Virgin Coconut
Oil and Diabetes

Indeed Virgin Coconut Oil has a substantial effect on blood
sugar levels. My wife and daughter (both have type 2
diabetes) measure their blood sugar levels at least three
times a day. When they eat the wrong foods and their blood
sugar levels get to 80-100 points above normal, they don't
take extra medication, they take 2-3 tablespoons of the
coconut oil directly from the bottle. Within a half hour
their blood sugar levels will come back to normal. Ed,
Coconut Diet
Forums
25.8 million children and adults in the United States, 8.3% of
the population, have diabetes.1 The current rate of
people becoming diabetic in the United states is doubling
every 10 years. This has resulted in a windfall for
pharmaceutical companies capitalizing on this “disease” with
drugs designed to treat type 2 diabetes, but not deal with
the underlying cause. These drugs have serious side effects.
One of the most popular diabetes drugs, Avandia, was pulled off
the market in 2011
after a number of studies showed that the drug increased the
risk of heart attacks among type 2 diabetes patients. The
manufacturer of the drug reached a $3 billion settlement in
December 2011 over its fraudulent marketing of the drug, the
largest federal criminal drug-company settlement to date.
Information that is finally making its way into the
mainstream media is that type 2 diabetes is a lifestyle and
diet issue that can be reversed without drugs. This
information has been known for years, however, among those
in the alternative health crowd. Consider these testimonials
(some over 10 years ago) from individuals who did not
follow typical doctor’s advice:
I also wanted to pass along a bit of my experience in regard to
diabetes. I have been taking Coconut Oil (CO) since about
the end of February of this year. I first started cooking
with it and replacing the vegetable oils in my home. Then I
started taking it by the spoon as well, about 2 tablespoons
daily around the first of March.
I was diagnosed as a type 2 diabetic in July of 2001 and
immediately put on the Amaryl RX (1 in am and 1/2 in the
pm.) I have been looking for a way to reverse this condition
since diagnosed. I have found a world of info out there on
various supplements and diet, BUT not from my doctor who
just said "welcome to the club" and told me to take my meds.
(I was crying and he seemed happy!)
He also sent me to a nutritionist to take diabetic classes.
Fortunately, I had already learned enough on my own to know
that A LOT of what they are teaching is NOT correct and
their recommendations are NOT what you want to do UNLESS you
want to further the condition, NOT improve or reverse it.
Bottom line is this. I have been able to slowly remove myself from
the RX and now control my blood sugar by diet, supplements
and with CO! Cool, huh? I do still check my blood sugar
levels once or twice daily... and they are as good and
usually BETTER than when I was on the Amaryl RX! And I have
been off the RX since the end of March of 2003. I was taking
several supplements for a year or so before CO but still had
to take the RX. It wasn't until I removed most of the
vegetable oils (all of them at home and careful when out to
eat) and added the CO that I noticed I was beginning to
crash while on the RX at different times during the day...
so I would cut down on the RX and still maintain good blood
sugar levels. Gradually I was NOT taking the RX anymore!!!
Hope this may help someone and God Bless all... Sharon,
Coconut Diet
Forums
I've been diagnosed as Type II Diabetes and have been struggling with
a wildly fluctuating blood sugar level for two years. I've
used diet, exercise, herbs and vitamins in my attempts to
stabilize my levels, with limited success. My MD wanted to
put me on prescription meds, but I resisted based on reports
I'd read about the long-term side effects of those drugs.
One day reading a newsletter, I ran across an article mentioning that
Coconut Oil was used to regulate blood sugar levels. So on
November 7, 2003, I ordered 2 quarts of the Virgin Coconut
Oil. I began taking one tablespoon a day at dinner. My
yearly blood test was done on January 2, 2004. When I saw my
MD on January 13, 2004, he was pleased to see that my blood
sugar levels were now in the normal range, and told me that
they'd been that way for a few months. I was ecstatic! I've
been using Tropical Traditions Coconut oil since, and my
blood sugars have stayed in the normal range ever since.
