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Diabetes Management
Fitness, Exercise and Sport
Advice on exercise and food
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<blockquote data-quote="haspden" data-source="post: 808344" data-attributes="member: 164908"><p>If you look at my recent post on cycle sportive nutrition I talk all about fitting hypos, during, directly after and hours after exercise and how to fight them. Having been a pump user and an injection user I can safely say the theories are the same.</p><p></p><p>You can introduce some basal reduction schemes into the mix but increasing glucose intake instead will give you far better performance related results. You don't want to be starving your body of calories Unless you have a serious weight loss challenge in mind.</p><p></p><p>Hope this helps,</p><p></p><p>Henry</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/cycle-sportive-nutrition.72299/page-2#post-806778" target="_blank">http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/cycle-sportive-nutrition.72299/page-2#post-806778</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="haspden, post: 808344, member: 164908"] If you look at my recent post on cycle sportive nutrition I talk all about fitting hypos, during, directly after and hours after exercise and how to fight them. Having been a pump user and an injection user I can safely say the theories are the same. You can introduce some basal reduction schemes into the mix but increasing glucose intake instead will give you far better performance related results. You don't want to be starving your body of calories Unless you have a serious weight loss challenge in mind. Hope this helps, Henry [URL]http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/cycle-sportive-nutrition.72299/page-2#post-806778[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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