In respect to this, while I have limited study based evidence to work from, I also have my sample of one, and I think that you'll find there are two processes being undertaken that need to be accounted for when looking at the impact of protein on glucose and how it needs to be accounted for in the use of bolus insulin.Recently I've been looking to understand the proportion of glucogenic amino acids versus the ketogenic amino acids. I just uploaded an updated version of the manifesto doc - https://www.dropbox.com/s/if9cs6u0achx4lj/Optimising nutrition, managing insulin.pdf?dl=0. It seems that up to about 80% of proteins could be converted to glucose if someone was very inactive and they were eating a lot of protein etc... So 54% is not a maximium it is more a typical average as shown by the FII data from The University of Sydney testing.
The link you posted does not make the claim for 80% glucogenic potential, nor do the three most obvious links in the article you link to. Do you have a link for this 80% claim?The protein allowance is subject to a bunch of variables. I could argue it's 54% based on the precendent of Wilders' formula, 60% based on the actual data, or 80% based on the glugenic protential of amino acids versus ketogenic (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucogenic_amino_acid).
I'm not postulating this. Given that Leucine has a direct effect on the Beta cells increasing insulin production, I postulate that it has a similar action on the alpha cells stimulating glucagon release, causing glycogen to be converted to glucose, rather than Leucine.I'm not convinced of a direct leucine - > glucose conversion that isn't GNG. An alternative GNG would be that GNG has different timescales for different amino acids and while some part of GNG takes longer to finish than carb metabolism does, some other parts of GNG start almost immediately.
I don't think that GNG is a delayed start, but I don't believe it has the intensity that the protein bar demonstrates. Additionally, the protein bar contains a 20g protein content that is not the purest form of protein (i.e. Whey) but is milk protein. Even by the greatest stipulated conversion of protein to glucose under GNG, 80%, that is an ingestion of 16g equivalent of Carbs. The glucose spike that was ongoing was considerably in excess of what I see from 16g glucose. Hence why I don't believe this can be considered to be purely a GNG reaction.We shouldn't assume GNG has a delayed start. I don't think I have seen that cited. Definitely GNG takes longer to finish but that doesn't necessarily imply it has a delayed start. I would interpret your protein bar test (wherever did you find a carb-free protein bar?!?) as a clear demonstration that GNG begins immediately.
I consistently see a similar BG increase (and therefore treat with insulin) whether my BG level is higher or lower, when taking whey protein. I haven't done the comparison with the protein bars.What is harder to explain is why you saw a BG rise when consuming protein but already in a high BG state. But I think I can explain it. Did you see the same degree of BG rise that you would have seen from eating the same protein in a low BG state? Higher or lower?
I don't produce insulin, and my comparison is based more on whey protein than the bars particularly. There is still some experimentation to be done with the bars, so I can't confirm when using the bars where the effect is strongest. Based on the whey protein and the duration of the insulins I use, plus the timing of exercise and whey protein ingestion though, the rises, as said before, are consistent.You'll have to remind me Tim if you are still producing insulin. GNG is down regulated by insulin, not by carbs, not by BG. So if you were not producing insulin, or only had Phase II response, I would expect to see the BG rise from the protein bar, whether your BG was high or low. In fact a rise would be MORE likely when your BG is high, since in that state your blood is likely to be low in insulin.
Correct.@tim2000s from your description of the leucine action directly on beta and alpha cells are you saying that in an IDD it would trigger a glucagon release and then glycogen dump, hence the need for extra insulin?
In a non-diabetic I would expect the reaction to be a flat lined BG level as I would expect the glucagon and insulin to offset each other.Otherwise the impact on a (NIDD) diabetic with insulin response would be a drop in BG and a need to reduce insulin, not increase it, is that right?
Yes. I see the same reaction with scrambled eggs and breakfast meats, a meat and spinach omelette, non-whey protein and to a lesser extent chicken breast.Have you ruled out other reactions causing the immediate BG rise via a hormone response, such as allergy to the whey protein?
