I am pretty sure, that the dysfunctional glucose sensing and inappropriate liver glucose release are consequences and complications of diabetes, not the primary causes. Diabetes (Type 2) is primarily caused by insulin resistance combined with progressive beta cell dysfunction.
Therefore, treating the liver to treat diabetes seems .... weird?
Yes, treating symptoms is not the ideal, but if you can fix the immediate need of getting blood sugar down, that is still helpful.
Let's say we had a particularly bad winter that required the use of power tools, which had the effect of damaging the driveway. Your body on diabetes is like a damaged driveway.
At some point you'll need to fix the damaged driveway. It will require a change in lifestyle while the driveway is being fixed, and perhaps even a change SOP's to reduce the risk of future damage.
Most people never give up on the power tools (supplemental insulin). Most doctors don't know any better.
Additionally, partial remission in type 2 diabetes has a success rate of just 0.007% per 5 year post-remission cohort. The idea that a lifestyle change can "fix the damaged driveway" is essentially a statistical anomaly - it's not grounded in evidential standards has yet to be proven.
Splinting a leg is treatment, but it has nothing to do with not drinking before driving.
It was recently discovered that when listening to music your brain waves sync up to the same frequencies, which I had predicted for a long time. This means the "computational model" (i.e. synapses and neural nets) theory of consciousness is mostly wrong.
How would that work? Do we even have a reliable way of detecting localized places of internal inflammation? The article mentions ultrasound imaging, but this is beginning to sound a lot like a "if all you've got is a hammer" type thing.
What about other localized inflammatory conditions, such as asthma?
Ultrasound is high frequency sound/vibration (+20kHz).
But functionally they have the same effect - ie they cause the subject to vibrate and heat. I think it's fair to say they are similar functionally... Or do you disagree?
These two are as diffent as you can get. Electromagnetic waves mostly ignore you, except some atoms. Sounds waves propagate through you, and will cause some organs to resonate more.
One unifying thing is the waves.