It's not me suggesting reducing fats, see the first post. In my mind it seems fat in the diet increases satiety that's why low carb good fat intake seems to work for me. Icant however seem to get my carbs much below 80 a day. I love green sprouts and these are high in carbs. Maybe have to compensate with higher carbs by more exercise.....Hi. I would disagree with you about reducing fats. Much of the fat stored in muscles causing insulin resistance will have come from carbs not fat. Carbs are very easily absorbed by the body (stomach) and if the body doesn't need the glucose it stores it as fat. Fat from food goes thru a much more complex process lower down the system; some is passed thru the body and energy is used to store any that is used. Many on this forum have benefited from a low-carb diet not just to reduce blood sugar but to reduce weight. The 'eat low-fat' mantra since the 70s is one of the causes of obesity and T2 as people have stuffed themselves with carbs instead. It's your choice to have a vegan diet but proteins do help the body feel full as fats do as well; carbs don't.
Yep, this is exactly what happens with me as well. As you have discovered, low carb high fat seems to be the most healthy way of eating for many of us T2 diabetics.It seems as though the butter fat signals straightaway to the brain I have eaten I dont need food and stays that way. I also dont feel hungry until 16/1700 hrs.
I eat meat and natural healthy fats (both saturated and unsaturated), but I also eat lots of low carb vegetables. Most modern research is showing that this way of eating is not at all unhealthy.That may be horrendously unhealthy
I totally agree with this Diabell.Hi. I would disagree with you about reducing fats. Much of the fat stored in muscles causing insulin resistance will have come from carbs not fat. Carbs are very easily absorbed by the body (stomach) and if the body doesn't need the glucose it stores it as fat.
Having tested some theories over the last few weeks my particular situation is:
Because of the dawn phenomena, my bg is usually 7/8 at 8am even if I go to bed at 4.5.
If I have a meal replacement shake, veggies etc. for breakfast and go for 45min walk my bg drops slowly to 6 ish until about 1500.
If I have 2 scrambled eggs same time, it drops about the same. But if I add a couple of tbls. of butter for with the scrambled egg, or have fried egg and bacon [in coconut oil, all I ever use] my bg drops like a stone to 4/5 by 1500 hrs.
It seems as though the butter fat signals straightaway to the brain I have eaten I dont need food and stays that way. I also dont feel hungry until 16/1700 hrs.
That may be horrendously unhealthy for low fat living but it certainly drops the bg big time.
Anyone else find that?
It's not me saying fats are unhealthy...see top topic. I eat butter and avocado by the spoonful....I find the same with eating a protein fat brekkie. My bg drops, immediately after eating to levels I like.
The only thing in your post i disagree with is the implication that eating fat is unhealthy (second to last sentence).
In the 2 years since i went even lower carb and higher fat, i have lost weight, feel better, have more energy and stamina, my hba1c has dropped, my cholesterol ratios have improved to 'optimal', my joint inflammation has virtually disappeared, and i feel 15 years younger.
If i switched to vegan (as suggested in the video), i would risk losing many of those benefits. I have no axe to grind against veganism, but that is simply a risk i am not willing to take...
What's your definition of high and your source for sprouts being high carb... google suggests 9% total and 4% df.... I eat them quite a lot and was taken back to read your post...It's not me suggesting reducing fats, see the first post. In my mind it seems fat in the diet increases satiety that's why low carb good fat intake seems to work for me. Icant however seem to get my carbs much below 80 a day. I love green sprouts and these are high in carbs. Maybe have to compensate with higher carbs by more exercise.....
Having tested some theories over the last few weeks my particular situation is:
Because of the dawn phenomena, my bg is usually 7/8 at 8am even if I go to bed at 4.5.
If I have a meal replacement shake, veggies etc. for breakfast and go for 45min walk my bg drops slowly to 6 ish until about 1500.
If I have 2 scrambled eggs same time, it drops about the same. But if I add a couple of tbls. of butter for with the scrambled egg, or have fried egg and bacon [in coconut oil, all I ever use] my bg drops like a stone to 4/5 by 1500 hrs.
It seems as though the butter fat signals straightaway to the brain I have eaten I dont need food and stays that way. I also dont feel hungry until 16/1700 hrs.
That may be horrendously unhealthy for low fat living but it certainly drops the bg big time.
Anyone else find that?
Lost a bit of weight but can't seem to get the balance of carbs/fat right.If that works for you, why are you asking if vegan is better?
Do you want to lose weight, or are you not losing it on lchf?
Or is there some other reason to try it?
Yep, this is exactly what happens with me as well. As you have discovered, low carb high fat seems to be the most healthy way of eating for many of us T2 diabetics.
I eat meat and natural healthy fats (both saturated and unsaturated), but I also eat lots of low carb vegetables. Most modern research is showing that this way of eating is not at all unhealthy.
I totally agree with this Diabell.With we T2s having very poor glucose metabolism, and with the glucose from those readily absorbed carbs basically just floating around in our bloodstream without being used, it's pretty much a "no brainer' that much of it is going to get converted to fat no matter how hard we try (at least if your T2 insulin resistance is bad enough).
I was vegetarian for a few years. Always cooked my own stuff. Then I was diagnosed with diabetes, I found it hard to eat low carb. I was starving so began eating meat again. I was never one for eating fake food yuk. And soy is not healthy. I don't like quorn either.
I actually bought his book. Mind you I'm great at buying books but not following through.
By the way if you already have diabetes you can manage it but not reverse it.
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