depends what low carb is...........
I have heard some say less than 100g is low carb, however I would say 150g a day is low........
My experience is that if you have less carbs, or at least, less carbs like bread, pasta and rice etc, then your blood sugars behave brilliantly.....
it really worked for me, and still does, but I do find myself getting the real carbs in at the weekend..........
and yeah, less carbs means less calories which should help with weight loss.........having low GI carbs should also help......
A low carb diet is beneficial for T1's as less insulin is required. This also leaves less margin for error in carb counting and dose so should mean fewer hypo's.
Ive been doing it since October. Lost 2 stone better control than i have had in years id Recommend i try stick between 130/150g per dayIs a low carb diet beneficial for somebody with type 1?
Also, will following such a diet cause a person to lose weight?
I don't suppose anyone has a link to a good site where I can find some more information on the subject. Have had a google but not finding as much information, just recipes/foods and stuff.
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Firstly, insulin is a growth hormone so not advisable to take large doses. Second ( if on basal/bolus), the less carbs we eat, the less we need to inject, less margin for error. Whenever we carb count, the error margin is up to 20%. So, if a meal contains 100g of carbs, ratio 1:10, we inject 10 units. With 20% error margin, we could be 2units too much or not enough. If meal was 50g, 5 units, the 20% error is only 1 unit. Sorry if that's a really complicated way of telling you lol ! Hope it sort of makes sense.Hi and thanks for the help. How is less insulin beneficial? Sorry, I know this is a very basic question but I'm fairly new at this.
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Yep lol ! I'll edit it ! I meant 10 carb units ( 100g ). Nice spotWith a ratio of 1:10 you'd only inject one unit of fast acting for a 10 gram meal surely?.I don't use fast acting but I thought that was the method?
Firstly, insulin is a growth hormone so not advisable to take large doses. Second ( if on basal/bolus), the less carbs we eat, the less we need to inject, less margin for error. Whenever we carb count, the error margin is up to 20%. So, if a meal contains 100g of carbs, ratio 1:10, we inject 10 units. With 20% error margin, we could be 2units too much or not enough. If meal was 50g, 5 units, the 20% error is only 1 unit. Sorry if that's a really complicated way of telling you lol ! Hope it sort of makes sense.
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Rosie, there's no need to low-carb if you have good control.
You could always try reducing carbs a bit if you want to see if it helps - maybe down to say 150g/day, and if you don't want to lose weight you need to keep your calories up.
To keep your weight stable you increase the amount of fats you eat. Not all fats are bad, and some are better than others
Hi Rosie. The obvious good fat food is fish with omega 3 oils but there other foods with this fat. I agree with the other posters ref low-carbing. Just get a sensible balance between carbs and fats and ignore the DN advice you were given; it's why there are so many obese people around. As Mo says by keeping insulin to a minimum consistent with good blood sugar you minimise peaks and troughs and hence hypos
I don't know what sort of levels of insulin you're taking but it can cause you to gain weight the more you take, or something along those lines anyway, I'm not sure of the exact mechanism. This happens when you become insulin resistant - but many T1s won't experience this if they're in good control of their diabetes and at a healthy weight, healthy diet etc... I'm on fairly high doses for a T1 because of having insulin resistance as well as the T1 diabetes.
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