Almost anything cereal based will have a very negative blood glucose effect.Dont have weetabix any more because BH too high, so I have porridge oats for breakfast with berries. I read that oats were good for slow glucose release, but my latest reading was 10.7 Not happy! I must be having too large a portion Thought it would be ok but it doesn’t appear to be!
Depends.. many T1s go for the Bernstein small numbers model others are happy to dose for their carb intake.I am a Type 1 diabetic and have been told that a Keto diet is not recommended. What do people on the Forum think ?
Dont have weetabix any more because BH too high, so I have porridge oats for breakfast with berries. I read that oats were good for slow glucose release, but my latest reading was 10.7 Not happy! I must be having too large a portion Thought it would be ok but it doesn’t appear to be!
It seems clear that oats are not for you, it’s a personal tolerance issue. Three times a week I have an oats breakfast totalling 40g of carbs and blood glucose returns to about 6.0 after 2 hours. But I also have with it 15g of cheese which I think has a pacifying effect. Anyway, this shows that any statement like “any cereals are bad for type 2s” is over-generalised.Dont have weetabix any more because BH too high, so I have porridge oats for breakfast with berries. I read that oats were good for slow glucose release, but my latest reading was 10.7 Not happy! I must be having too large a portion Thought it would be ok but it doesn’t appear to be!
Oats are the devil incarnate for me and I had readings of 15 at one point after eating them. I take inulin to keep things going and it seems to work a treatJust been reading articles on cereals I too have porridge oats and small amount of berries but prefer oats to regular laxatives. K
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