JohnEGreen
Master
A system of parts working together in a machine; a piece of machinery.orDefine mechanism?
A natural or established process by which something takes place or is brought about.
A system of parts working together in a machine; a piece of machinery.orDefine mechanism?
I wasn't sure of the context, hence my question. Also English is my 4th language, so please be considerate.Really? It's the way in which something operates.
LCHF
I'm sorry if you think I was being rude. Your English is excellent by the way.I wasn't sure of the context, hence my question. Also English is my 4th language, so please be considerate.
Scientists still don't have the answer to what causes T2D (or even T1/other forms of diabetes for that matter) so I hardly feel qualified to answer that. I do know that excess carb consumption alone doesn't cause it, otherwise my 6'0" tall 130lbs younger sister would be T2 diabetic already - the things she's eaten throughout the years is astounding and qualifies as an extremely high carb diet. (And no, she's not diabetic, she's been tested often.) If excess carb consumption alone would be the cause of T2D, we'd have a lot more diabetics than we already do in the world as well. We'd also be seeing a dramatic increase in vegans who become diabetics who follow an extremely high carb, low fat diet, but they are generally healthier than those who eat less carbs.
Again, individual needs differ per person - that's why they're called individual needs, and why one diet won't work for everyone.
Have to rename this website LCHF.co.uk soon, it's becoming much more about that than diabetes topics in recent months.
Also English is my 4th language, so please be considerate.
I was referring to the guy recommending buckwheat flour as low carb, it isn't. And although you don't spike with it, I definitely wouldn't recommend it to all and sundry.
I don't expect any degree of accuracy from working hacks who are putting out articles to dead lines, so I'll cut the boy a bit of slack over his confusion about low carbs.
Still, my point remains, and some of the points made on this thread emphasises it, that some of us regard carbs as the spawn of the devil whereas others are fine with with them.
I think it's it's wrong to write something off just because the carb percentage is above a certain level. Sure, buckwheat is high but the low GI makes a difference, and the chiro-inositol aspect is fascinating.
I'm not recommending it to anyone, just pointing out that it seems to work for me: people can do their own experiments.
My general take on the subject is that the brain chooses glucose as it's fuel and for that matter, pretty much every other cell does too, so it seems insane to suggest that carbs should play no part in all this.Sure, moderate them to avoid spikes, but like I've seen on this site, people feeling guilty about eating a Jacobs cream cracker, loosen up a bit.
As a type 1 you have more flexibility regarding carb intake than those of us who do not inject.
Have a look back through the thread. The original poster was a Type 2. The majority of the posts suggesting stricter carb control are by T2s, many of whom manage their diabetes by diet and exercise. The majority of posts suggesting higher levels of carb intake are Type 1 or LADA 1.5.
That is great. Always good to hear differing points of view, but worth bearing in mind that different types of diabetes have different management strategies, and for some, it isn't possible to bolus.
In many ways you are right but over several years now I've seen very few posts from those who successfully have a medium or high carb diet and have diabetes at any reasonable level. There is no doubt that all those carbs convert to glucose but if you have a high natural metabolism or exercise a lot then those carbs will be turned into useable energy rather than stored as fat or lurk in the blood raising BS.
Well she may be well down the way but may not show any symptoms for decades...I wasn't sure of the context, hence my question. Also English is my 4th language, so please be considerate.
Scientists still don't have the answer to what causes T2D (or even T1/other forms of diabetes for that matter) so I hardly feel qualified to answer that. I do know that excess carb consumption alone doesn't cause it, otherwise my 6'0" tall 130lbs younger sister would be T2 diabetic already - the things she's eaten throughout the years is astounding and qualifies as an extremely high carb diet. (And no, she's not diabetic, she's been tested often.) If excess carb consumption alone would be the cause of T2D, we'd have a lot more diabetics than we already do in the world as well. We'd also be seeing a dramatic increase in vegans who become diabetics who follow an extremely high carb, low fat diet, but they are generally healthier than those who eat less carbs.
Again, individual needs differ per person - that's why they're called individual needs, and why one diet won't work for everyone.
Thanks! Limburgish, Dutch and German.Wow, that's impressive! All your posts are very fluent, I would never have guessed it wasn't your first language. Bit off topic but what are the other three? English is my first language but I can barely speak it after three beers. I recall being in a bar in a backpackers hostel in Tirana with people from six nations, three continents, and felt slightly ashamed they could all speak my language but I couldn't hazard a guess at theirs.
I personally feel, based on the research I've read, that the blame lies mostly with the fact many carbs we consume are heavily processed, and since around the 80's-90's, the low fat diet became 'the' diet to follow. Fat was the enemy for decades, while being substituted with processed simple carbs to keep the flavor intact. I believe we're feeling the effects of this change more and more, especially as the adult generation of that time is now growing older and suffering the long-lasting effects of this diet.We do all react differently to different carbs. My view is similar to @BrianTheElder that mainstream carbs are not good for diabetics and non diabetics. I base this generalisation on the high levels of insulin resistance in the general population, the ever increasing insulin response required to deliver normal blood sugar's in non diabetics, the blood sugar spikes outside of the prescribed ranges of non-diabetics such as the chap who runs diet doctor when eating high carb.
She'll always be at risk because both T1D and T2D occur heavily in both sides of our families. I have two cousins on my mom's side with T1, my dad and uncle are T2, my mom's grandmother had GD which turned into insulin dependent diabetes etc. Her main problem is that she's chronically underweight (one of the reasons she tests frequently for T1D) but she has adrenal gland issues that make the pounds fly off with minimal stress... exactly the opposite of me.Well she may be well down the way but may not show any symptoms for decades...
Dr joseph Kraft who unfortunately died last week at 95 gave people an OGTT and tested their bloods for the next 5 hours regularly and showed that there was a normal response and 4 abnormal responses which all predicted an eventual Type 2 diagnosis possibly many years down the line. Amazingly this is rarely used today but would probably help so many with undiagnosed pre diabetes.
The tone of the article also suggests that everyone in the world is negatively affected by carbs
Hi @DaftThoughts I agree that many mainstream consumed carbs are over processed, but I would also add it is the density of the process which adds to the carb hit, take a look at white flour production, it takes circa 9 square feet of wheat to make 4 cups of flour, this is effectively condensed carbs, no wonder bread etc is so spikey. If you were able to use the wheat closer to its natural state, the carb hit would be significantly lower. I believe the safest carbs are above ground vegetables.Thanks! Limburgish, Dutch and German.I also understand and speak basic phrases in Japanese and Korean, speak a little bit French, can understand some Spanish etc. I have a thing for languages lol.
I personally feel, based on the research I've read, that the blame lies mostly with the fact many carbs we consume are heavily processed, and since around the 80's-90's, the low fat diet became 'the' diet to follow. Fat was the enemy for decades, while being substituted with processed simple carbs to keep the flavor intact. I believe we're feeling the effects of this change more and more, especially as the adult generation of that time is now growing older and suffering the long-lasting effects of this diet.
I also think this is why vegans who are on a low fat high carb diet aren't sick as much and have lowered risks for diabetes; their carbs are unprocessed and consumed with a great amount of fiber generally speaking, and combined with adequate exercise.
(I also want to clarify that I'm speaking mainly about non-diabetics for this, we're obviously playing a different game with our conditions and even whole carbs affect us way differently now.)