And you keep ignoring the fact tbat T2 diabetics not on medication have to reduce their carb intake to keep their blood glucose levels down.
Diets centered on white rice have, in fact, produced some of the most dramatic health benefits ever reported in the medical literature. The Rice Diet, as pioneered by Walter Kempner, has repeatedly been shown to drastically reduce hypertension [3], insulin resistance [4], and obesity [5]. Low-fat diets emphasizing starch have demonstrated the ability to reverse diabetes mellitus [6] and coronary artery disease [7]. These remarkable studies were all inspired by the traditional Asian cuisine.
Conclusions: Findings of this post hoc analysis demonstrated that the Ma-Pi 2 diet is a safe dietary strategy to reduce levels of the markers of insulin resistance and inflammation, compared with baseline values, in the short term. Furthermore, the Ma-Pi 2 diet was superior to the control diet in reducing insulin growth factor-1 and may be beneficial for patients with T2D
After correcting for age, gender, BMI at baseline, and physical activity, there was a significantly greater reduction in the primary outcomes fasting blood glucose (95% CI: 1.79; 13.46) and post prandial blood glucose (95% CI: 5.39; 31.44) in those patients receiving the Ma-Pi 2 diet compared with those receiving the control diet
Intervention with a short-term Ma-Pi 2 diet resulted in significantly greater improvements in metabolic control in patients with type 2 diabetes compared with intervention with standard diets recommended for these patients.
we know people misreport their intake
And we're back to anecdotes.Well my blood glucose. meter and scales don't agree with you.
bulkbiker said:Possibly because it is almost impossible to calculate your intake (as well of course as expenditure) to any decent degree of accuracy.
The steak I eat may fit the nutrient profile from the McCance and Widdowson table or it may not.
It will depend on the breed of cow, how it was raised, what it ate and maybe which part of the UK it comes from.
Likewise depending on temperature, state of metabolic derangement, time of day 'inter alia' the energy expenditure my dog walk uses will vary too.
So we have a hazy idea of Calories In and an even hazier idea of Calories Out.
bulkbiker said:That many of us here have lost loads of weight fairly effortlessly by reducing our carb intake without recording or counting those pesky cals should maybe be of more interest to you (especially those that have maintained that weight loss for extended periods) than constantly repeating how we have all "got it wrong".
I have to question what your motivation for joining the forum was?
To tell people with a "chronic, progressive condition" (the words of my DN) that they are "doing it wrong" seems to be a strange reason which you have yet to elaborate on.
Apologies mods if derailing but it is an interesting question.
Well yes it does mean exactly that because I have tried most of them. Funny how you think I am incapable of weighing and measuring my food without supervision when it comes to calorie intake but I am quite capable of weighing and measuring my food without supervision when it comes to low carbing. Do you seriously expect me to ignore my blood glucose meter? If the meter says No I don't eat it. How's that for willpower without supervision?And we're back to anecdotes.
I'm stoked a low carb diet has worked for you. That doesn't mean a comparable diet under supervision wouldn't.
My motivation was and continues to be pretty simple, prevent the spread of misinformation.
So what if you are currently at a good weight, either not having been overweight at all or have already lost it, by any method?If you restrict caloric intake leading to weight loss you will see improvements in blood glucose control.
Please could people share links to good quality studies either supporting Low Carb or showing calorie restriction to be ineffective long-term? Many thanks!
I find it quite amusing that so many of us have found that low carbing works for us for weight loss and blood glucose control yet it 'doesn't count' because we haven't been in an official study.
Myfitnesspal doesn't agree that I eat less calories. I don't eat less calories. I eat more but its more convenient for you to think I don't count them properly because otherwise you would have to admit that some of your training was wrong.That's not what I'm saying. Low carbing works, but not because you've dropped carbs, because you're eating less calories. That is the topic of this thread, somebody looking for "science" that low carbing works by some other mechanism. You won't find it.
If that is the case, why is the first instruction when we meet out DN for us to lower our carbs to improve our blood sugars? If one is on a mission to also lose weight, then the reduction in calories also results in a reduction in carb intake, by its very nature, resulting the in improvement seen in your post. Once the calorie intake goes back to maintenance levels, the carb intake goes up again, and T2 diabetes gets worse.No they do not. If you restrict caloric intake leading to weight loss you will see improvements in blood glucose control.
You can use a carbohydrate based diet to do this and it's been proven over and over again.
Kempner's "Rice Diet" for one:
https://www.bmj.com/content/344/bmj.e1454/rr/575608
Or the Ma-Pi 2 diet, which is a largely vegan 70% carbohydrate containing based diet:
https://drc.bmj.com/content/3/1/e000079
And:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4190933/
I'll wait for you to do explain how a white rice based and 70% carbohydrate based diets produce favourable outcomes in those with T2D. Even fairly rapidly given the latter was only a 21 day trial.
given that much of the advice on this whole website is about managing carbs, and reducing carbs, it seems ironic to talk about bias on here.Threads like this where members are actively looking for information to confirm their bias do not help with providing q balanced perspective.
So what method do you think is best for putting T2 into remission.. if all we are doing here is spreading misinformation?
I have been reading this thread with interest, but not having a very scientific mind a lot of it has gone over my head! However as a type 2 with a low carb success story, of n = 1 (I think that’s the terminology!), for both blood sugar control and weight loss, I decided to Google are all calories the same? This is the first thing that came up:
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/6-reasons-why-a-calorie-is-not-a-calorie
Notably it claims to be evidence based. If you don’t want to read the whole article the conclusion says:
The Bottom Line
Different calorie sources can have vastly different effects on hunger, hormones, energy expenditure and the brain regions that control food intake.
Even though calories are important, counting them or even being consciously aware of them is not at all necessary to lose weight.
In many cases, simple changes in food selection can lead to the same or better results than restricting your calorie intake.
This study proves it's energy intake and not carbohydrate you need to be concerned with:
I have just re-read this thread very carefully. I see no-one who has said calories dont matter. I do see many who have said that the make up of those calories has an effect above and beyond the standard calorie effect normally seen in those who have not got a metabolic condition. This effect, for many, overrides the calorific value of t.he food, thus making calorie counting a tool, but not the master of the situation.The internet is both a blessing and a curse. That fact that different food sources contain differing amounts of energy and illicit different hormonal responses is not evidence that calories don't matter.
Unless you are diabetic and/or have insulin resistance. At what point are you going to take on board the metabolic difference between those with diabetes, and those without?
For those who are not diabetic or likely to become diabetic then yes, calories are all that matters. Their bodies can deal with carbs.
For those with diabetes this is not the case, as our metabolic difference changes the way we process and deal with carbs, and insulin resistance is part of why carbs have a disproportionate and non standard affect on our weight and thus our sugar levels.
This is proven by the many studies (referenced on this whole site) which has explained why those of us with impaired carb responses gain weight if we dont control our carbs, even if we control our calorie intake.
On a different point - it is insulting to suggest people on here are not capable of recording and weighing our intake. How do you think those on insulin and other diabetic medication, for example, manage to control their blood sugars if they are incapable of calculating their carb intake? They record, weigh and measure day after day, hour after hour. If they get it wrong, they risk death. They deserve respect for their hard work.
Please open your mind to one word: Diabetes, and take it on board when responding and learning.
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