As an aside, in my opinion, optimally efficient testing once you understand your food, is waking up and before the evening meal. If you know that your food choices won’t “spike” your sugars after eating, then these two testing times are the most reliable marker of your metabolic health. They indicate better than any other testing: the level of fatty infiltration of the liver, and your insulin resistance.
I agree, and these are the only 2 tests that I am interested in, but as you say, only when you understand your food choices and what they do to your levels. Until then, my opinion remains that eating to your meter is the best way to learn, and when I suggest to newbies that any rise from before to after should be under 2mmol/l I always add that this should preferably be much lower. It isn't just a question of knowing that spuds, bread, rice and so on should be left off the menu or seriously reduced in portion size, but also what every other ingredient in that meal does. Newbies should also understand that the testing at 2 hours after first bite is just a guideline and that glucose can peak earlier or later.
@Charis1213 . Your avatar states you are “ insulin dependent type 2” if you are a resident in the UK why are you buying test strips? If you’re using insulin, test strips should be on prescription.
It shouldn't say that because I am not I will have to look at that , thank you for pointing that out .@Charis1213 . Your avatar states you are “ insulin dependent type 2” if you are a resident in the UK why are you buying test strips? If you’re using insulin, test strips should be on prescription.
I can't see I have put insulin dependent . Thanks bulkbikerAre you on the app or web page.. @Charis1213 on my desktop is Type 2 well known member
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I've checked and it says diet only .It is a glitch in the website that has been reported countless times but nothing gets done. It has been the same since a previous upgrade about 3 years ago. I only ever see "Type 2" and never see "type 2 insulin dependent" even if they happen to be insulin dependent!
@Charis1213 if you go to your profile settings, please make sure you have ticked the correct box.
I've checked and it says diet only .
As an aside, in my opinion, optimally efficient testing once you understand your food, is waking up and before the evening meal. If you know that your food choices won’t “spike” your sugars after eating, then these two testing times are the most reliable marker of your metabolic health. They indicate better than any other testing: the level of fatty infiltration of the liver, and your insulin resistance.
what meter have you got? I have an SD Codefree and the test strips are much cheaper.I've checked and it says diet only .
I have the tee 2 got it free , test strips are £7.90 for fiftywhat meter have you got? I have an SD Codefree and the test strips are much cheaper.
I look at my approach to controlling my diabetes from an insulin angle.I found Joeseph Krafts' work with insulin testing enlightening.I want to minimize insulin production in response to my food choices.
Kraft found that people can have normal blood glucose readings,but only by producing excessive insulin.Through his work doing autopsies on young men returning from the Korean war he concluded vascular damage was occurring long before abnormal blood glucose readings.
I don't want to go into a full description of Krafts' work here,but he believed it was hyperinsulinemia was the problem with type 2 diabetes,and high blood sugars were a symptom of prolonged hyperinsulinemia..
Thus, if we are controlling blood glucose by eating carbs up to the amount we can maintain blood glucose at an acceptable level we may still be experiencing hyperinsulinemia.
My approach is to minimise insulin response to my food choices.I keep carbs to the minimum always.Unfortunately blood glucose testing doesn't tell me what I want to know,and is a very rough guide only.I test 2 hours after dinner,sometimes on waking and rarely during the day.It's the only information I have on my progress.
I don't want to eat what I can get away with,but what I think will keep my insulin response to a minimum.
ps I have never needed medication
Eating to the meter = testing before and after food. Or knowing that the food you’re eating is putting glucose into your body but you’re happy with that.
Long game = not needing to test before or after. Keeping your toe in the water with occasional or daily fasting checks, but otherwise knowing that you are depleting glucose, not putting some in.
Err sorry apologies not intending to tell any one off just giving an opinion thats all always value yours Jim.
I believe they ARE DIFFERENT.You seem to have this strange idea that the human body is full of glucose like some sort of crystallised fruit. Glycogen is stored temporarily but without being topped up would be exhausted in a day or so. Energy is stored long term as fat. By eating low carb we are putting less stress on our ability to deal with glucose and hopefully long term reducing insulin resistance. Your two scenarios are really not different.
I don't wish to offend anyone, but Jim's question is a very good one and is subtly ferreting out whether we want to manage T2D or cure ourselves of it.
Poor choice of words on my part, not yours.Yes. This is the crux of it, except to say that “subtly ferreting out” probably implies judgement, which was not my intention at all. To reframe the choice;
Eat to the meter vs. long game.
Low carb vs. keto.
Reverse vs. manage.
Call it what you will
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