I have been trying to keep up with this thread. So much information in such a short time, and I am unable to give it my full attention right now.
Firstly, well done @Neo_USA for making the decision to follow the Newcastle diet. I appreciate your anxiety about the BG levels. I was concerned that you felt ill, and also worried that you may not be getting support and monitoring by medical team.
@Andrew Colvin has recently had success with Newcastle diet. He gives excellent advice. I am three years post ND, and although I am still around 5 stones overweight, I have had non-diabetic BG since. Even when I do daft things and overload on high carb, rubbish food.
I wonder if some of your symptoms are due to anxiety regarding the BG readings? Also, being so eager to get BG control so early in the diet? Although when I did ND I stuck to the meal replacements with no deviation from the plan for 9 weeks, I realise that level of perfectionism was probably not essential,. As long as you keep the carbs low, it is the calorie reduction that matters. So, if you are exercising a lot, have some more veg. Also, instead of the excessive exercising, would you benefit by replacing one exercise session a day with some mindfulness relaxation? Just take time to be still, calm, and relax.
Wishing you well
Pipp
Thanks for the kind words and information.
Its definitely not anxiety as I've been to the hospital before because of hypoglycemia from excessive exercise. I can feel when it starts to happen because my hands feel tingly and weak, my heart rate picks up and sometimes beats a little weird, dizziness, along with a couple of other symptoms.
After coming off your ND and you started eating more calories did you see a corresponding increase in your BG as well?
yes it is true - seen it with my own eyes they can go up to 10. His 9.7 is perfectly natural. As for the information it isn't quite the complete story if you look at the 95th percentiles they are up over 10 - That is an ideal but given the diet we all eat nowadays (and I dont me diebetics) Im not surprised everyones pancreas' arent stressed constantly. I think the key point is that there is a level that if the body is working correctly you will not go over. I read on a different thread that a consultant told someone that that was 11.5 or something like that. I think that must be the kidney flushing point but not sure of the truth in that but it does seem to be the case.That actually does bring me some relief. Thanks for sharing that.
There is one thing I'm wondering though. I have read that even non diabetics can get into the 10s after eating something really sugary. Do you feel that is true?
One of my friends we checked him 45 minutes after eating instant oatmeal that had sugar and his reading was 175 (9.7). Granted that it was 45 minutes, but I immediately felt like there was something wrong and he needed to go get checked.
I've seen a couple of other studies that suggests that non-diabetics pretty much never go over 140 regardless of what they eat. The information out there is confusing and conflicting.
Maybe cut back on the exercise?
800 calories leaves a large deficit to fit if you are burning a lot of calories.
The original diet was for patients post bariatric surgery because of obesity, so wasn't going to be targeted at very active people.
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