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Post Newcastle Diet blood glucose increase.
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<blockquote data-quote="Indy51" data-source="post: 954808" data-attributes="member: 48386"><p>I don't think Prof Taylor ever said that the diet would work for everyone. From the people I've been reading about over the past few years, quite a few get hung up on the "cure" fantasy and think they can resume eating like a non-diabetic afterwards and the result is not good. I honestly don't think it's possible except in very rare cases. I suspect some of us have permanently broken glucose control. That certainly seems to be the case for me. If I eat more than 25g of carbs in a meal, I know I'll go above my target of 7.8. I'm learning to accept that as my default setting, probably for the rest of my life.</p><p></p><p>Intermittent fasting has been the only thing to stop my dawn phenomenon and normalise my fasting BG, so I'm happy to continue with it. But post prandial responses haven't changed despite weight loss.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Indy51, post: 954808, member: 48386"] I don't think Prof Taylor ever said that the diet would work for everyone. From the people I've been reading about over the past few years, quite a few get hung up on the "cure" fantasy and think they can resume eating like a non-diabetic afterwards and the result is not good. I honestly don't think it's possible except in very rare cases. I suspect some of us have permanently broken glucose control. That certainly seems to be the case for me. If I eat more than 25g of carbs in a meal, I know I'll go above my target of 7.8. I'm learning to accept that as my default setting, probably for the rest of my life. Intermittent fasting has been the only thing to stop my dawn phenomenon and normalise my fasting BG, so I'm happy to continue with it. But post prandial responses haven't changed despite weight loss. [/QUOTE]
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