I AM TOTALLY CONFUSED
4. Dr. Neal Barnard of PCRM tells us that it is the fat in the cells that makes them insulin resistant. “The old approach had us cutting down on carbohydrates.” “A low-fat vegetarian approach recognizes that whole-food carbohydrates are fine; it’s the fat in our diets that is the problem.”
nolly53
Well, I'm T1 so it's not so relevant for me but if I were T2 I would go the low carb route. (no 3). The offcial UK recommendations still follow high carb low fat route, which is outdated (deep flaws in the original study which recommended it) and are useless to T2s who are carb intolerant. Nothing wrong with intermittent fasting, but keep the carbs down.
Not sure about the Vegan approach, have a look at the Vegan section here. I think it's probably excellent for non-diabetics but not sure it works for people who are carb intolerant/insulin resistant.
Thanks NicoleC1971.I get your dilemna though I am a type 1 (no cure but just ongoing 'management') . You can google any approach you like and find 'evidence' to echo your bias. On this forum the bias is towards the low carb with the rationale being as type 2 you are in some way intolerant of carbohydrate and produce too much insulin, become insulin resistant and then on the spectrum of diabetes.
The Diabetes UK site places the emphasis on losing weight and protecting your heart (hence low fat and higher carb) but this approach is correlated with increasing rates of diabetes in particular and obesity in general possibly because it is based on the flawed idea of counting calories. Sadly going low fat and./or taking statins does NOT protect diabetics from getting heart disease either if they are using lots of meds to control their blood glucose without changing carb intake.
The vegans have moral reasons (care for animals with faces and mothers, though not slugs evidently!) for eschewing meat and dairy however we evolved to be omnivores and in the long term a vegan diet needs supplementation. On the diabetic front if you were eating lots of white carbs and swapped to lower GI versions and more green veg etc. then you'd undoubtely lose weight and consequently inprove your blood glucoselevels . But being vegan is hard work and I can't see a good health reason for giving up dairy and meat with all the protein, vitamins and minerals plus healthy fats they contain!
You seem to be at a cross roads with this having not found the magic pill so far. Could you draw up a list to evaluate the options that's personal to you and your life . Otherwise you risk being in 'analysis paralysis' . Once you've decided something that seems to work for others and appeals to you, then get consistent with whatever changes you make recogising that you need to stick at this for the rest of your life and it will include some plateaus as your body gets used to being smaller! Measure yourself including waist size and bg results objectively and then subjectively e.g. am I hungry? do I have good energy levels/cravings?
Thanks EllieM. I find it amazing that Diabetic nurses and dieticians are distributing mis-information as in (1). I am interested in LCHF but Dr. Neal Barnard of PCRM certainly makes a case for no fat, not just for treating diabetes but lots of other illnesses.
I will be interested to see what others think.
nolly53
@nolly53 You say in your post "you could follow the Diabetes UK Healthy eating sheet given to you recently which recommends “Avoid skipping meals”, “eat pasta, easy cook rice, new potatoes”, “Cut down on fat – eat low fat or diet yoghurts”, “a small glass of fruit juice or fruit smoothie” etc." I would just like to let you know what happened to me when I followed that advice ".
Right foot went from low risk to.moderate risk as it began to get more and more numb. Eyes went from.no retinopathy to some background retinopathy then full blown retinopathy and diabetic macular oedema which needed regular injections of Lucentis directly into my eyes. This happened even though I was injecting insulin for everything I ate. I was a model T2D and was congratulated on how well I was controlling the diabetes.
I couldn't carry on down the road to blindness and foot amputations so I 'jumped ship ' and went low carb and keto. Result was - diabetes in remission, Not on insulin or any meds now, all eye problems reversed, foot no longer numb and at the last check was now at low risk.
You have come to the right place as there is so much good advice and support on this forum.
Thank you for your encouragement.Hi Nolly53.
I was diagnosed as T2 over 4 years ago with an HbA1c of 104. The DN told me that the condition was progressive and that, if I could tolerate it, I would be on 2000mg of Metformin for life with the possibility of eventually needing insulin. She prescribed the standard NHS 'healthy carbohydrate' diet and suggested some increased exercise. I reasoned that if carbs were the problem then continuing to eat them did not make sense. Fortunately I discovered this forum! I do not meat so listed all the protein sources that I could eat and started planning meals around the list. I also started including more fat which was tricky as I had been eating high carb low fat for years (and gaining weight!). Within 4 months I had lost 3 stone and reached an HbA1c of 36. I halved the dosage of Metformin. The diabetes nurse referred to me as her star but I did not tell her that I ignored much of her dietary advice. (I did take on board the advice about foot and eye care etc). She has since retired.
I also increased the amount of exercise I do. My HbA1c has stayed in the non-diabetic range for the last 4 years. Three months ago I reduced Metformin to 500mg per day. My HbA1c yesterday was 37!!
I agree with the advice of the other people who have posted. I too was very confused about the wealth of information available. I took the approach that I would prepare more of my own meals based around foods that I like to eat and that I would start to take care of myself more. The T2 diagnosis was a wake-up call. There are people on this forum who have had great success in reversing their diabetes even many years after diagnosis. My best wishes go with you for embracing whatever changes you decide to make.
Very interesting that you were vegetarian when diagnosed with diabetes. (This goes against Dr. Neal Barnard's teaching.)I was vegetarian when diagnosed with diabetes. I was told I had a good diet also. I asked if it was that healthy why if I carried on eating like that would I expect any change. I'm a good cook but a lazy one, I eat to live not live to eat. I was starving eating as a vegetarian so I began eating meat. I can't say I've lost weight or seen my sugars reduce but I'm not hungry.
I was put on jardiance a month ago, haven't told my dn yet, but after reading Jenny Ruhl I've stopped taking it. Its not been tested enough and they aren't testing on me.
Very interesting that you were vegetarian when diagnosed with diabetes. (This goes against Dr. Neal Barnard's teaching.)
I agree with you about Jardiance. I certainly would never consider taking it again.
nolly53
Am so.pleased to hear that you had no intention of following the NHS advice. I am quite cross with myself that I followed it for so long. It is interesting that the diabetic neuropathy can be reversed. I was very surprised when it happened because everything I have read says that it can't be reversed.Hi Krystyna23040,
Thanks for the reply. Perhaps I misled you slightly... whilst I could follow the Diabetes UK Healthy eating sheet, I have no intention to. Like you, my diabetes progressed simply because I did follow it. In fact the only time my diabetes has improved is when I read Dr David Cavan’s book “Reversing your Diabetes” and dumped the NHS advice given. I was citing the Diabetes UK Healthy eating sheet as one of the conflicting pieces of advice that I have come across.
I am delighted for you and particularly interested to hear that your and feet symptoms reversed. Whilst I have no eye problems, I do suffer from diabetic neuropathy and am encouraged that it may reverse when my diabetes improves.
Thanks for your input.
nolly53
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