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One Healthy Guy’s Mission to Prevent a Diabetes Diagnosis

IT WAS ABOUT eight years ago when my dad, John Zaleski, first noticed something was off. I’ve always thought of him as someone with an infinite reserve of energy, the sort of stamina that allowed him to work his white-collar job and fix something in the house once he clocked out. This feeling he developed, as he recounted to me this past summer, was different: He felt shaky and fatigued for no obvious reasons. Weariness seemed to attack him out of nowhere. It was a true puzzle—one he started trying to solve when he bought a glucometer, a small device that measures glucose levels. It’s the kind of thing he does, searching for answers to things, even in unlikely places.

The morning after he picked up the device, he checked his glucose and saw the reading at 218. For perspective, a fasting glucose level of 126 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl) of blood is considered the threshold for diabetes. The number shocked him. Dad is a lean guy, a trim 150 pounds at five-foot-seven. He regularly exercises (pushups, situps, miles and miles clocked on his Concept2 rowing machine) and works as a volunteer critical-care paramedic with the local fire company and health system in addition to his corporate gig at a large health-care company…where he uses a standing desk. After registering his own fasting glucose, he quickly scheduled an appointment with his primary-care doctor, who ordered blood tests that confirmed the diagnosis: type 2 diabetes.

“I was stunned,” says Dad, who recently turned 60. “I then realized that what I was feeling made sense, but I had no idea that it was diabetes.”

Hearing the backstory for the first time this past summer stunned me as well.

The simple fact that Dad has diabetes places me in a high-risk category, since first-degree relatives are three times as likely to develop it as people without a family history of the disease. It turns out that genetics plays a strong role in its development. “Type 2 diabetes is very inherited,” says Mayer Davidson, M.D., a professor of medicine at Charles R. Drew University and David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. Studies of identical twins, for example, have shown that if one twin has type 2 diabetes, the other has a high chance of developing it as well.

In some instances, a family history of obesity can explain someone’s predisposition to type 2 diabetes, since the two conditions are linked: Roughly one quarter of people who have obesity have type 2, and obesity increases your risk of developing the disease threefold. There are also a handful of genes that, if mutated, can increase one’s chances of developing diabetes. But pinpointing one factor—inherited or environmental—as the root cause is a mystery that medicine is still trying to figure out. “There are probably different reasons that different people get it,” Dr. Davidson says. “But we don’t understand any exact causes that we can come up with.”

That’s why type 2 diabetes is usually described as a disease that’s dependent on both genetic and environmental factors, such as what you eat and how you exercise. Just because you have a family history of diabetes doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll develop it, but I didn’t want to find out the hard way.

Courtesy Zalenski

Like father (Dad, at right), like son is fine with me in many ways. But when it came to diabetes, I was looking to avoid the diagnosis he couldn’t dodge.

In a way, I’m somewhat lucky when it comes to my own diabetes prevention, since I’m able to point to something concrete. As I learned three years ago, I have type 1 myotonic dystrophy, an adult-onset form of muscular dystrophy that affects around 40,000 Americans. It’s a genetic disease whose effects may be so mild that someone won’t even know they have it—which was exactly the case with Dad. He didn’t get tested for it until I knew I had it. One of myotonic dystrophy’s hallmarks, regardless of the severity of other symptoms, is insulin resistance, which is one of the ways diabetes starts to develop. And it’s likely how it happened for Dad.

Glucose and insulin play complementary roles in the body. Glucose is our primary source of fuel, the necessary ingredient to help us finish that mile-long run, pump out sets at the gym, or run errands on a Saturday. Insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas, breaks down what we eat and releases glucose into the bloodstream. It also helps our cells take in that glucose. But when there’s too much glucose in your bloodstream, the pancreas goes into overdrive to produce more insulin to get those levels down. Eventually, it just can’t keep up, and over time you can develop type 2 diabetes, which can make you feel the way my dad did. Heart disease, nerve damage, impaired vision, and more can follow. (Type 2 shouldn’t be confused with type 1, an autoimmune disorder wherein the pancreas produces little to no insulin at all.)

