The upside for the likes of us are minimal to no cravings for carbs, which perhaps leads to a step easier (mental) management; I have learned more acceptance and patience for those who really miss the previous stuff, for which I am a little proud as a growing exercise, as my personality is an on off switch when management of diabetes is nuanced.That's exactly how I feel about carbs. We went to a lovely hotel for 3 days over Christmas and I stayed keto throughout our stay. The hotel provided a wonderful selection of cheese which I ate instead of the sugary deserts. I actually averaged about 15g of carbs a day but did eat huge amounts of fish meat and cheese.
I agree that for me that the best part of keto is the absolute absence of any cravings for carbs. It does make it much easier to manage the diabetes and I am hopeful that I will eventually move from 'in remission' to 'diabetes reversed '. This for me is 'the long game'.The upside for the likes of us are minimal to no cravings for carbs, which perhaps leads to a step easier (mental) management; I have learned more acceptance and patience for those who really miss the previous stuff, for which I am a little proud as a growing exercise, as my personality is an on off switch when management of diabetes is nuanced.
Watching Shawn slaughter over 180 kgs for 20 reps deadlift, increased my reps by 50%! (at less weight of course, he's got super human strength). Interesting that his A1c is around pre-diabetic, but his insulin is on the floor, as is his HOMA IR - there seems to be a paradox with some elite performers and circulating glucose (even so low carbers).Great post. Thanks for sharing
Coincidentally I was listening to Dr. Shawn Baker on Pete Evans’ Recipes for Life podcast just a couple of days ago. Very interesting fellow
Edited to add a link for those of the Apple persuasion;
https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast...-pete-evans/id1306697084?mt=2&i=1000426911702
The aim should be to drain the sugar from the body
Got it. And that was my original question. How low should one go?Yes it probably would have been easier to ask “low carb or keto?”
Got it. And that was my original question. How low should one go?
An interesting thread nonetheless and one that I have only just got around to reading.
The important thing to remember is that glucose in the blood is only the symptom, not the cause. The cause is too much glucose in the body. If you eat to the meter or use it as a “fuel gauge” you are only measuring the excess that is spilling into the blood.
Many people have this idea that sugar only exists in the blood, as glucose, and in the muscles and liver, as glycogen. The truth is that almost every cell in the body can use glucose and become engorged with it. The blood carries glucose around the body, but when the cells cannot accept any more, and when the liver has run out of places to stash it as glycogen and fat, it begins accumulating in the blood. This is all you are measuring with a glucometer - the overflow. If you truly want to beat insulin resistance then one must focus ruthlessly on carbohydrate restriction irrespective of what is appearing in the blood.
If you’ve been on a keto diet for a year and you’re still struggling with blood glucose then you may be sensitive to protein. Fasting will definitely help. The aim should be to drain the sugar from the body, not negotiate with a glucometer and unwittingly top it up.
All the above is my view only and is not meant as prescriptive advice.
Well, that makes sense. I should burn off the overflow by fasting and/or exercise. Wait till my blood is not carrying any excess glucose and then eat. I agree, Jim, I really must start paying closer attention to the amount of protein I eat. I didn't think I was eating too much but I don't think it will do me any harm if I reduce it a bit.
OK, thanks folks, that's me back on track now.... I hope !
I need to understand this DP @Jim LaheyIn my opinion, as low as you need to go in order to start seeing a reduction in dawn phenomenon. DP is probably the single greatest practical metric of understanding your metabolic health. If your liver and pancreas are healthy then you shouldn’t even notice it. This is why DP is usually the very last thing to be “fixed”, if ever.
I need to understand this DP @Jim Lahey
I am normally asleep at that point. Presumably it occurs in the morning regardless of shift pattern?
I would imagine a Libre gizmo would help with that too...
Assuming a regular sleep pattern, it will usually begin a couple of hours before you wake. Glucagon, cortisol and posssibly adrenaline and others, signal the liver to secrete glucose. This is normal for all humans. What’s not normal is an insulin resistant fatty liver that continues to pour out the glucose even when the pancreas begins ramping-up compensatory insulin. It’s meant to give us energy for waking, but when your liver is bricked the whole process runs away with itself and causes a major malfunction. Usually it’s impossible to completely get rid of DP until the hepatic and pancreatic fat have cleared.
Just remember that the glucose in the blood is not the damaging part of diabetes. It’s the glucose elsewhere where it cannot be measured. This is why exogenous insulin and oral hypoglycaemics are not associated with improved outcomes - because they just cram the sugar into the tissues and leave behind clean blood.
Whilst the blood glucose is obviously a very useful measure, it should never be viewed as a green light. Putting more sugar in could top it up in one meal. Whereas emptying the body gives you a far greater buffer. Hope I’m making sense.
I'm taking it you mean keep fasting or whatever until your Blood Glucose is satisfactorily low ? Like 5.5mmol/l for example ? And then eat till you're full but be very strict about carbohydrates. I'm still assuming no one will die due to lack of ingested carbohydrates.....
In my opinion, as low as you need to go in order to start seeing a reduction in dawn phenomenon. DP is probably the single greatest practical metric of understanding your metabolic health. If your liver and pancreas are healthy then you shouldn’t even notice it. This is why DP is usually the very last thing to be “fixed”, if ever.
I agree that probably applies to a majority, but there are (as bloomin’ always) exceptions.
Sadly I am a case in point.
5 years of keto, 1 year of carnivore at keto ratios, and my Dawn Phenomenon is as alive and kicking as ever.
But then I have wangier hormones than most, and bg and carbs play a surprisingly small part, whilst stress hormones appear to be the major influence.
Yeah for sure but then that implies persistent insulin resistance. It can take a very very very long time for this to be reversed, and of course may not even be possible in individuals with other compounding factors. Perhaps indeed you fall into this bracket
I am one of those people, at least I am until I have been convinced otherwise by scientific explanations, not vague notions of overflow. Cells in the body cannot absorb glucose as such, as it is water soluble and osmotic pressure would cause the cell to absorb water and rupture. Cells therefore store glucose in the form of glycogen which is not water soluble. Glycogen stores are finite and store approximately 400grams of glucose in the skeletal muscles and 100g in the liver of a 70Kg person. When the glycogen stores are full glucose is stored as fat. I have not seen any suggestion that the body can accumulate glucose elsewhere.Many people have this idea that sugar only exists in the blood, as glucose, and in the muscles and liver, as glycogen. The truth is that almost every cell in the body can use glucose and become engorged with it. The blood carries glucose around the body, but when the cells cannot accept any more, and when the liver has run out of places to stash it as glycogen and fat, it begins accumulating in the blood.
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