His Sugar was 200. His Neighbour’s was 500. Only One of Them Was Unwell.

This review came to me from a daughter, written on behalf of her father. It is, at its heart, a story about how easy it is to watch a number on a lab report for eleven years and still miss what the body has been quietly trying to say. I’m grateful to Priya and her family for trusting us with this story, and for wanting other families to have it too.

– Dr Anupam Gaur

The Story of Suresh Khanna

Patient Review — Suresh Khanna | Centre for Optimum Health
PK
Priya Khanna
Written on behalf of her father, Suresh Khanna, 64
Type 2 diabetic · 11 years on treatment · Delhi NCR
This review is written by the patient’s daughter. Our father has asked us to share this story in full, in the hope that other families recognise these signs before reaching the same point we did.
✓  Metabolic terrain programme · Type 2 diabetes, MASLD, sarcopenia, osteopenia

My father had been a “well-managed” diabetic for eleven years. Every three months he went for his HbA1c. Every time, his doctor said the number was acceptable — sometimes 7.2, sometimes 7.8, once 8.1, but broadly under control. He was compliant with his medications. He avoided sweets. He fasted regularly to keep his sugars down. By every visible measure, we were doing the right things.

Then, on a Tuesday morning in January 2023, he fell in the bathroom. Not a dramatic collapse — just a quiet, sudden loss of balance. He could not get up by himself. My brother Arjun and I rushed to him, and our neighbour Mr. Sharma — who has lived next door for twenty years — helped us get Papa up, into clothes, and into the car to the hospital.

In the car, I was talking to Mr. Sharma. I told him what I had been quietly thinking for months: that Papa’s memory was slipping, that he seemed confused more than before, that he had lost a lot of weight but still looked unwell, that he was becoming weaker and stiffer despite his morning walks. That his average blood sugar was around 200 and this must be why everything was going wrong.

Mr. Sharma looked genuinely surprised. Then he said something I have not stopped thinking about since.

Mr. Sharma, neighbour — spoken in the car, on the way to hospital
“Beti, mera sugar kabhi kabhi 450–500 pe jaata hai. Kuch nahi hota. Main toh saalon se aise hi hoon. Tere papa ka toh average 200 hai — fir bhi itna ho raha hai unhe. Matlab sirf sugar problem nahi hai. Kuch aur bhi zaroor hai.”
Translation: “My blood sugar sometimes reaches 450–500. Nothing happens to me. I have been like this for years. Your father’s average is 200 — yet he is in this condition. That means sugar alone is not the problem. There must be something else going on.”

A simple observation from a man with no medical training. But it was the most clinically significant thing anyone had said to us in eleven years of managing Papa’s diabetes. Two people. Very different sugar numbers. Very different outcomes. The number was not the whole story.

Arjun and I spent the next two weeks researching. We were not looking to replace Papa’s diabetologist — we were looking for whoever was asking the question Mr. Sharma had accidentally raised. What actually determines outcomes in a diabetic, beyond the blood sugar reading? That search led us to Dr. Anupam Gaur at Centre for Optimum Health.

The first consultation lasted over an hour. Dr. Gaur did not dismiss Papa’s endocrinologist or question his medications. What he did was pull up eleven years of reports and read them as a single continuous story — which, remarkably, nobody had ever done before.

“The blood sugars were being managed. But look at what else was recorded in these same reports, year by year. Fatty liver — noted in 2016, graded mild, no follow-up comment. Serum albumin — quietly falling since 2018. The grip strength at his 2020 annual physical — noted as reduced, attributed to age, no further action. Body weight going down, but no body composition analysis. These are not isolated incidental findings. This is one terrain, deteriorating slowly and consistently, in plain sight — for seven years.”

Papa had lost nearly 9 kilos over three years before his fall. We had thought this was a good sign — lower weight, lower sugars. Dr. Gaur was the first person to tell us that significant weight loss in an older diabetic on a restrictive diet is frequently not fat loss. It is muscle. And losing muscle — sarcopenia — does not just make a person physically weaker. It directly accelerates insulin resistance, because muscle is the body’s primary glucose disposal organ. Less muscle means the same amount of sugar has fewer places to go. It worsens the very condition it is meant to manage.

We had been trying to lower a number by slowly dismantling the biological infrastructure that processes it.

What we were watching
HbA1c every 3 months
Fasting blood glucose
Post-meal sugar spikes
Body weight (going down → reassuring)
What was actually happening
Fatty liver — progressing since 2016
Lean mass loss for 4+ years (sarcopenia)
Bone density declining (osteopenia)
Visceral fat rising despite weight loss

The DEXA scan Dr. Gaur ordered told us what no blood sugar reading ever could. Papa had the muscle mass of a man fifteen years older than him. His bone density was in the osteopenic range. His visceral-to-subcutaneous fat ratio was severely elevated — meaning the weight he had lost was largely protective subcutaneous fat, while the dangerous visceral fat around his organs had actually increased. His fatty liver had progressed to moderate grade. His body was ageing faster on the inside than his age on paper suggested.

Dr. Gaur explained something that reframed everything for us: fatty liver, visceral fat accumulation, sarcopenia, and osteopenia are not merely downstream complications of diabetes. They are themselves metabolic disorders — bioterrain markers of accelerated metabolic ageing. They each independently drive insulin resistance. They each independently generate chronic inflammatory signals. They each contribute to brain ageing, cognitive decline, and physical frailty. The medical community is increasingly recognising these not as side effects but as core metabolic disease processes in their own right.

This is why Mr. Sharma, with his 450 blood sugar, had a different story. His body composition, his liver health, his inflammatory state, his lean mass — these were different. The sugar number was the smoke. The terrain was the fire.

Dr. Gaur built a programme that ran alongside Papa’s existing care, in full coordination with his endocrinologist. Medications stayed untouched — that was his specialist’s domain. But alongside that, Papa began a supervised resistance exercise programme to rebuild lean mass, a protein-forward nutritional plan designed around terrain repair rather than just sugar suppression, targeted hepatic support, and a structured inflammatory resolution protocol. We monitored the full picture at each review — lean mass, liver stiffness, inflammatory markers, bone density, body composition — not just HbA1c.

We also began recognising, in retrospect, what the warning signals had been for years. The fatigue Papa had complained about since 2018 that everyone put down to “getting older.” The morning stiffness and body aches he had managed with pain relief without investigation. The brain fog he had joked about at family dinners. The slow withdrawal from social conversations as his recall became unreliable. These were not ageing. They were a terrain in decline, sending signals that nobody had a framework to read.

Fourteen months later: Papa walks without assistance. His neurologist’s word-recall tests, which Arjun and I administer monthly at home, show consistent improvement since the eight-month mark — the trajectory genuinely reversed. His lean mass has increased by 4.2 kg. His fatty liver is back to mild. His HbA1c, which we no longer treat as the headline number, also improved — not because we targeted it directly, but because the terrain that produces it changed.

We will always be grateful to Mr. Sharma for the question he asked in that car without realising its weight. And we will always be grateful to Dr. Gaur for having the framework — and the patience to explain it to a worried daughter and son — to answer it.

If your family member is a “well-controlled” diabetic and yet something still feels wrong: please look beyond the number. The number is not the terrain. The terrain is what decides where this is going.


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *