
The Three Questions That Change Diabetes Treatment Before the Blood Work Comes Back
April 8, 2026If you have type 2 diabetes or prediabetes, you have probably heard a lot about cutting carbs and avoiding sugar. That advice is fine as far as it goes. But it leaves out a massive piece of the puzzle. It never tells you why certain foods actually protect specific parts of your body from the damage high blood sugar causes.
Here is one of the most surprising findings from Dr. Fernandez’s work: a tiny, salty, often ignored bud called the caper is one of the most powerful tools you have against diabetic nerve damage.
To understand why, you have to look at what happens inside a nerve cell when blood sugar runs high. There is a backup pathway in the body called the polyol pathway. In most cells, this pathway is quiet. But in the nerves, the lenses of your eyes, and your kidneys, it kicks into overdrive when there is too much glucose around. An enzyme called aldose reductase takes that excess glucose and turns it into a sugar alcohol called sorbitol.
Sorbitol is sticky. It does not cross cell membranes easily. It gets trapped inside the nerve cell and pulls water in with it. Over time, this causes the nerve to swell and malfunction. That burning, tingling, or numbness in your feet is not just a vague symptom of “bad circulation.” It is often the direct result of this sorbitol buildup. And while this is happening, the pathway also burns through a critical antioxidant resource called NADPH, leaving the nerve defenseless against further oxidative stress.
This is where the caper enters the picture.
Capers are the unopened flower buds of the Capparis spinosa plant. They are usually pickled in brine and sit on supermarket shelves next to the olives. And they contain a compound called quercetin in concentrations that dwarf almost every other food source. We are talking about 234 milligrams of quercetin per 100 grams of capers. Red onions, which get all the credit for quercetin, have about 35 milligrams per 100 grams.
Quercetin is a direct inhibitor of aldose reductase. It blocks the enzyme that starts the whole sorbitol traffic jam. Studies show that quercetin can inhibit aldose reductase activity by roughly sixty five percent. That means two tablespoons of capers tossed into a salad, scrambled into eggs, or added to a pasta dish is doing more for your nerve health than most generic supplements ever will.
This is the kind of specificity that Eating Against the Network is built on. It is not about vague superfoods or miracle cures. It is about identifying the exact chemical pathway causing the damage and then finding the food that puts a wrench in that specific gear. The book covers dozens of these connections. It explains why you should let rice and potatoes cool down before you eat them because the starch physically restructures itself into something your gut bacteria ferment instead of your bloodstream absorbing. It explains why the bitter taste in arugula and good olive oil is not a bug but a feature that triggers receptors in your gut to release satiety hormones.
Most people are tired of being told to just eat healthy. They want to know what “healthy” actually means at the level of their cells. They want to know why one choice protects their eyes while another protects their kidneys. If you find yourself wanting that kind of detailed map, this is the territory the book covers. Start with the capers. It is a small change with a surprisingly deep biological justification.