Thank you so much for making such a wonderful, healthy food
source available to us! Beth,
Coconut Diet
Forums
Restricting refined sugar, refined carbohydrates, and
alcohol from one's diet, while increasing healthy saturated
fats and protein, can reverse type 2 diabetes. Even the
mainstream media is starting to report that type 2 diabetes
is reversible through diet.2
Replacing longer chain polyunsaturated fats, such as corn
and soybean oil, with the saturated fat of coconut oil, can
reduce cravings for refined carbohydrates that contribute to
insulin resistance. Consider Dr. Mark's testimony:
As a physician of many diabetics, I am constantly telling
them how to eat more healthily but was unable to follow my
own advice. I knew WHAT to do, but feeling like I had the
wherewithal to practice what I preached was a different
matter! I knew my patients didn't take my advice seriously
enough, since I wasn't treating my own body right and was
clinically "morbidly obese". My hunger and cravings have
been my downfall for years leading me to donuts, cookies and
other unhealthy foods I knew to stay away from. I was
constantly hungry. When I heard that adding [healthy] oils
like Tropical Traditions Virgin Coconut Oil could help
satisfy my run-away hunger and cravings, I was skeptical. I
knew if it could help even ME, then there would be something
to the claims! No one was more surprised than me when I felt
satisfied for hours after spreading some on my morning
toast, or enjoying a tablespoon in my oatmeal. My wife loves
to make our family sugar free chocolate balls using this
wonderful oil, and I am still amazed that something so
delicious is actually good for me! I have more energy, been
able to exercise for longer periods of time, and have now
lost 36 pounds!
Mark -an
M.D. in New Mexico
Coconut oil's ability to control hunger and cravings is well
documented. Coconut oil's medium chain fatty acids promote
thermogenesis and lead to increased metabolic rates. For
more info, see this article on weight
loss.
Population studies of societies that consume much of their
calories from the saturated fats of coconut oil show that
diabetes is very rare. A study done in India in 1998 showed
that when Indians abandoned traditional fats like ghee and
coconut oil, and started using polyunsaturated fats like
sunflower or safflower oils, that the rates of diabetes
became alarmingly high.3 Studies carried out in
many South Pacific Island countries have revealed the same
thing: when the traditional diet high in coconut oil is
abandoned in favor of more modern foods that are highly
processed, including polyunsaturated vegetable oils, there
is a direct increase in the rate of diabetes and other
western diseases.
A study was conducted in 2010 "to study the effect of
saturated fatty acid (SFA)-rich dietary vegetable oils on
the lipid profile, endogenous antioxidant enzymes and
glucose tolerance in type 2 diabetic rats." The study
concluded: "The type of fatty acid in the dietary oil
determines its deleterious or beneficial effects. Lauric
acid present in coconut oil may protect against
diabetes-induced dyslipidemia."4
My husband is type 2 diabetic and we believe the use coconut
oil has greatly helped in his control of blood glucose. With
a very low carbohydrate diet, and cooking only with coconut
oil he has been able to reduce his prescription drugs to the
very lowest amount. Hopefully he will be able to eliminate
them all together and control his diabetes with just diet. Suzan,
Coconut Diet
Forums
Coconut Oil and Type 1 Diabetes
While type 2 diabetes is related to diet and lifestyle, type
1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that shuts down your
body’s insulin production. But we are seeing good
testimonies in coconut oil's ability to control type 1
diabetes as well:
The Virgin Coconut Oil (VCO) also is helping with my
diabetes. I have type 1 juvenile diabetes and take insulin.
I've had ups and downs with my control through the years and
I've ALWAYS struggled with cravings for sweets and
carbohydrates. The VCO has helped with my control (I've
noticed more stability) and it has alleviated some cravings.
It has not completely alleviated cravings, but I've have
noticed a decrease. People with diabetes often crave
high-glycemic foods (that we should stay away from!) due to
cravings caused by blood sugar swings. The VCO has helped a
lot in this area! I'd recommend it to anyone with diabetes.