It's amazing what you can find on bodybuilding websites!wherever did you find a carb-free protein bar?!?
I'm sure there will be an app for thatI'm actually slightly depressed that this may mean there is no such thing as a constant protein ratio even for one individual at one point in time - that it depends on the specific food. :-(
I may have to start carrying around ILI tables.
Outside of the US and some other countries this can be ignored as fibre is already excluded from the carb count in the nutrition information. Are you sure that the Sydney data hadn't already excluded the fibre from their data?
[/QUOTE]Me too, and in my experience your suggested ratio of 54% is much too high to be conservative. I will hypo when low carbing if I use a ratio above 33%. I suggest a conservative number to start with is 25%, test and titrate from there.
54% is also implying a degree of precision that simply doesn't exist given the level of variation. Given all the uncertainties, both theoretical and practical, I think you should use a round number, say 50% or 60% - though as I say I think those are too high.
Whether the maximum value is 54% or 58%, there's no way you can say it's "conservative" to use a maximum value that would never be reached even if a person ate nothing but pure protein (since even then not all the protein would enter GNG).
I've never heard this 80% number quoted. I would dismiss it as an outlier, rather than using it to justify well referenced experimental reports and well analysed metabolic sequences of the theoretical maximum as being "middle" values.
Yes as I said, he is unfortunately pretty vague about it, and no one else is speaking with any authority about it. So like you have done, I had to go to the underlying research papers. I then (as Dr Bernstein has always done) had to use myself as the experiment. So I have empirical data from a real human. There are a u other humans in this small data set, enough to convince me that effective protein ratios vary in T1 LCHF people, from below 25% to as high as 60%.
I responded on the thread @tim2000s posted. http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/how-does-protein-affect-blood-glucose.75156/
You have convinced me that there is a prompt glucagon->glycogen response from certain free amino acids, particularly found in pure or purified protein foods such as eggs, whey protein, etc. A response that is additional to GNG. So thanks for that!
In turn I can see how someone might correctly have a 100% protein to carb ratio, if they were eating these kinds of foods. As per Tim's experience in fact.
Coming back to ILI and the manifesto, I think what would be much more useful than assuming a 54% protein ratio across the board, is to use the ILI to hunt for protein foods that have particularly high or low insulin response. These may well correspond to the eggs, whey protein etc. We then know to dose differently for these foods, and/or avoid them.
Funnily enough over the last few years my response to "the problem with protein" in low carb diabetic dieting is to minimise the reliance on protein, and to consistently eat the same protein foods. In a way this protein minimising and standardisation is a throwback to the minimising and standardisation of carbs in the diabetic diet prior to QA insulins and the resulting freedom of basal-bolus. So potentially here there is a "basal-bolus" revolution for protein that offers the same freedom while still low carbing.
I'm actually slightly depressed that this may mean there is no such thing as a constant protein ratio even for one individual at one point in time - that it depends on the specific food. :-(
I may have to start carrying around ILI tables.
@martykendall, whilst I agree with this statement relating to the speed at which protein affects glucose levels and the effects on insulin requirements, especially on a low carb diet, high protein diet, I still think you are missing the non-gng component.It appears to me that people haven't contemplated this much because protein has a slow impact on glucose levels, however I think this means that we underestimate the effect of protein containing foods on insulin, particularly on a low carb, hight protein diet.
@martykendall I've a strong interest in this too and I and others have noticed a number of factors relating to protein ingestion on low carb diets, especially where high protein levels are eaten.
In respect to this, while I have limited study based evidence to work from, I also have my sample of one, and I think that you'll find there are two processes being undertaken that need to be accounted for when looking at the impact of protein on glucose and how it needs to be accounted for in the use of bolus insulin.
