I started following the LCHF diet when I was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in September last year. The results have been fantastic. Excellent glucose control, great weight loss and massive improvements in well-being. Recently, I decided to try adding some carbs back into my diet. I ate a sandwich - no spikes. Ate chocolate - no spikes. I ate a sandwich and a cake - no spikes. On Saturday I ate a whole pizza and 3/4 tub of ice cream - no spikes. Woohooo I thought - I have this cracked - I'm not diabeteic anymore.
Last night at dinner I had a bowl of spaghetti - a controlled sensible portion - BAM Bg soaring up over 10! Tonight, I ate 1 bowl of muesli because I have a slight cold, felt tired and didn't feel like cooking - BAM BG over 10 again!
So its back to the low carb diet for me. Just goes to show that testing is soooo important even when you're getting consistently low readings and things seem to be rolling along wonderfully.
And the high readings are not due to the cold - it's mild and the readings have been just fine cold and all when I'm not eating carbs.
Thanks again for this forum - so incredibly useful for newly diagnosed and those of us needing a little motivation to get back on track!
Well done for continuing to test as you did Lins. It looks like you made a very valuable discovery.
Like you, I can eat pretty normally, with no issues, but in many ways some of that carb-tastic stuff no longer excites me, so I don't bother sustaining, or trying to sustain it.
It was pretty useful on a recent long haul flight, when I'd had a very busy and active day prior to heading for the airport, so was hungry. I ate the whole, "normal" meals, so that included rice, a creamy, coconut-y pudding (it was outrageously sweet!), crackers, then the brekkers included croisant, fruit low fat yoghurt.
Although I go for a few strolls over the long haul, it could hardly be described as exercise. No blips. No rises in numbers, and thankfully, no hangover carb cravings over the next few days.
But, from what I had, the only thing I really enjoyed was the West Indian style rice and peas that went along with the Jerk Chicken, but in a restaurant, I'd have some of that anyway.
Back in UK, I'm quite happily back on my reduced carb routine. I have read of a number of folks who describe pretty much exactly as you experienced. It's almost like their system can cope with it once or twice, then either gets exhausted and can't keep up that level of intervention (coping with the carbs), or it sends out a bit warning signal, via the blood sugars.
In many ways, I see it as a reverse of what happens when we're at the other end of the timeline, reducing carbs. Initially, our bloods don't reduce as much as we'd like them to, despite reducing the baddies. Our bodies try to maintain those higher blood sugars, because that's what it's used to. Our bodies like routines.
Perhaps what you saw was your body valiantly fighting to maintain your lower numbers, until it no longer could, by being "flooded" by sugars.
That's just my theory I've been thinking about for ages, but for me it makes sense. Please don't ask me to provide 79 scientific papers because I couldn't.
I don't know if any exist, but it works, in my mind, for me.