Hi Milja,
If you use insulin, then achieving weight loss usually requires reducing your insulin requirements without compromising your BG control. In practice this often means reducing carbs and perhaps also protein intake (protein breaks down to sugars and amino acids during digestion) in order to be able to safely reduce your insulin. Regular aerobic exercise and perhaps using metformin can increase insulin sensitivity even in Type 1s.
Our bodies only start burning fat stores once all glucose stores are depleted - keep carbs low and try decreasing protein and increasing the % of fat in your diet, but as others have said, total calories do count - reconsider your portion sizes as well?
Sorry should have clarified that it is glucose from muscle glycogen stores that is depleted first. In a nondiabetic blood glucose levels will stay in a tightly regulated narrow range even during exercise and fat burning. You are correct that if you consume more carbs the body will use these first for energy before fat stores.This may be a silly question but I'm new to all of this... If our body only starts burning fat once the glucose stores are depleted would this not mean that my blood glucose levels would have to be really low? Would this not make me hypo or then have to consume some carbs to get back to normal but then my body would just be burning off those extra carbs?... Not sure if that makes any sense, sorry :/ x
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