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Vegetable intake when trying to move from low carb to even lower carb (as a vegetarian)

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So don't keep them that low? You don't have to be in ketosis for weight loss, if you raise your carbs just adjust your insulin, it has to be what you're happy with, life's too short to not enjoy the simple pleasure of good food! I try to aim for around 40 to 50grams but it's changeable, I'm low carb not keto. Good luck with it, you'll find the right balance for you

Still working out the best combination for me and trying to exercise more often. I’m T2 and on metformin, no insulin. Thanks!
 
I have read that fat has twice as much calories as either carbs or protein and so while on low carb high fat diet the total food portion has to be smaller to make sure the total calorie intake does not jump up. may be someone who knows better can say if I have it wrong.
 
In addition to the above, according to your profile you are on empagliflozin. Flozins do hold a small risk of DKA, so the warning may have been because of this.
Is it only this drug?
 
Sadly this is part of the problem with T2 diabetes management. Well meaning but ill informed professionals who have quite frankly misunderstood or got their facts wrong. Ketoacidosis (very dangerous) is quite different to and not caused by nutritional ketosis (various benefits). https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/ketosis#ketosis-ketoacidosis. Or https://www.diabetes.co.uk/in-depth/nutritional-ketosis-vs-dka/

Many hospital nurses will have had zero education on diabetes diets and little on ketoacidosis unless it is part of their speciality. Many of these will be repeating stuff “they heard/read in a blog” as a lay person rather than during the course of their profession, yet because of their profession they are often seen as infallible.

What I would agree with is to understand any diet you plan to follow, including and possibly especially ones that are not mainstream and that are quite different to ones you previously followed. Knowing what side effects, potential pitfalls and how to avoid them or possible deficiencies is as important, if not more so, than how to count whatever you plan to count etc
This person had said they’d had many in hospital seriously ill. I’d mentioned it to dr when I’d had appt. She gave me some strips to use in my monitor so
 
I have read that fat has twice as much calories as either carbs or protein and so while on low carb high fat diet the total food portion has to be smaller to make sure the total calorie intake does not jump up. may be someone who knows better can say if I have it wrong.
Hi and welcome. I think you may not have seen the full picture. Fat in the diet does indeed produce more energy than either protein or carbohydrate. It's a more efficient food.

I don't know if you're diabetic or not, but for those of us with insulin resistance, the problem is usually that our system cannot utilise the food we eat, so excess glucose gets stored as bodyfat or remains in the bloodstream.

The point about a low-carb lifestyle is that it is NOT a calorie-control diet. The issue is limiting carb intake so that (because carbs are digested to glucose) blood glucose levels are lowered to and maintained at preferred levels. Weight loss often follows, as the body uses up its bodyfat stores to make glucose.

So - I've not limited portion sizes at all, but I don't eat bread, rice, pastry (anything flour-based really), most fruit, most root veg, sugar, etc., things that would be digested to glucose. I have never been hungry in nearly four years of eating this way.
 
This person had said they’d had many in hospital seriously ill. I’d mentioned it to dr when I’d had appt. She gave me some strips to use in my monitor so
Yes ketoacidisis is serious. Nutritional ketosis is different. It sounds like she doesn’t know the difference and is talking about the former.
 
I have read that fat has twice as much calories as either carbs or protein and so while on low carb high fat diet the total food portion has to be smaller to make sure the total calorie intake does not jump up. may be someone who knows better can say if I have it wrong.
There are no single nor any combinations of foods or macro/micro-nutrients that lead to fat gain. It is true that fat, having more than double the energy of either carbs or protein. might be slightly more 'dangerous'. But that's only in the sense that it is very easy to rack up a lot of calories with a very small amount. But even then, that'll only become an issue if your total energy input is more than your total daily energy expenditure.

The best way to get a handle on it all is to spend some time tracking i.e weighing and quantifying the foods you eat. (Many online food trackers can help with this). Eventually, you'll start to become pretty adept at portioning the various foods that keep you within the various energy and nutrition requirements which align with your particular goals.
 
There are no single nor any combinations of foods or macro/micro-nutrients that lead to fat gain. It is true that fat, having more than double the energy of either carbs or protein. might be slightly more 'dangerous'. But that's only in the sense that it is very easy to rack up a lot of calories with a very small amount. But even then, that'll only become an issue if your total energy input is more than your total daily energy expenditure.

The best way to get a handle on it all is to spend some time tracking i.e weighing and quantifying the foods you eat. (Many online food trackers can help with this). Eventually, you'll start to become pretty adept at portioning the various foods that keep you within the various energy and nutrition requirements which align with your particular goals.
I’d say that is only true if you are actually able to burn the food or macro.

