What is the best way to improve insulin sensitivity/reduce resistance in Type 1s?
Ideas to try: Exercise - you will see the effects straight away as you will need less insulin, lose belly fat (if this is an issue), get more sleep, reduce stress, try intermittent fasting, and reduce your carbohydrate intake.What is the best way to improve insulin sensitivity/reduce resistance in Type 1s?
To be brief, studies show lots of things do. As well as what others have already suggested, a lot of "healthy habits", which would be good for anyone, frequently have a positive impact on Insulin Sensitivity. The most unusual instance of this (that works for me) is a strict 10g of 70% (or higher) Cocoa Dark Chocolate (5 out of every 7 days) has increased my sensitivity since I began doing it by just under 5%.What is the best way to improve insulin sensitivity/reduce resistance in Type 1s?
If your blood sugar's rising in the absence of Carbs that points to an issue with your Basal insulin specifically. If your Basal's at a lower level than you require, this will also affect your Bolus doses. So it would be worthwhile doing some Basal Testing to check that possibility out.Hi all! Thanks for your responses - there is no pattern to it - I seem to having to inject even when I’m not eating carbs! I’m exercising more and that’s causing my levels to rise. I don’t really know what’s going on but it’s causing me to gain weight quite quickly. I’m not huge by any means but I’m about a stone heavier since I’ve been experiencing the resistance. I used to think it was just hormonal but now it’s happening all month round! Hope that’s more insightful?
I have to inject when I'm not eating carbs, it's more common than you think. Some people can take enough basal insulin to not have to but I can't take any more without causing hypos. My blood sugars rise when exercising (even non-diabetics do) so I drink coffee and cream and take a small correction dose for this. I struggled with weight gain when I started insulin. I went from BMI 19 to 24 within a couple of months. I have to use myfitesspal food diary and work hard to lose it - something that I never had to before. Even though I have similar issues, I'd still call myself very insulin sensitive due to taking about 15 units a day on an LCHF diet. But if I ate high carbohydrate meals, and completed less exercise, I would have to take a lot more insulin units.Hi all! Thanks for your responses - there is no pattern to it - I seem to having to inject even when I’m not eating carbs! I’m exercising more and that’s causing my levels to rise. I don’t really know what’s going on but it’s causing me to gain weight quite quickly. I’m not huge by any means but I’m about a stone heavier since I’ve been experiencing the resistance. I used to think it was just hormonal but now it’s happening all month round! Hope that’s more insightful?
Low carbs, always
Sugar/carbs get converted by insulin to fat, particularly around the liver. When your body doesn't want anymore it starts to resist -hence insulin resistence, hence fatty liver. When you cut carbs, you cut insulin, you cut fat, and you cut resistence
Yeah I don’t follow low carb consistently (I sometimes Low Carb accidentally). I guess my carb intake would be considered moderate, as it’s still below average. The absolute highest my HBA1C hits is 42. I’m above DAFNE estimates on typical Insulin sensitivity (which can actually be an issue in some ways). Hypos are infrequent to rare.Just to point out I am not totally low carb and have absolutely no fat on my liver as was evident on a recent scan. I don’t have insulin resistance either, but it shows that you don’t have to be low carb to have a fat free liver. For those of us who wish to be a bit more relaxed about what we eat it is not all doom and gloom. My HBA1C was 44 and I have not had a hypo in a month.