Admittedly I’d never given diabetes much thought. Like Dad, I’m a trim 150-pound man, albeit 25 years his junior. Preventing the disease was never really a concern of mine until I was sitting in an office at the Johns Hopkins Hospital three years ago, listening to a genetic counselor telling me that I may end up with it. I’m not alone in being at risk of developing diabetes. Close to 98 million Americans—yes, more than one in three adults—have prediabetes, which means their fasting blood sugar is between 100 and 125 mg/dl, and they’re likely to make their way to having type 2 diabetes if they don’t get their blood sugar in check now. As with diabetes itself, prediabetes may be due to genetics or lifestyle factors (and it’s often both). On top of that, about 36 million Americans currently have type 2 diabetes, according to the CDC.

Learning that my ectomorphic body type isn’t guaranteed to protect me from diabetes threw me for a loop. It may just be the case that, one day, my cells won’t respond normally to insulin, increasing my blood-sugar levels to the point where I, too, get type 2 diabetes. How do you outrun your heritage knowing all that? For the past three years, I’ve been trying to figure that out. And I started with the best been-there-done-that expert I could think of: Dad.

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A Healthy Weight Doesn’t Always Protect You

THE KEY THING is to maintain your bodyweight in all cases,” Dad’s advice began. “Don’t have a lot of crap in the house.” I know he likes snacks. After all, I’m his son, and when your dad goes hunting for the chocolate ice cream or the cheese puffs, you generally pay attention. (The nights I brought home cheesesteaks and cheese fries probably didn’t help.) But in recent years, he’s radically changed the foods on his plate. The bulk of what he eats now consists of lean protein like chicken and omega-3-rich salmon. He throws back handfuls of blueberries. He cooks with extra-virgin olive oil. Then there’s the asparagus, the Brussels sprouts, and the broccoli.

These days, his fasting glucose numbers generally hover between 108 and 135, aided in large part by his diet—even if he didn’t need to change his weight.

Still, about three quarters of people with obesity do not have type 2 diabetes. And as I discovered on the flip side, not everyone with diabetes has extra weight.

Sandra Arévalo, a registered dietitian and spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, says following a prevention diet is a cornerstone of keeping diabetes at bay. In practical terms, that looks a lot like what Dad was telling me. Fill your plate with fresh fruits and vegetables. Pick whole grains and brown rice. When it comes to meat, try to focus on lean meat with little marbling. And then there’s what you don’t want to fill up on. “The number-one recommendation is to limit sugar,” she says. That’s not just the added sugar in everything from ketchup to bread to chocolate-chip cookies. Sugar also refers to refined carbohydrates, like those in white pasta and burger buns and cheese curls, because these carbs turn into blood-glucose-spiking sugars. (Yes, complex carbs like brown rice and bananas eventually turn into sugars as well, just at a healthier, slower rate.)

Refined carbohydrates and added sugar can cause spikes in glucose levels. In the long term, repeated rapid spikes can increase the risk of developing insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. (After all, you’re asking your pancreas to very quickly pump out insulin to deal with a massive amount of blood sugar—not all of which is going to be taken up by your cells.)

quote about the possibility of having diabetes or prediabetes despite good physical health

Even for people with a family history of diabetes, these dietary moves can be game-changing. “Genetic predisposition to obesity and type 2 diabetes—these diseases can be prevented by diet and exercise,” says Caroline Apovian, M.D., codirector of the Center for Weight Management and Wellness at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Others who work in diabetes prevention and treatment get more hardcore when it comes to diet. Sami Inkinen is one of them. He’s the founder of Virta Health, a company he created in 2014 with a mission to reverse diabetes in 100 million people. His dive into peer-reviewed research on how to manage blood sugar led him to the work of scientists who were compiling new evidence on the original, pre-insulin treatment for diabetes: a low-carb diet. (Key scientists in this arena—Stephen Phinney, M.D., Ph.D., and Jeff Volek, Ph.D., R.D.—became cofounders of Virta.)

But the low-carb-beats-diabetes approach is a hot button in the diabetes community, with research going back and forth on how effective it is, coupled with affordability issues. A more common approach is following the nutritional guidelines the American Diabetes Association recommends for type 2 prevention and management. When I reached out to ask about the best diet for both preventing my type 2 and, maybe one day, managing it, I was given a blueprint for my dinner plate by Toby Smithson, R.D.N., the association’s senior manager of nutrition and wellness.

