Modern breads especially white flour breads generally have added sugar. They are considered as high GI load, and generally will cause bgl spikes. I have toast myself, If I have white bread, I spike badly, but I use a multi-seed loaf that hardly registers on my meter. I also use butter to lower the GI load, and this slows things down even further.Hi,
First off, I'm a newbie. I've had diabetes 2 for two years. Sudden I've had a dramatic change in bread reaction. If I eat one slice of toast or half a bagel (no jam) my mml goes to 10. I've been having toast for breakfast for ages, and this change is a puzzle. I take 2,000 mg of Glumetza daily.
Any ideas?
Michael
If we base things on MY readings and experience it's possible you may have type one.Based on my readings and experience, your diabetes will continue to progress and worsen, eventually resulting in complications, with or without medication, until you change your diet.
Thanks for all the advice. The bread I eat is multi-gran and contains no sugar at all. It's bakery bread and I have spoken with the baker. I eat my bread (or used to) with butter or cream cheese. Funny thing is my last A1C was 6.3, and my other readings are pretty good most of the time. There might be something about the no-fat that Torq mentions, as if I have a hamburger with bun, I don't get that reaction. Is there a way to know if I have moved to T1? I was projected to have it when I was 18, and held it off for 50 years!
There are tests that can help diagnosis. Ask for a GAD test and c-peptide test. You could experiment with porridge as a temp measure to see if that spikes you, or is it just the bread?Thanks for all the advice. The bread I eat is multi-gran and contains no sugar at all. It's bakery bread and I have spoken with the baker. I eat my bread (or used to) with butter or cream cheese. Funny thing is my last A1C was 6.3, and my other readings are pretty good most of the time. There might be something about the no-fat that Torq mentions, as if I have a hamburger with bun, I don't get that reaction. Is there a way to know if I have moved to T1? I was projected to have it when I was 18, and held it off for 50 years!
As you wish:@TorqPenderloin, type 2 and type 1 require different treatments, but both benefit by finding the right diet. Not sure where you're going with your comment. Is something in my post incorrect? If yes, please correct me. Providing accurate information is important to me.
I understand what you're trying to say, but I'm noting the method in how you initially said it.@TorqPenderloin I'm writing from a type 2 perspective, which is Mike's current diagnosis. The driving point of my first post was the tremendous value of diet in managing diabetes, type 2 or type 1.
The problems with the average US diet are well documented, but in UK we are not so badly affected, and our diet should provide all our micronutrient needs, even LC diets, Why I raised the question of water based minerals and vitamins is that diabetics tend to lose more fluids through frequent urination, and loose bowels from Metformin, and in my case diuretics for heart or BP medication, and this can deplete those nutrients. Alcohol consumption can also aggrevate the situation. Mostly we do not need to supplement, but should consider it if any contributing factors occurs on a regular basis. A multivit tab is recommended to make sure. But to return to topic, it would need a massive depletion to affect how bread is metabolised, and raising bgl as it has been reported shows that metabolism is working, but the endocrine system is not keeping up. Welcome to the world of diabetes.@Oldvatr I can't speak for the UK, only the US. Here magnesium levels in the soil have been depleted. In part due to flooding being controlled by dams - (flooding helps replenish the land with minerals) - also due to large scale farming practices. I personally eat 4 cups of leafy greens, 1 serving of spinach, half an avocado, 1 to 2 ounces of nuts, and vegetables with every meal and still need to supplement with magnesium, 450 mg magnesium citrate a day.
You might find this 4 minute video interesting... http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/fasting-for-type-2s.73800/page-6#post-1099279
Michael Greger, MD does not sell nutritional supplements. He has dedicated his life to teaching people how to use a whole foods, plant based diet to reverse chronic disease and to improve health.
Magnesium deficiency in the US is estimated to affect 80% of the population. Magnesium is needed for almost 300 processes in the body. It also plays an important role in managing inflammation. It is one of the most important nutrients needed by the body.
I'm sometimes wrong. Might be this time too. Don't know. Mike doesn't know either.
When I was diagnosed 10 years ago, not one healthcare practitioner told me I could improve my glucose and insulin levels with the right diet. Not one. I have a real problem with that. After my initial diagnosis I read one book on diabetes. Unfortunately it was the wrong book. It relied heavily on nutritional supplements, not diet. I couldn't afford the long list of supplements, so I ate as healthily as I could: protein, vegetable or fruit, and starch with each meal, a piece of toast with cheese or peanut butter, or fruit for a snack as needed between meals.
When my doctor's office informed me of my A1c of 9.9% a year ago, I was in absolute shock. They wanted to put me on metformin and a statin that week. I declined, but agreed to an appointment in 6 weeks. Within three days I was on the diet that I am on today. My blood glucose stabilized to where it is now in 30 days. How different would my life be today had someone, anyone helped me understand how to "eat to my meter", and to walk every day?
Worse yet, up until a few years ago, most if not all dieticians were recommending the American Diabetes Association's diet. Most still do. There will always be outliers, but most type 2 diabetics get worse on this diet. I just got an email from the ADA asking me for a donation, and to sweeten the request, they provided me with an apple pie recipe.
We've got to start telling type 2 diabetics the truth. T2DM is a lifestyle disease. It takes decades to develop. It takes a commitment to learn which foods make us better and which make us worse to turn it around, but it's absolutely worth the effort.
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