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Hypothesis on the glucose production’s communication model between the brain and other internal organs, especially the stomach and liver

Journal: Journal of Psychology and Neuroscience (Vol.2, No. 2)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 1-5

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Abstract

After reviewing the research results for six months, from September 2019 through February 2020, the author identified a probable internal communication model between the nervous system and certain vital internal organs, specifically the stomach and liver regarding postprandial plasma glucose (PPG) production. The author used a continuous glucose monitor device to collect 50,000 glucose data during the past 665 days. He focused on studying the relationships among different food nutritional contents, cooking methods, food material's physical phases, and different characteristics and variants from his glucose waveform patterns. In this study, he focused on the three major meal groups based on food nutritional ingredients, meal's preparation, and cooking methods of eggs, squash, and cabbage to create soup-based (liquid) meal and pan-fried (solid) meal. The PPG waveforms from these three meal groups demonstrated that soup-based liquid food produced a much lower glucose value than the pan-fried solid food. Although both liquid and solid meals have similar identical nutritional ingredients, he questions why did this occur? His hypothesis is that his PPG differences are due to specific physical phase of his finished meal either “liquid” or “solid”, which is his ready-to-eat meal's final physical “phase” that determines his PPG characteristics and waveforms. The author utilized his GH-Method: math-physical medicine (MPM) approach to explore a T2D patient's glucose production situation from a scientific view of the brain and nervous system's functionalities. If this specific approach and above interpretation are accurate, we can then “trick” our brain into producing a “lesser” amount of glucose after food intake without altering or sacrificing the needed food nutritional balance. As a result, T2D patients can simply change their cooking method in order to lower both of their peak PPG values and their average PPG levels.

Last modified: 2020-11-17 04:07:38