thats a hell of a jump @DavidGrahamJones - I've a feeling you may have been tested for t1 previously? Do you test?
The three 'big' steps to take to reduce insulin resistance are exercise, reducing carb intake, and fasting. The first and last work brilliantly for me in the short term, and very low carbing is a way of life. But for me, the reality is that I simply cannot exercise enough to keep my IR down, and I can only fast for so long...
Good to hear and contradicts my last post.I am allowed sheep and goats cheese though as she has tested me for these and I am fine with them.
Sorry, don't agree. LCHF is about not filling yourself up with something that doesn't suit you and your body doesn't deal with efficiently and thereby being healthier and happier than you were before. Flirting with the sugar bowl will not assist with this.The more I read the more I feel lchf is a liver detox diet and should be alternated ever so often to get the best out of it.
. . . . . . 42 to 68 is one heck of a jump,
No, over three years of low carbing has kept my HbA1c at a level where my lovely doctor writes "well Done" in my notes. So , this is a bit of a conundrum. At least my GP has said do what you do for another three months and we'll look again.Is your lower hba1c your first lower result since starting lchf?
The interesting and good news is that having lowered carbs for a couple of years and taking Milk Thistle for only 6 months, this time last year, I got my first OK liver function test in over 10 years.Sorry, don't agree. LCHF is about not filling yourself up with something that doesn't suit you and your body doesn't deal with efficiently and thereby being healthier and happier than you were before. Flirting with the sugar bowl will not assist with this.
Hi. The fact that you put on weight when on Gliclazide might imply that your daily carb intake is too high?Sadly my HbA1c was not good this time 68 as opposed to 42 last time. I'm not aware of slipping off the band wagon and in fact the only thing I have tried is more fat in the form of cheese and cream. The doctor has put it down to increased insulin resistance and I was wondering why that should have increased in the last year.
It could just be that I'm looking for a change to have caused a change, and whether that was self inflicted (cheese/cream) or natural (increase insulin resistance). Just been looking at whether fats convert to glucose. Seems they can under the right conditions, like not enough carbs to convert. That's especially interesting because so many people talk about the LCHF. Maybe I've been overdoing the cheese.
Any ideas?
BTW, the doctor is happy for me to see what I can do to tighten my control over the next 3 months, I'll have another HbA1c and then see where we go from there. I'm not happy with gliclazide because I gained 10 kgs without trying last time, I can't afford that or a raises HbA1c. I managed to come off that when I lowered carbs.
That's brilliant news!The interesting and good news is that having lowered carbs for a couple of years and taking Milk Thistle for only 6 months, this time last year, I got my first OK liver function test in over 10 years.
Just keep in mind carbs aren't the only food which raises bgs. Protein, especially too many nuts can get me. Reducing carbs alone as not the answer, for some.Just for clarification, that's over a year, and obviously the last 3 months are what's in that number. I'm still scratching my head. The strange thing is that my doctor wasn't surprised, as if worsening insulin resistance is to be expected.
I'll be making 110% effort to watch out for little things that slip into my diet without to recognising the demon carb. My brain is struggling a bit, memory is awful.
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