borofergie
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Dottybagpuss said:What I need to ask, and again please forgive my ignorance, is when should I test to see how a particular fruit (or other food) is affecting my BS? Should I test immediately after eating the item or a specific time after? Up to now, all my tests have been before meals, on the instruction of my DSN.
Dottybagpuss said:Thanks for that Borofergie, just needed that explained to me. But can you also explain what would be an acceptable rise in level and what would be unacceptable?
Well if you listen to Dr Bernstein "none" is the right answer, but that's hardly reasonable.
I would say that Fruit Juice is almost certainly out of the question (it's like drinking a glass of sugar), and I probably wouldn't eat canned fruit either. Some people suggest that berries have a lower GI and are much kinder to your blood sugar than the types of fruit you've been eating.
It really comes down to working out how much carbohydrate is in all that fruit, and adjusting the amount you eat accordingly:
Half a can of peaches in juice = 11g of carb (surprisingly low)
Large glass of Orange Juice = 50g (ouch!)
1 apple= 21g for a medium apple
Total = 11+50+4*21=145g of carbohydrate per day just on fruit.
Some people suggest that 100g TOTAL carb per day is a good starting amount to aim for. You're already 45g over this, without accounting for any other carbs in the rest of your diet.
I'd forget the 5 a day too, it's a load of old unscienttific rubbish.
If they won't give you a meter, try and find some money to get one for yourself. It would tell you instantly what's wrong with eating so much fruit.
What was the result of your blood sugar level test 2 hours afterwards?Hi, I had two kiwi's, two small fresh figs and an avocado for lunch. Do you consider that too much fruit/sugar? I've heard conflicting views on it
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