BurnleyMark
Newbie
- Messages
- 2
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Hi all, I have just been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, this is a bit of a shock as I'm only 36. I checked my blood sugar the other night and it was 27.2 which I know is high, I've been eating healthy the past couple of days and it's come down to 17.4 in two days so I was just wondering if I continued to eat healthy and cut out bad carbs like bread and chips etc will this continue to drop.
Thank for your advise everyone
Hi all, I have just been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, this is a bit of a shock as I'm only 36. I checked my blood sugar the other night and it was 27.2 which I know is high, I've been eating healthy the past couple of days and it's come down to 17.4 in two days so I was just wondering if I continued to eat healthy and cut out bad carbs like bread and chips etc will this continue to drop.
Thank for your advise everyone
Just to note that you may find that ALL carbs are bad carbs.
Disagree 100%... with Type 2 I would try to avoid as many carbs as you can. I would also try to avoid as many dieticians as you can as well! The problem with things like a "well balanced diet" is no-one is sure what that means. You could call the eatwell guide a "well balanced diet" but it would send my blood sugar through the roof.Some complex carbohydrates are indicated for good intestinal health and are indeed recommended by dieticians as part of a well balanced diet for people with diabetes.
For both types, some complex carbohydrates (which will reach the full length of the lower intestines) are required on a reasonably regular basis to ensure that the correct balance of bacterial flora can survive. This should not make one's blood glucose levels hard to control as part of a low carb diet.
https://fixyourgut.com/low-carb-diets-and-the-gut/
It means balanced for your own individual dietary needs.Disagree 100%... with Type 2 I would try to avoid as many carbs as you can. I would also try to avoid as many dieticians as you can as well! The problem with things like a "well balanced diet" is no-one is sure what that means. You could call the eatwell guide a "well balanced diet" but it would send my blood sugar through the roof.
This is a bit of a misnomer. Some complex carbohydrates are indicated for good intestinal health and are indeed recommended by dieticians as part of a well balanced diet for people with diabetes. It's "cheap" simple carbohydrates that we should be aiming to keep to an absolute minimum.
Let's not go from the extremes of "all saturated fats are evil" to "all carbs are evil". It's not helpful. All food groups have a useful function in the body.
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