Grab a nine-inch plate, she says, and cut it in half, filling one half up with stuff like broccoli, green beans, and cauliflower. Then cut the other half of the plate in half. Fill the top with lean proteins like chicken and fish and the bottom with complex carbohydrates like sweet potatoes and quinoa, anything that takes a while to break down into sugars in the blood.

Thanks to Dad, I already tend to do this pretty well: smoked salmon and baked chicken, broccoli, brown rice, green beans, arugula. I like eating red grapes and Cosmic Crisp apples more than the blueberries Dad favors, but sometimes I eat those, too. And I should probably swap fatty rib eye steaks for strip steaks when I do eat red meat. More recently, though, I’ve begun considering cutting more carbs from my diet. The last time I had my fasting glucose checked, in March following my annual checkup, my number was 95, squarely in the healthy range. If it goes higher, I’ll probably be much more careful about what I’m putting on my dinner plate.

With that in mind—and with my weight-management strategy, evidently, well in hand—I looked at what could shift my diabetes-prevention strategies into overdrive.

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Exercise Might Not Save You

NORMALLY, THE MUSCLES in our body are a massive sink for excess glucose. The ADA recommends that people do some strength training two or three times a week. More muscle mass means your body can better deal with any glucose floating around.

Having muscular dystrophy makes this recommendation a little more complicated at both the biological and practical levels. In my body, most of the insulin receptors contained in muscle tissue are spliced abnormally, making them insulin insensitive. My pancreas is already working harder to pump out more insulin than normal in order to get my cells to gobble up excess glucose.

For specific guidance, I spoke with John W. Day, M.D., Ph.D., the director of Stanford’s Division of Neuromuscular Medicine and a medical advisor with the Muscular Dystrophy Association. The main thing is focusing on what might increase my risk of getting type 2 and then minimizing it. “And so what are the things that are going to precipitate that risk?” he says. “More sedentary activity as opposed to more active activity.” Put another way: Don’t stay seated the whole day.

My own doctors tell me I shouldn’t lift weights anymore, since my body is slowly losing the stem cells that help regenerate muscle tissue. Bodyweight exercises for me, though, are fair game, as is any sort of aerobic exercise my legs can tolerate. Dr. Davidson says aerobic exercise means getting my pulse up to 70 percent of my maximal heart rate and doing it three times a week. Translated, that means getting my heart rate up to a point where I can carry on a conversation but talking might take a little more effort than usual.

a person running on a snowy surface with visible footprints

Andrew B. Myers

While there are elite athletes who have type 2 diabetes, exercise is still considered a cornerstone of prevention and management. Any workout you do helps your muscles take in glucose and keep it from floating around your bloodstream.

My own cardiologist—annual checkups are part of keeping tabs on what muscular dystrophy might be doing to my heart—tells me that a long, brisk walk solves that equation. These days, I get at least 6,000 steps daily. “That’ll keep your muscle bulk up,” says Dr. Day, “and that will allow you to absorb enough of the glucose and decrease your risk.”

Yet exercise can sometimes be deceptive. Years before starting Virta Health, while cofounding the real-estate company Trulia, Inkinen was an elite Ironman triathlete. He was, and still seems to be, at the pinnacle of health. But he was stunned when he found out at age 36 that he was on his way to type 2 diabetes.

“I had prediabetes, and I was lean and I was exercising and toned,” Inkinen says. “You can have type 2 diabetes and prediabetes even if you are thought to be the perfect specimen in terms of exercise and athletic feats.”

It’s a lesson other elite athletes have learned as well. Consider Sir Steve Redgrave. In 1998, while training for the Sydney Olympics, the power rower was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes at age 35. He would go on to win his fifth consecutive gold medal two years later, but he’s an illustration of a common misconception about type 2 diabetes: that being super fit and lean or thin makes you safe. As Redgrave has pointed out in interviews, his grandfather had type 2 diabetes.

