52O342UOIF
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 45
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Yes, I've thought about that. Especially considering many doctors still recommend (by official guidelines) a lot of carbohydrates to diabetics, and has for quite some time now. If you're not a child/teenager there's not (that I've found at least) studies that supports the claim that a diabetic should eat carbs to every meal. A good read about it is "The Laws of Small numbers - Diabetes solution."Hi! The obvious one must be the shift in thinking amongst the diabetic community. from low GI foods to a low carb high fat diet. You could perhaps look at the scientific reason that reducing carbs rather than just sugar appears to have a more profound effect on blood sugar control????? Sue x
The requirements are pretty much met with the some of the questions in the thread start, and then I have my experiment. We have quite a bit of time to work on this, as it is a upper diploma project.What do you require from your project?
There's a danger of biting off more than you can chew given time and resources.
Better to answer a simple question well, than to fail with a complex question.
Wow! My only worry would be it could end up an enormous project and youll run out of time!! Love the idea of looking at the (lack of) guidance for children/teens but I would perhaps limit it to either children or teens, again only because of the potential size of the issues (personally think the teens stuff would be better because its a time when young diabetics are beginning to really make independent choices) As for the alcohol one, fascinating but I wouldn't have a clue where to start!! Really good luck with it, and don't forget we want to know about it!! Sue x
Yes, you couldn't possibly do a project on "the shift in thinking among a community" because it would require a huge survey of a representative number of T1 diabetics. So it's impossible for a high school project.
I for one think that the LCHF advocates are hugely overestimating their numbers simply because they are over represented on this site. (I hardly come here bcs I am so sick of the chorus now).
I follow the old-fashioned plenty of carbs, low-fat diet and have spot-on fasting bloods and an average 6.4 Hb these days. But that's because I exercise a lot. Exercising on LCHF is pretty hopeless. I hate high-fat because it boosts insulin resistance and for T1s involves highly unpredictable bolusing for protein etc.
Maybe, an achievable project could be on the interaction of exercise types and insulin requirements/resistance.
What kind of experiment? If you do anything that needs people as subjects, that's going to be tricky. Quite of a few of your original topics would suffer from that problem.
You might be able to build part of a CGM system yourself, using something called xDrip. Would that qualify? Then maybe you could test it on yourself in different conditions - eating different foods, etc.
Sounds very interesting! Some things I would suggest for your experiments
Verify your basal rate is flat first using a fasting basal test for, ideally, 24 hours
As far as possible do a crossover study - hard with one individual - but if you are testing diet A vs diet B, do A then B then A then B. This is to try eliminate effects where one diet carries over to the other. Ideally you would have more subjects and the other half of the subjects would do B then A.
Weigh/measure everything and never assume something you eat or drink has no effect on BG and can be ignored. Record everything, and let the CGM tell you whether it did or didn't affect your BG.
By the way Dexcom sensors are cheaper, over time, if you re-use them. No problem if your study will only run 2 weeks though, just use Libre. Hopefully you can persuade someone to lend you a Libre scanner?
Yes, that does sound like a lot. There's not much of a margin for error dealing with so much carbs. Hopefully she has good control, sad to read about the result of elevated blood sugar during growth years.I know of one child in the UK that is T1 and her mum is still told that 240g of carbs should be ate each day.
This qty to my way of thinking makes errors too high, especially for children that may have PE one day and all behind the desk the next. School hols compared to term time are harder to manage too.
It would be interesting for a study of how some adults with T1 are lowering the carbs and yet children (parents) are still being told to have large amount of carbs.....
Really!!! That is great news, I haven't heard of one being prescribed before.I think I'll be able to get a Libre prescribed, I've been offered one before
To be honest you may not make an ideal or representative test subject if you still have significant, but perhaps fairly random, insulin production. Or you can say your study is on a honeymooning T1 and may not generalise well to other T1s.Wow, thanks! I'm still in my honeymoon (diagnosed 6 months ago) and don't take any basal insulin.
Don't forget fat. Like I said above, don't assume anything won't have an effect and skip logging it. Fat will have quite a big effect on your BG graphs - you may be surprised.As for the logging food I don't know how much information besides the carbohydrates I should log, calories and protein could be interesting.
Yes, that's great about your training. I've been Type 1 since 1967 and I have gone through every variety of insulin regime under the sun in that time so I do understand about "managing with needles". I now have pump. I find all I need to keep my blood sugars in the non-diabetic range is to have my basal rate right, and follow Scheiner's "Strike the Spike" instructions, which are all about timing.Well, I wasn't thinking about the community's thoughts, as you said it would be impossible, the diets wouldn't be discussed from a standpoint of the diabetic community. I would of course use studies, my experiment and so forth to support any claims.
Here's a survey about the effects of LCHF, self reporting but you can clearly still see restricting carbohydrates can drastically help the manage of diabetes. It's great that you can manage with your diet, unfortunately it doesn't work for everyone. Having to manage with needles, older insulin types and insulin resistance can make high carbohydrate consumption a bad choice. I'm not necessary an advocate LCHF, but seeing how good it works for many makes it interesting to study.
I've some about training and diabetes, interesting stuff! Many types of intense training result in fluctuating blood sugar and higher A1c, still there's a significant lower risk of complications, and still have the health benefits that training gives. Of course different types of training affect the body different, there's a difference in lifting weights and running... I don't think I'll point the project towards a training as I somehow want to connect my experiment and some of the literature.
Thanks for the tips, always nice with input!
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