What Is Diabetes Remission
Type 2 diabetes remission is a state where blood sugar levels return to normal without glucose-lowering medications. According to the American Diabetes Association criteria, remission is defined as HbA1c below 6.5% without medication for at least 3 months.
It is important to understand: remission is not the same as a complete cure. The predisposition to diabetes remains. However, under the right conditions, a person can live with normal blood sugar levels for decades.
Why Standard Treatment Doesn't Achieve Remission
The conventional approach to type 2 diabetes focuses on symptom management with medications. Metformin, glimepiride, insulin — they all lower blood sugar but don't address the root cause.
The root cause of type 2 diabetes is insulin resistance. Cells stop responding to insulin, the pancreas produces more and more of it, yet blood sugar remains elevated.
Standard medications either stimulate insulin production (which worsens resistance) or artificially lower blood sugar without solving the underlying problem.
The md_pereligyn protocol: Addressing the Root Cause
Over 15 years of clinical practice, I developed a methodology aimed at eliminating insulin resistance. Statistics from 500+ patients:
How Remission Is Achieved
The Protocol includes three key components:
1. Insulin resistance diagnostics. Standard blood sugar and HbA1c tests are insufficient. We evaluate over 50 biomarkers: HOMA-IR index, C-peptide, fasting insulin, inflammatory markers.
2. Personalized nutrition. Not a calorie-counting diet, but metabolic correction through nutrition. Reducing insulin resistance allows the body to regulate weight on its own.
3. Targeted nutraceuticals. Berberine, chromium, magnesium, alpha-lipoic acid — scientifically proven compounds that increase insulin sensitivity.
Who Is the Protocol For
The methodology is effective for type 2 diabetes at any stage, except cases of complete pancreatic dysfunction (when C-peptide is near zero). The earlier treatment begins, the higher the chances of full remission.
Particularly strong results are seen in patients diagnosed less than 5 years ago and those with excess weight — in these cases, remission is achieved in 90%+ of cases.
The First Step Toward Remission
If you're asking "Can type 2 diabetes be cured?" — the answer is yes, it is possible. The first step is a consultation where we assess your situation and set realistic goals.
85% is not a promise — it's a statistic. Become the next success story.