Still, as Dr. Davidson says, exercise—and regular aerobic exercise, especially—can nonetheless be a critical part of battling diabetes. Any bit of exercise we do improves the insulin sensitivity of our muscles. “Maybe eventually you’ll develop type 2 diabetes,” he says. “But it will be much delayed.”

With my exercise strategy dialed in, I had one more preventive option to consider: pharmacological weapons.

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WHETHER TO GO on some type of drug to prevent type 2 diabetes is something I only began considering as I was researching this piece. It’s virtually impossible these days to read anything about type 2 diabetes without a mention of the new kind of medication called GLP-1 agonists—including Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound. And for good reason: These drugs work on a key mechanism of diabetes by mimicking a gut hormone that prompts the pancreas to produce more insulin. (There’s a subtle distinction here: Of the three, only Ozempic, which was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2017, is meant to treat adults with type 2 diabetes. Wegovy and Zepbound are approved by the FDA to help people with type 2 diabetes manage their weight.) These GLP-1 medications also have the well-known bonus of acting on body composition and cardiac health, too.

“They are transformational,” says Dr. Apovian, noting that they work well for people with diabetes. But even people with prediabetes, or those with a family history of diabetes because of obesity, ought to consider such medications, she says. “People with a high risk of developing type 2 diabetes should take them.” The important caveat is that once you’re on these drugs, they may have to be taken indefinitely, which, it seems, can’t happen for everybody. A recent analysis found that one quarter of people who were prescribed Ozempic or Wegovy for weight loss went off it after two years. I’m not ready to commit to—or invest in—a weekly injection or pill for the rest of my life. But I will follow the evolving science around these drugs—one new study on people with obesity and prediabetes showed that taking tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Zepbound, prevented diabetes from developing in 94 percent of cases—and may reconsider taking them in the future.

There is one more option. If you’re not carrying extra weight, metformin is generally the first-line therapy for helping your body manage glucose. Dad’s been on this since he was diagnosed. An oral medication widely used by people with type 2 diabetes, metformin helps lower the level of blood sugar swimming around our vessels. Some data also shows that metformin is effective as a preventive for people with prediabetes and even those whose glucose levels are normal. From 1996 to 2001, a division of the National Institutes of Health conducted a randomized, controlled trial across more than two dozen clinical centers in the U. S. Roughly a third of the trial’s 3,200 participants, all of them at a high risk for developing type 2 diabetes, were given doses of metformin twice a day. By the end of the trial, this group had reduced their chances of developing type 2 diabetes by 31 percent compared with those who received a placebo.

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Skeptics, however, note that as long as there are other ways to prevent or delay the onset of diabetes—and there are—going on a drug like metformin if you don’t actually need it at the moment is best avoided. Among longevity bros, metformin is almost like a multivitamin, with generally healthy experimenters taking it for purported health-span-enhancing benefits. Dr. Davidson doesn’t agree with taking metformin before you have diabetes. He says you have to weigh the potential benefit of preventing the condition against the possibility of side effects, which can include a variety of abdominal issues like nausea and vomiting. And you have to factor in cost as well. (The standard initial dose of metformin is 500 milligrams twice daily; even without insurance, the price generally tends to be under $30 for 100 tablets. Just for comparison, Ozempic can cost $900 or more without insurance.)

In talking with Dad, and the people I interviewed for this article, any complacency I had about developing diabetes myself has vanished. I can’t use my physique as armor—just because I’m lean doesn’t mean I’m protected, especially given my family history and my own disease.

And while the tactics we hear about for preventing or managing diabetes—changes in diet and exercise—might not work for everyone, they still serve as a good starting place. It’s also the strategy my dad is using: “Diet, weight management, and exercise,” he says. “Eat fresh stuff. Don’t eat processed crap. The key thing is to not make it worse.”

It sounds like incredibly boring advice. No AI, no apps, no buzzy meds, no continuous glucose monitors or fancy scans or celebrity-endorsed supplement stacks? Yet it’s the last part of his advice, about not making it worse, that resonated with me the most. I want to do everything I can to prevent diabetes—or if I do develop it in the future, to manage it well so I don’t need to go on drugs. I can’t predict what will happen. But I do have a 25-year head start.

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