No. Absolutely fucking not.
I just had a patient who I consulted with a few months back get in contact with me about his type 1 diabetes. Due to his work he had to start incorporating carbs back into his diet, but couldn't adequately control his blood sugar, even with insulin. So out of necessity he cut out carbs and went back onto a strict ketogenic carnivore diet and his blood sugar completely normalized.
I'm sure he could control his blood sugar with insulin, but other variables were in place which are conveniently missing from this guy's twitter sales pitch. And yeah, if you are using insulin and are on a strict diet of any kind you should be controlled.
Now here's the really interesting part: over the weeks and months he needed steadily less and less insulin until now he has completely normal blood sugar, even without taking any exogenous insulin...This is now the second patient I've had who has had this result, both of whom started a ketogenic carnivore diet within a year of being diagnosed. I haven't seen anyone be able to put T1DM into remission and start making insulin again after 1 to 1.5 years after presentation, but it's amazing that it can happen for anyone at any stage.
More variables required to be shared. With a strict diet, especially low carb, it is entirely possible to not need insulin provided you are exercising enough to burn through everything you're eating.
And how does he know the guy is making insulin again?
With my other patient, I saw her two weeks after she was discharged from the hospital with DKA, with blood sugars all over the place. Ketogenic carnivore completely stabilized her blood sugar levels immediately, and she steadily needed less and less exogenous insulin, until finally she didn't need any at all.
Great sales pitch! No info on what was happening with this individual before with blood sugars all over the place, but yes when you eat the same thing every day managing blood sugar is much more predictable! No other commentary on other variables, again.
I even checked her C peptide, which measures how much insulin the body is making, and it was barely detectable after 6 weeks on a ketogenic carnivore diet, but another two months on and it was completely normal, as was her fasting insulin, even though she no longer needed to take exogenous insulin.
Fasting insulin is not a thing, but I will assume grifterbro meant fasting glucose. More overall info on the patient is needed since if she was hospitalized for diabetic ketoacidosis, it is likely that was when she was diagnosed. And yeah your pancreas can begin to produce a bit more in the early stages after diagnosis and initial treatment.
This is something that can stabilize blood sugar for any type 1 diabetic, reducing the amount and variability of insulin, but for new presentations of type 1 diabetes, and type 2 diabetics at any stage, this is something that should be seriously considered as soon as possible.
Eating any type of repeatable, consistent diet will bring more stability. Eating a diet low in carbs will bring stability, especially if there is something (exercise, insulin) done to counteract the glucose spikes which come from eating excessive protein and fat. What? That can happen? Oh absolutely it can, it digests at a different rate so something has to counteract.
Type 1 diabetes is effectively cured. If you have the medicine, devices, knowledge and discipline, it's cured. You will be able to manage it well enough to avoid the negative health outcomes associated with the disease. Retina surgeries are basically non-existent now because T1s can handle their shit with the tools available.
Which brings me to my larger point: This fucktard is positioning his brand as a savior for a health problem for the subset of patients who can't figure their shit out. All he did was inject discipline to them but positioned it as miracle diet. The elimination of insulin could be considered impressive if he provided more evidence on the patients before and after - changes in exercise, behavior, A1C values, full lipid panel results, confirmation of proper diagnosis in the first place. But he doesn't, and without those details it is hard to trust.
The other super critical part is blood sugar management is not the only intended outcome of diet management. Maybe he did solve that issue for these 2 cause they couldn't solve it themselves. Sweet! You still have to manage that cholesterol, vitamins and nutrients, calcium etc essential to living. Has to share that end to end holistic outcome to make the level of claims he is making. And has to do so for a much larger sample over a long period of time. Until then it is just an anecdote to toss out to help him get straight cash homey.