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Diet after physical exercise.

Frodo

Newbie
Messages
1
Hello Everyone,

I have recently become a new personal trainer and have taken on a client who has type II diabetes and i have tried looking for hours to find a good diet for a diabetic to eat after exercise however i have come up blank.

I was asking if anyone out there who has type II diabetes could help by maybe sending me a link to a good website or could tell me some good foods to eat after physical exercise

Best regards


Thomas Evans
 
Hi Thomas
have you used the search facilaty on the top right of the page . To be honest your client should already know what he/she can eat . Someone will reply to your q? with better knowledge than mine .There is a fellow Trainer on here but i don't if i can pass that info to you ref: forum rules. :D :D
 
Why not tell us what you would recommend for a non-diabetic client (and why) and we can then suggest what (if any) might be inappropriate for a diabetic.

Diet before exercise may also be a useful topic - for instance there may be things a T2 can eat before exercise (and also you need to state how much exercise) which would be inappropriate at other times.

For example, a medium distance run (6 miles+) might be a chance to eat a Mars Bar cut up into sections without the usual dire consequences.

One interesting aspect of diabetes and exercise; as I understand it, normally you would not eat high sugar foods such as a Mars Bar before exercise because the sugar rush is countered by an increase in Insulin which then clears the sugar out of the blood stream leading to reduced blood sugar which is then taken low by the demands of exercise (peak then trough) which does not give you long term stamina.

This is why slower release foods such as malt loaf have been recommended to provide fuel for long duration exercise such as cycling and distance running.

However if your Insulin response is not rapid and you do not flush the sugars out of your blood stream (as with a lot of T2 diabetics) then you may get a longer term energy benefit from taking in sugars before and during exercise. All the sugars go to the muscles to be burnt. It obviously needs careful management to make sure your blood glucose levels are not taken too high.

Have you looked at www.runsweet.com?
Although primarily aimed at T1 diabetics it is a good general resource for exercising diabetics in general.

HTH

LGC
 
Hi Frodo, before you can even begin to suggest a diet for a T2 diabetic you need to fully understand how diabetes affects T2's. All carbohydrates are turned to glucose by the body so a good diet for a T2 will probably involve some reduction in carbs but this will need to be balanced by the exercise side of things so that your client does not become hypo during or after exercise.

Have a read of the Information For Newly Diagnosed Diabetics that is posted here by the forum monitors, it will give you an insight into how diabetics metabolise carbs.

Click this link for Information For Newly Diagnosed Diabetics

It may also be useful to recommend your client to seek an appointment with a qualified dietitian, they can do this through their GP or by asking at their local Diabetes clinic.
 
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