Diabetes can cause low moods & low energy levels, and I've
noticed a positive increase/lift in both. Megan,
Coconut Diet
Forums
A study done in May 2009 suggests that the medium chain
fatty acids found in coconut oil can improve brain function
in type 1 diabetes. The study concluded: "Medium-chain
triglycerides offer the therapeutic advantage of preserving
brain function under hypoglycemic conditions without causing
deleterious hyperglycemia."5
Other recent research is showing that neurological disorders
such as Alzheimer's should be classified as "type 3"
diabetes.6 Coconut oil works well with type 3
diabetes as well. See our
article on Alzheimer's here.
In January 2011 Rogier Donker wrote about his experience
with type 1 diabetes, his dependency on the drug Humalog,
and how Virgin Coconut Oil helped reduce his dependency on
this drug:
Of Virgin Coconut Oil. From a skeptic’s
point of view!
I first learned about virgin coconut oil when I was reading
a book about giving massages. The author recommended VCO as
a very good massage oil, so I went out and purchased some.
A search on the Internet brought up all kinds of (other)
information and I got myself a general education about VCO.
Good for a multitude of things that might ail a person, I
was intrigued to the point of wanting to learn more…
I read about how VCO could reduce one’s belly fat, could
change the dependency on insulin for diabetics and a host of
other things. Being a type1 diabetic due to an injured
pancreas I have to take 34 units of Humalog (an insulin mix)
twice daily. When I read that VCO could restore some of the
pancreas’ insulin production capabilities, I decided to run
an experiment. I have nothing to lose and everything to
gain.
I started ingesting VCO by the teaspoon on January 1st 2011.
As the first week of the New Year progressed I started
eating VCO on toast, in my cereal and by the spoon full. All
week my glucose levels seemed to be getting lower than what
I was used to, but I kept shooting myself with the
prescribed 34 units of Humalog morning and evening.
On Friday January 7th my morning glucose was 104. I had my
usual breakfast: 1 boiled egg and two slices of raisin bread
toast with VCO spread and my shot of Humalog. Ellen had
noticed that my energy level was higher than normal all week
and that I seemed to have lost some weight as my pants “were
falling down”.
We had a normal lunch on that Friday: grilled cheese
sandwich, mine made with coconut oil. Dinner was also
normal: baked pork chops, fried (in olive oil) potatoes and
apple sauce, glass of milk. Just before dinner I checked my
GL and it was 142, so I shot myself, as per usual, with 34
units of Humalog as I was about to eat dinner and ingest
food…
An hour after dinner I got the shakes, started sweating like
a dog and experienced the unmistakable signs of “crashing”.
Ellen rushed to the kitchen got some OJ and my testing kit.
My GL was 55! Say what? Impossible! It took a couple of
glucose tablets, orange juice and some chocolate and after a
half hour the “crash” signs diminished and I was back to
normal. It was a rather scary experience as I’ve only
crashed a few times in the last five years and never as
violent as this last time. We went to bed at eleven that
night and just before bedtime my GL was 113. Sleep tight!
Saturday morning January 8th I woke up with a GL of 102.
Decided NOT to inject any Humalog, had my breakfast and went
on with the day. The bathroom scale revealed that I had
indeed lost a couple of pounds. Saturday evening,
just before dinner my
glucose level was 141. Remembering what happened the night
before, I made the decision (with Ellen’s blessing) to shoot
myself up with only 10 units of Humalog. Dinner was served.
Later that evening Ellen and I shared an apple and just
before we went to bed my glucose level was 117. All along I
am ingesting VCO, by now about a tablespoon a day. Sunday
morning the GL was 110 and I decided again to NOT shoot up.
Sunday night the GL was 138, again I did not partake of any
Humalog. It is now January 15th and I have not taken ANY
Humalog for six days, glucose levels appear to be below 130
and I feel TERRIFIC! The bathroom scale indicated this
morning that I lost another pound and that weight loss is
now visible in the belly region. Blink the Humalog, bring on
the VCO! Through a mix-up at the Diabetes Care Club I ran
out of test strips (to test my GL) on Monday the 10th. The
last time I was able to check my GL it was 127 and I felt
terrific.
