Oat groats link (https://www.amazon.com/yupik-organic-oat-groats-cereal/dp/B07TYZK623/ref=sr_1_6?crid=1Z9IZEQIFUZVC&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.O28lwCAWgLj2ficSqgoVQ9MYfjFcGP0NFt8CPlkf4DwBLgBiwV5qMy48ScyrTPrZWxH0Vb4sv5fjV_2HZ-qOJtMwEKqfGTRjutpfVSSB1wqeEq-XVYNIZ_7puVn7w5BgWUF2NYD2T2xjwY7g6VwaYBvtNa8qsE2qvoc9u2t_jIjVCoMFbG49thdVVJe65G6hc_tK1kMC9oN82-Y46zFw4vTRJypl927qjrMuPdQ647q2geLPHtXwHol7Bsl2qugLRucu8w9BOjrJmaAtH06OqmmPsNZNhiV-r2Nm_j0eprQ.SKaf6_j4ICvair7aRRtqw6vFyWtskQPiKTpZ2VaZyMk&dib_tag=se&keywords=oat%2Bgroats&qid=1757766219&sprefix=oat%2Bgroa%2Caps%2C158&sr=8-6&th=1)
  • Leafy greens: two big handfuls daily. Lightly cook to bright green or blend into smoothies.
  • Pair greens with healthy fats (nuts, avocado, olive oil) to boost the thylakoid effect.

Easy add-ons that help

  • Apple cider vinegar: 1 tbsp in 8 oz water before meals
  • Protein at breakfast: 15–20 g (overnight oats with chia + flax; or tofu scramble with turmeric and kala namak)
  • Fiber goal: work up to 40 g/day (add slowly)
  • Fermented foods daily: sauerkraut, kimchi, kefir, unsweetened yogurt
  • Spices: Ceylon cinnamon, turmeric + black pepper, cayenne
  • Early time-restricted eating: front-load calories earlier in the day

Your 90-day plan

  • Weeks 1–4:
    • Greens daily
    • Swap refined grains for intact grains
    • 2 tbsp ground flax seeds
    • 10-minute walks after meals
  • Weeks 5–8:
    • Apple cider vinegar before meals
    • 15–20 g protein at breakfast
    • Start lifting 2–3x/week (20–30 min)
    • Raise fiber toward 40 g/day
  • Weeks 9–12:
    • Add short HIIT 2x/week (ease in)
    • Fermented foods daily
    • Use cinnamon, turmeric + pepper, cayenne
    • Try earlier eating window (e.g., 8am–6/7pm)

Tracking that works

  • Waist circumference weekly (great for belly fat changes)
  • Energy rating (same time daily)
  • Hunger/fullness scale before and after meals
  • If you have diabetes: check blood sugar to see what helps

When GLP-1 meds make sense

  • Type 2 diabetes with A1C not at goal despite lifestyle work (common targets: ≤6.5% endo, ≤7.0% primary care)
  • BMI ≥ 30 with health risks (e.g., hypertension, diabetes)
  • You’ve tried structured lifestyle changes with a pro (RD/CDCES/PT/EP)
  • You accept costs and risks and have a muscle plan

If you’re on GLP-1 meds

  • Protein: 1.0–1.5 g/kg body weight daily
  • Resistance training: 3x/week, big muscle groups
  • Consider creatine monohydrate: 5 g/day (lab-verified)
  • Side effects:
    • Nausea: ginger tea/chews, smaller meals, avoid very fatty/fried foods
    • Constipation: increase fiber slowly and hydrate
  • Don’t under-eat; fuel your body to keep muscle
  • Track belt fit and waist, not only the scale

Kids and GLP-1

  • Some groups consider GLP-1 for ages 12+ with obesity, but long-term brain effects are unknown
  • We push intensive lifestyle help first: family support, better food access, more movement

Real talk: our world is “diabetogenic”

  • Ultra-processed foods are engineered to be hard to resist
  • Kids see thousands of junk food ads each year
  • Many areas are not walkable; sleep and stress get ignored
  • Systems need to change, but you can still win with simple daily steps

Key takeaways

  • Add leafy greens and intact grains
  • Eat beans and lentils often
  • Walk after meals and lift a few times a week
  • Use fiber, protein, vinegar, spices, and fermented foods
  • Build habits now—meds or not—and create your exit plan

Subscribe to The Diabetes Podcast for more step-by-step help from Amber and Richie. Your worth is not your weight. The goal is more health, more energy, and more life.

 

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

Episode 23 - Diabetes and GLP-1: The Real Story Behind Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro (Part 1)08 Sep 202500:44:13

Love the podcast but hate taking notes? The Diabetes Podcast Blog compresses every episode into a bulleted, 10 minute read AND has the podcast embedded so you can listen as you read along! Check it out at https://empowereddiabetes.com/diabetes-podcast-blog

Amber (RD/LD, CDCES) and Richie (TRS-C) dive into diabetes and GLP-1 medications like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro. We cut through the hype and give you the real story. How do these drugs work? What are the benefits? What are the risks? And why do some people regain weight when they stop?

What you’ll learn:

  • What GLP-1 is and how it helps with type 2 diabetes
  • How GLP-1 messages lower hunger, slow the stomach, and boost insulin when glucose is present
  • Why ultra-processed food can block natural fullness signals
  • The step-by-step journey on these meds: titration, appetite changes, weight loss, and the 6–12 month “stall”
  • The truth about side effects: nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation
  • “Ozempic face” and why fast weight loss can mean lean mass loss
  • Why up to 40% of weight lost may be muscle—and why that matters for your metabolism
  • Real-world costs, insurance rules, and why Medicare coverage is tricky
  • Caution on compounded semaglutide and FDA warnings
  • Big benefits for many with type 2 diabetes: A1C drops and lower heart risk

Key takeaways:

  • GLP-1 meds can lower A1C by about 1–2 points and help with weight.
  • Your body fights fast weight loss. Weight often returns when you stop.
  • Protect your muscle with resistance training and enough protein.
  • If you use these meds, plan for cost, side effects, and long-term use.

What’s next (Part 2):

  • Foods that naturally boost GLP-1 (some by 40%+)
  • Simple meal and movement strategies to calm “food noise”
  • How to talk to your doctor about diabetes and GLP-1
  • A practical multi-week action plan

Subscribe for more real talk on diabetes and GLP-1.

 

Disclaimer:

The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

Results vary from person to person. Examples, statistics, or studies are shared to educate, not to promise outcomes. Any discussion of medications, dosing, or side effects is general in nature and may not be appropriate for your specific situation. Do not ignore professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read or heard here. If you think you are experiencing an emergency or severe side effects (such as persistent vomiting, severe diarrhea, signs of dehydration, allergic reaction, or symptoms of lactic acidosis), call your local emergency number or seek urgent care right away.

We strive for accuracy, but health information changes over time. We make no guarantees regarding completeness, timeliness, or suitability of the content and assume no liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material. Use of this content is at your own risk.

Links or references to third-party resources are provided for convenience and do not constitute endorsement. By reading, listening, or using this information, you agree to these terms and understand that you are responsible for your own health decisions in partnership with your licensed healthcare provider.

© My Podcast Data