I got called in to do fasting glucose as my initial blood glucose was high
After this I have been testing and no matter how low carb my diet is after eating it’s between 12 - 16 mmol on friends glucose monitor
What can I do to reduce this ?
Also do I have to stop drinking alcohol I drink wine twice a week
Still awaiting results from doctors since last Friday :/
Hi I tested before meal and was 6.5 had been 6 hours since I last ate .. I eat small piece of high protein bread with salmon and salad or egg boiled .. for tea I have gammon or chicken with lots of carrots broccoli and a small amount of mash that’s it for the day . I used to eat until 3 days ago a LOT of carbs rice , potatoe , bread with everything xHi Dawn and welcome, as is tradition here, I’ll tag in @daisy1 for her useful info post.
Can you give us a few more details please? This might give us some pointers. First have you tested before the meals too, so you can compare results with the post prandial ones? Also how long after eating are you resting? Then can you give us a typical day’s low carb menu you’ve been eating to see if we can tweak anything.
Lastly keep an open mind about which type you might be.
Ah I see that’s why the root mash spiked me to 15.6 yesterday then !! Thank youHi @Dawnybee
Carrots and other 'below ground' veg aren't low carb. Stick with the broccoli. Also, mash and most potatoes are high carb. Have a read around this site and see what other people are eating..... Most T2's eat low carb so that means very little if any bread, potato, rice, wheat, etc. You don't need to go cold turkey, but try to reduce slowly - and don't expect a dramatic drop in your bs immediately.
Very good point of view ok will try to be good!! It’s hard completely changing your dietI wouldn't eat high carb when you don't know what's going on yet.
If you are diabetic, or prediabetic, high carb foods will hurt your body with blood glucose spikes. Carbohydrates break down into the body as sugar which is something our bodies can't handle. A lot of nondiabetics eat low carb as well, some for other health reasons. A low carb diet will not hurt someone without diabetes but a high carb foods will hurt someone with diabetes or prediabetes.
Fantastic support thank youThe hardest part about it is IMHO getting started. It turned out not to be as difficult as I thought. I reduced my carbs gradually and felt better within a couple of days.
BTW, there's a lot of thinking now that the average nondiabetic person eats far too many carbs (over 300g daily). If you are overweight or insulin resistant (as I am), reducing carbs will make weight loss much easier and reduces hunger.
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