It is now Sunday, January 16th 2011. I have not taken any
Humalog or been able to test myself since Monday morning on
January 10th. I’m ingesting VCO at the rate of about a
tablespoon a day. I still FEEL terrific! My stamina has
improved, I have more energy and have lost 6 pounds! I
cannot wait to receive test strips from the Diabetes Care
Club, my gut says that I will be testing within normal
limits…. Can’t wait to PROVE it!
It’s Monday January 17th. I did my breakfast: two slices of
wheat walnut raisin bread, a boiled egg and just because it
NEEDED ? to be eaten, half a cinnamon roll. Washed it all
down with three cups of coffee, each cup with a half a
teaspoon of sugar and some half and half. Went to work- full
of energy and get-up and go. At eleven o’clock I thought:
I’d better go to the house for a mid-morning snack. UPS
delivered the test strips just as I was walking to the
house. OK… here we go… testing one, two, three and
prick….beep-beep….drum roll: 113!! Talk about feeling GOOD!!
Just for the heck of it I pushed the buttons on my tester
and found:
My seven day average was 113…
My fourteen day average was 128 (that’s two weeks on VCO,
the first week with 68 units of Humalog each day, the next
week NO Humalog…)
My thirty day average was 134….
Since I tested 113 I nibbled on a large dried fig that my
friend sent from Turkey. As soon as I ate that fig I tested
myself again: 133 …. Back to work! Ask me if I feel healthy!
So far I lost seven pounds and the last time I felt this
energetic was before the pancreatitis of nine years ago….
It is now Wednesday January 19th 2011
Yesterday Ellen and I went to Carmel to repair a kiln. Just
before lunch I started sweating a bit and felt a little
“high” and sure enough when I tested myself my GL was 210.
Better take a little bit of Humalog. 10 units. No problem at
all! The coconut oil, overall is making a huge difference. I
test myself three or four times a day and can tell when I’m
low and when I’m high. I take Humalog as needed but no where
near the 68 units I was taking before I started on the
coconut oil! I still feel terrific and it appears I am still
losing weight.
Sunday January 23rd 2011
My system must have gotten used to the coconut oil and the
much smaller amounts of Humalog I am now taking. On average
I ingest a table spoon of VCO and 10 units of Humalog per
day and STILL feel terrific! As of today my seven day
average was 146, fourteen day average 145 and my thirty day
average was 139…
FEELING GOOD!!
Rogier,
Coconut Diet
Forums
As the word about coconut oil’s effectiveness in combating
diabetes gets out, it is only natural that the drug
companies will try to mimic the effects and come up with new
drugs, since coconut oil cannot be patented, as it is a
natural food. A study done in 2011 on capric acid, one of
the medium chain fatty acids found in coconut oil, fond that
this “natural fatty acid can serve as a regulator of blood
sugar levels, which may have important applications in
designing better and safer drugs for diabetes treatment.”7
Given the pharmaceutical industry’s track record and
criminal convictions, however, it might be best to stick
with pure Virgin Coconut Oil.
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Virgin Coconut Oil
How it has changed people's lives, and how it can change yours!
References
1. American Diabetes Association,
http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/diabetes-statistics/
2. "Reversing
Diabetes is Possible," by Val Willingham, CNN - January
28, 2011
3. Sircar S, Kansra U. "Choice of cooking oils--myths and
realities." Journal Indian Medical Association. 1998
Oct;96(10):304-7.
4. Kochikuzhyil BM, Devi K, Fattepur SR. "Effect of
saturated fatty acid-rich dietary vegetable oils on lipid
profile, antioxidant enzymes and glucose tolerance in
diabetic rats." Indian J Pharmacol. 2010 Jun;42(3):142-5.
5. Page KA "Medium-chain fatty acids improve cognitive
function in intensively treated type 1 diabetic patients and
support in vitro synaptic transmission during acute
hypoglycemia." Diabetes. 2009 May;58(5):1237-44.
6. "Insulin:
Predictor for Alzheimer's?," by Fernanda Barros, Ivanhoe
Health Correspondent, April 13, 2011
7. “Van
Andel Institute study may lead to better, safer drug for
diabetes” 21-Nov-2011
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