If as a type 2 you can’t utilise carb’s effectively then they become the “dangerous “ one ie the one to take care with.

Fats extra calories also means you tend to naturally eat less of it as it makes you feel fuller for longer than the same weight of carbs.
 
I’d say that is only true if you are actually able to burn the food or macro.
Could you perhaps elaborate?

If as a type 2 you can’t utilise carb’s effectively then they become the “dangerous “ one ie the one to take care with.
Could you please quantify "can't utilise carb's effectively"?

Fats extra calories also means you tend to naturally eat less of it as it makes you feel fuller for longer than the same weight of carbs.
My views and personal experience regarding various macros and/or satiation are likely different to the majority here, and are irrelevant in this context. But it would be expected that if fat and carbs are weight-equalised the fat would provide much more energy...which can, at least for certain people in certain contexts, equal more satiety.
 
Could you perhaps elaborate?


Could you please quantify "can't utilise carb's effectively"?


My views and personal experience regarding various macros and/or satiation are likely different to the majority here, and are irrelevant in this context. But it would be expected that if fat and carbs are weight-equalised the fat would provide much more energy...which can, at least for certain people in certain contexts, equal more satiety.
If you eat food you cannot utilise for energy then you have no choice but to store it. The assumption of calories in calories out is that you can utilise anything and everything you eat so long as you eat little enough/are active enough. Now that’s true in a test tube. Not so true in a human body with hormones and flaws.

A fundamental issue in type 2 is that you cannot access the energy in carbohydrates for use (because of insulin resistance) so you have no option but to store that energy as body fat. This is demonstrated by the high unused glucose in blood and the propensity of a type 2 to gain weight. If we could use carbs efficiently we wouldn’t be type 2.

So you agree? Fat is more satiating gram for gram. No only does it provide more calories, that we can actually use, but it doesn’t mess up hunger and satiety hormones the way carbs can leafing to dysfunctional hunger patterns. And whilst you say your views are irrelevant you mentioned them. From my memory of your posts your eating patterns don’t seem to be resolving your diabetes or has that changed?
 
The whole object of dietary Ketosis to lose weight, is calculate your metabolic needs, using an online calculator such as My fitness pal. say for arguments sake YOU require 2000 calories. This is what is required to keep YOUR body in a stable state.
Once properly in Ketosis, and fat adapted, hunger pangs disappear, we often find ourselves missing meals because we just don't need them. (eat only when hungry, this is accidental intermittent fasting). Often without realising it, we are eating a calorie deficit. Our bodies make up the difference with body fat. Hence weight loss, whilst our systems remain stable.
If weight loss is the main criteria, actively reduce your calorie intake after a few days in Ketosis, again online calculators help here. By doing this, you are ensuring the calorie deficit, that forces the fat burning.
By restricting your calories to say 1500 a day, you will be burning 500 calories of body fat each day. BUT be aware, as your weight reduces, so does your metabolic requirement. So if you reduce by perhaps 200 calories a day, you will eventually reach a point where 1800 calories is YOUR metabolic requirement, and weight loss will plateau. Every few days have a day where you eat higher calories, and lower calories. This stops the body reducing metabolic functions, to match calorific intake. ( this is where traditional calorie controlled diets stall, because without any variation of intake. the body cuts out less necessary functions, to save energy.)
Everybody has a different level at which they enter Ketosis, from below 20g to as much as 75g a day. Once there, carbs can be increased slightly, whilst staying in Ketosis. But again we are all different, some may have to stay very low to stay in Ketosis.
If the criteria is purely blood sugar control, then your meter will dictate what you eat, and your scales will tell you if it's too much.
 
If you eat food you cannot utilise for energy then you have no choice but to store it.
indeed! When we eat past energetic needs and past the body's tricks to offset the overage, we will tend to gain fat.

The assumption of calories in calories out is that you can utilise anything and everything you eat so long as you eat little enough/are active enough. Now that’s true in a test tube. Not so true in a human body with hormones and flaws.
The impact of the various human metabolic processes on energy input is not any revelation. Not only does it not disprove the concept(s) or the science, but it is irrelevant for most practical applications other than the pursuit of pure scientific accuracy.

A fundamental issue in type 2 is that you cannot access the energy in carbohydrates for use (because of insulin resistance) so you have no option but to store that energy as body fat. This is demonstrated by the high unused glucose in blood and the propensity of a type 2 to gain weight. If we could use carbs efficiently we wouldn’t be type 2.
In my last reply, I asked if you could quantify this idea. Are you suggesting that as a T2D I can't access any of the energy in the carbs I eat, or that I can only access a certain quantity? If it's the latter, can you perhaps share how the variance is stratified?

