Your thoughts?
According to the
Mayo Clinic, caffeine can impair insulin reaction. This means it may take more time for your dose of insulin to fully kick in. Caffeine can also increase your body’s resistance to insulin.
In addition, a 2008
Duke University study showed that caffeine may have an impact on your
blood glucose levels. The study examined people with
type 2 diabetes. One group of participants took 500 mg caffeine–about the equivalent of two cups of coffee–every day for a week, while the second group abstained from caffeine. Each person’s blood glucose levels were tested multiple times throughout the week, and it was found that those who drank caffeine had blood sugars around 8 percent higher than those who didn’t take caffeine.
What about 1 cup or 1/2 cup of coffee, and what kind of coffee and is there a variable increment in the amount of coffee? That happens with drugs.
- Dr. Squiggles
Here is the full article:
https://www.iowadiabetes.com/2020/01/01/coffee-diabetes/