Thanks, I do snack on nuts, but it seems the only way to get my fasting bloodsugar down is to eat nothing from 7pm. if I snack on nuts in the evening my BS will be 6.1Hey Welcome here ..You can ADD some more nuts to your food that seems to help many that tends to lose too much
Thanks, I do snack on nuts, but it seems the only way to get my fasting bloodsugar down is to eat nothing from 7pm. if I snack on nuts in the evening my BS will be 6.1
Thanks for the advice. Do you think it's possible to restore the function of the beta cells, as some people proclaim, by losing weight and eating a low carb, high fat diet? Seems like you've done really well with your diet for a long time. Has anything changed from when you started this diet? Is your fasting BG lower now? Seems like everyone has a diff opinion to whether it's possible to actually reverse diabetes or just controlling it with diet and exercise.I managed to maintain my weight on a low carb (30g) high fat diet and have done so for 2 and a half years. I just added an extra egg a day and introduced cheese, which I hadn't had previously, plus extra butter and mayo. Since November I have been skipping breakfast other than a coffee with cream. My weight has remained stable. It's a question of balance and takes a while to find the right balance, but increasing fats, including fats from protein sources such as eggs and cheese, worked for me.
I didn't know about the protein. I did think on going vegetarian but it seemed to complex to do and being on a low carb diet as well. I think you're right about the exercise. I will try doing some after dinner. Maybe get an exercycle!! I've read high intensity should be really good? There's so much info on the net it's hard to know where to start. Tired after a day of work and slouching in front of the TV or with a book seems a lot better than exercisingI found that exercising lowers ones blood glucose, especially if you move after you have eaten...maybe if you exercise more and eat more fat you will find a balance that lowers your numbers more than now.
Many do not know that excess eaten protein will be changed by the liver into glucose as well more in some persons than in others... so most people do not need more protein than 0.8 gram pro kg bodyweight a day... but maybe you already know that.
on the other hand it is a very typical problem in type 2 diabetes that the livers transformation of protein and release of glucose reserves is raised compared to non-diabetics
you could choose to look at it this way that knowing that your liver produces more glucose then you counteract it by making sure that you do not eat any high spiking foods and then maybe you´ll end up with a HbA1c at the same level as a non-diabetic that just eat lots of high spiking foods but still is considered "normal"- non diabetic..
if you see my HbA1c underneath what I write here you can see it is in a non-diabetic area but still my morning numbers are almost always in the 5.2-5.8 area ... so don´t dispair , I think you are actually doing pretty fine.
by the way the extra nut do not have to be eaten in the evening... you could finish every meal with eating a couple of extra nut even though you do not really feel hungry
I didn't know about the protein. I did think on going vegetarian but it seemed to complex to do and being on a low carb diet as well. I think you're right about the exercise. I will try doing some after dinner. Maybe get an exercycle!! I've read high intensity should be really good? There's so much info on the net it's hard to know where to start. Tired after a day of work and slouching in front of the TV or with a book seems a lot better than exercising
Thanks for the advice. Do you think it's possible to restore the function of the beta cells, as some people proclaim, by losing weight and eating a low carb, high fat diet? Seems like you've done really well with your diet for a long time. Has anything changed from when you started this diet? Is your fasting BG lower now? Seems like everyone has a diff opinion to whether it's possible to actually reverse diabetes or just controlling it with diet and exercise.
Thanks for that. It's really good to hear that it can be done. I'll just keep going with the low carb diet and adding some HITT. It's only been 4 months, but I'm a bit impatient to see results.Hi,
I would say "YES" it is possible to reverse diabetes. I used to have fasting 6.5 - 7.0 in the morning, and after breakfast 11mmol/l or even 12mmol/l. I went mad on exercise and cut all junk food, and white flour products, and lost over 40kg rapidly, and now I get 4s in the mornings, and after breakfast like today: 5.2mmol/l 2 hours after eating, 3 hours 4.8, and that's eating over 50g carb meal for breakfast, I used to get 11s on much lower carbs.
The thing that work for me was the type of exercise, it was HITT(High Intensity Interval Training) that I've used when I was training for cycle races with the club in my much younger years.
I takes time and dedication, but strongly believe it can be done. Others have reversed it by low cal diet like the new castle diet, but everyone is different so you need to find what works for you, and more importantly what you can keep up long term.
Thanks for answering. I know it's different for everybody, but it's great to hear about others success stories. You've done so well, I will persevere and try and get there as well..I've never had a high FBG. It is the same now as it has been since the beginning, likewise all my other pre-meal and bedtime levels have always been good. What has changed are my post meal levels. They have come right down. As far as I can see from my blood tests I don't think I have ever had much of a fatty liver, maybe that is the reason. I have no idea if my beta cells lost function or not, and if they did, I don't know if it has been restored. I can't answer your question I'm afraid.
All I know is I lost a lot of weight in the first 10 months and followed a low carb diet, slowly decreasing my carbs as time went on. I didn't go cold turkey on them. I have been on around 30g carbs for about 18 months now and that is when my post meal levels really took a dive, and are continuing to improve whilst my weight remains stable and I am eating a lot more fats and protein than I was before I dropped my carbs to 30g.
I won't count myself as in remission or anything close to it until I can prove I can stay stable and eat more carbs. I am experimenting with this at the moment.
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