So you agree? Fat is more satiating gram for gram. No only does it provide more calories, that we can actually use, but it doesn’t mess up hunger and satiety hormones the way carbs can leafing to dysfunctional hunger patterns. And whilst you say your views are irrelevant you mentioned them.
I said that for "certain people in certain contexts" fat can be satiating. Outside of this particular population, fat is extremely easy to over-eat. And that's the only part of my opinion/experience that I shared. I shared nothing of my views and experience regarding satiety/satiation, nor anything on the topic of hunger

From my memory of your posts your eating patterns don’t seem to be resolving your diabetes or has that changed?
You're correct! Eating a high-ish calorie diet comprised of tons of carbs and tons of fat is not doing me or my diabetes any favours.
 
Thank you @ajbod for your detailed reply.

Still experimenting here. I’ve been carb counting so far, not calorie counting, in order to reduce my HbA1c (so far so good).

More questions springs to mind!

What kind of blood sugar levels would you expect to see whilst being in ketosis?

And if you have more carbs one day and come out of ketosis, does it take longer to get back there? Will you have undone your efforts?

As we’re all different, I’m guessing there’s no straight answer to either of these.
 
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I did full on Keto prior to a diabetic diagnosis, purely to lose weight. I lost 25 Kg in 4 months ( a sack of spuds ). I have no idea what my blood sugars were at the time, as, as far i was aware i was not a diabetic. although since i had peripheral neuropathy symptoms for 3 years prior to this, i think now i must have been. Shortly after that i was diagnosed as pre diabetic, and now believe the result was skewed, due to the strict Keto i had done. Nowadays i do low carb, i don't measure the carbs i eat, but do avoid as much as possible. My sugar levels tell me if i'm eating a low enough amount. i am convinced if i did strict Keto again, my levels would be in the 4 - 5 range, but i'm happy with them slightly higher, keeping full on Keto in my armory should i require it later. However we ARE all different, and the results i see may not be what you would, maybe not as good as yours.
Intermittent fasting is believed to start fat burning in as little as 12 hours once you are fat adapted. The reason the first time into Ketosis takes some effort and time, is the fact as a species we have forgotten how to utilise this amazing adaptation. Once relearned the body can switch quite quickly between glucose and Ketone bodies as fuel.
 
I can't possibly comment on your situation, as i only take a small dose of Metformin, and the doctor advised to keep taking it despite not needing it. purely as i have peripheral artery disease affecting my legs. only a doctor can advise you of the situation where drugs are concerned. Although to the best of my knowledge Ketones at 2.2 is nowhere near a dangerous figure, but again it's up to your doctor to advise.
 
Hi,
Can I just check ...I am type 2 on Metformin and Rybelsus...as well as 10 units of Lantus as my basal and Novo Rapid as and when ...no more than 10 units a day. Whenever I reduce my carbs my Blood Sugar numbers look OK ...currently 7.3 and I feel great but my Ketones go high (as I write this they are 2.2). I had a bad episode of DKA a couple of years ago when on SGLT2's and had to stop taking them. Having read your post I'm not sure if I'm dietary ketosis. Can you offer and advice/ideas as I would love to be low card and reduce my insulin levels...Thanks D
You're clearly able to test your blood glucose and your ketones. The problem is that unless you say what units you're reporting both your blood or your ketones in, I have no idea what your levels actually are.

It would be unwise for me to say anything otherwise.
 
I did full on Keto prior to a diabetic diagnosis, purely to lose weight. I lost 25 Kg in 4 months ( a sack of spuds ). I have no idea what my blood sugars were at the time, as, as far i was aware i was not a diabetic. although since i had peripheral neuropathy symptoms for 3 years prior to this, i think now i must have been. Shortly after that i was diagnosed as pre diabetic, and now believe the result was skewed, due to the strict Keto i had done. Nowadays i do low carb, i don't measure the carbs i eat, but do avoid as much as possible. My sugar levels tell me if i'm eating a low enough amount. i am convinced if i did strict Keto again, my levels would be in the 4 - 5 range, but i'm happy with them slightly higher, keeping full on Keto in my armory should i require it later. However we ARE all different, and the results i see may not be what you would, maybe not as good as yours.
Intermittent fasting is believed to start fat burning in as little as 12 hours once you are fat adapted. The reason the first time into Ketosis takes some effort and time, is the fact as a species we have forgotten how to utilise this amazing adaptation. Once relearned the body can switch quite quickly between glucose and Ketone bodies as fuel.

Wow, that’s some seriously speedy weight loss!

I was also diagnosed after I’d lost some weight so my HbA1c may well have been higher before that time.
 
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