I have observed that when I eat a high protein intake, without high carbs, I get an immediate reaction that requires an approximately 50% of equivalent carbs bolus, plus any required bolus for carbs, much as your calculations show. I am certain that this is not related to GNG.
We all regularly discuss GNG as a mechanism by which protein is converted into glucose, and I have observed that this is a process that does take place, however it is best observed when eating a low carb meal with a significant protein "lump", such as a steak or chicken. With these sources, you see a relatively slow increase in blood glucose over the following three to four hours that requires a regular bolus to manage it. It is a proper case of sugar surfing.
The other process that is continually ignored, but I think has a greater part to play in the use of mealtime bolus insulin is the impact of amino acids on insulin production, specifically Leucine, and the non-gluconeogenesis reaction that takes place. Leucine is a well known stimulant of the beta cells, actively increasing the amount of insulin produced in a non-diabetic person (NIH paper here). There appears to also be an effect on the alpha cells, which has less documentation, which is that in the presence of Leucine, Glucagon is released and glycogen is converted to glucose to counter the Leucine insulin increase.
I've done a fair amount of reading on this following observations of what happens to my glucose levels when ingesting Whey Protein and BCAAs relating to working out. The carb content is practically nil (typically 2 or 3g) however the blood sugar reaction is such that the only food source that can be having the effect is the protein. Taking it a step further, I experimented with a protein bar to see what the impact was. My reaction is detailed here: http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/how-does-protein-affect-blood-glucose.75156/
In order to take this experiment a step further, I was able to eat one of these protein bars as a treatment for a hypo. It was extremely effective. it contains practically no carbs. What I've also observed is that in the presence of a higher blood glucose level, when I would expect that the internal feedback loop would communicate that a reduced glucagon reaction is required to counter the diabetic non-existent insulin reaction to protein, blood glucose still rises. This leads me to the assertion that protein, and most likely leucine, has a direct impact on alpha as well as beta cells.
I think the crux of this is that GNG is not the only mechanism driving blood glucose levels up when ingesting protein. The insulin requirement is also driven by a reaction to amino acids and this is the primary driver of the mealtime bolus requirement for protein. GNG is a much slower effect and it is not the initial bolus that treats this but subsequent later boluses. I have also suggested that slower acting insulins might have a profile that better fit the GNG curve when compared to the rapid acting insulins currently used.
I hope this adds to your research.
OK but, 100% of the weight of glucogenic (and multipurpose) amino acids entering GNG do not turn into 100% of that amount of glucose. 100% of amino acids entering GNG turn into 58% of that weight of glucose. The rest are lost due to overheads and inefficiencies of the process. Partly this is just thermodynamics - you always lose energy (as waste) when you change the state of something from one state to another.total glucogenic aminos (74% by weight), column KL is the ketogenic aminos (12%) and the remainder is the aminos that fit into the "both" category (14%). Using the correlation analysis it appears that between 78 and 89% of protein not used by the body could be turned into glucose and stored in the liver and muscles for energy with the excess being converted to fat.
There is no doubt in my mind that LCHP diets fail, and the reason they fail is that people (including me) just replace carbs with GNG-generated carbs from protein. Nothing really changes.It appears to me that people haven't contemplated this much because protein has a slow impact on glucose levels, however I think this means that we underestimate the effect of protein containing foods on insulin, particularly on a low carb, hight protein diet.
Same as anything, frequent testing. Lots of people on here routinely do +2 +4 hr tests after food. That would cover most protein action.My question would be how you would accurately test / titrate for the protein factor when protein takes a very long time to digest and show up in the blood stream (i.e. three to ten hours).
Yes, and the same is true for carbs - lots of type 1s have their basal covering some of their standard daily carbs. But the right fix for that is to do correct basal testing, which requires it be fasting testing.I think a lot of type 1s just probably already have their basal insulin set to cover the protein in their diet. This was one thing I noticed from reading the TAG page on the TuDiabetes. Lots of people needed to cut back on their basal insulin once they started to dose for dietary protein.
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