• Guest - w'd love to know what you think about the forum! Take the 2025 Survey »

What a revelation

Bildad

Well-Known Member
Messages
371
Location
North West England
Type of diabetes
Treatment type
Diet only
I have had diabetes for a while now and was reasonably well controlled my weight was creeping up though! About this time last year my mum was diagnosed with cancer. Much of my time since then has been taken up with hospital visits and home care for her. Consequently I have grabbed food where I could and eaten vast quantities of chocolate (my stess reaction). At my last review in Feb my h ba1c was 73 and I was told to get a grip. I have now started low carb high fat eating - what a revelation. I don't feel hungry my bf readings are about 5.6 after meals instead of 11 or 12 or more. My joints don't hurt as much and I am sleeping better. Why did no one tell me about this before?? I have last a stone so far but have another couple to loose to be my "ideal" weight
I am due for another review in 3 months maybe I can get off the medication and treat with diet and exercise. Thank you for all the excellent info on here it has been a real help over the last few weeks.
 
Hi @Bildad I am sorry you have had to desl with a parent with serious illness and all the support required but well done you for looking after your health. I hope you continue to do so and your next review will be good. All best wishes.
 
I have had diabetes for a while now and was reasonably well controlled my weight was creeping up though! About this time last year my mum was diagnosed with cancer. Much of my time since then has been taken up with hospital visits and home care for her. Consequently I have grabbed food where I could and eaten vast quantities of chocolate (my stess reaction). At my last review in Feb my h ba1c was 73 and I was told to get a grip. I have now started low carb high fat eating - what a revelation. I don't feel hungry my bf readings are about 5.6 after meals instead of 11 or 12 or more. My joints don't hurt as much and I am sleeping better. Why did no one tell me about this before?? I have last a stone so far but have another couple to loose to be my "ideal" weight
I am due for another review in 3 months maybe I can get off the medication and treat with diet and exercise. Thank you for all the excellent info on here it has been a real help over the last few weeks.
Wow
 
Hi Bildad and welcome to the forum. In case you haven’t seen it yet I'll tag in @daisy1 for her useful info post.
I’m glad you found LCHF eventually, better late than never. I was lucky to stumble on this forum the night of my diagnosis.
I’m sure your efforts will show in an improvement in your HbA1c at your next review. Keep up the good work!
 
Feel for you with the situation with your mum very difficult times and quite understandable that you ended up with some comfort eating.
Delighted for you though that you have decided to also take care of your own health and that you’ve come across the right tools and information you need to do this Here on this forum. As you say why are we not given this advice from health practitioners - it works and does help too with hunger too as well as all the major health benefits.
Be kind to yourself - have you discovered high percentage cocoa choc yet? I eat mainly a few hotel chocolate 100% cocoa buttons when need choc they work out at 0.2g of carb per button and for me hit the spot and feel I’ve had a treat. I also find I can’t overeat them in the way I could with milk choc when I used to eat it!
 
Thank you shelley 262. I love really dark chocolate but can no longer eat it as it gives me migraines. I live in hope that LCHF will reduce the headaches too. I find if I eat a small amount of sweet stuff I crave more and more so I decided as of the beginning of lent to give it up all together. Sugar is definitely an addiction with me.
I am waiting to see the reaction of the diabetes nurse at my practice to LCHF. Not sure why some of the medical profession are so against it. The NHS could save a fortune.
 
When I had my review in Feb I was taken off Gliclazide and put on Dapaglaflozin, by the time I got home (10mins) my test strips had been taken off my repeat prescription! Just a pity my Dapa prescription didn't arrive at the pharmacy as quickly.
 
Thank you shelley 262. I love really dark chocolate but can no longer eat it as it gives me migraines. I live in hope that LCHF will reduce the headaches too. I find if I eat a small amount of sweet stuff I crave more and more so I decided as of the beginning of lent to give it up all together. Sugar is definitely an addiction with me.
I am waiting to see the reaction of the diabetes nurse at my practice to LCHF. Not sure why some of the medical profession are so against it. The NHS could save a fortune.

@Bildad - Our friend @Goonergal found a significant change in her migraines, having gone LC. In fact, as I recall it, that's one of the things she cites as "big wins".
 
@Bildad - Our friend @Goonergal found a significant change in her migraines, having gone LC. In fact, as I recall it, that's one of the things she cites as "big wins".

Thanks for the tag. @Bildad sorry to hear about your mum. Must be a difficult situation. Well done on taking control with the LCHF way of eating. As DCUKMod says, my lifelong, chronic migraines (I was treating 6-8 a month at diagnosis) have completely vanished with a ketogenic diet. It is well over 18 months since I last had one, so there is hope.

For what it’s worth, I can eat very dark chocolate but think you’ve made a good move giving it up - definitely a trigger for over eating for me (despite my weight loss) and I probably need to follow your lead on that.

Good luck with all of this.
 
@Bildad you have had some immense stress there, I am with you on the stress eating chocolate anything! And sweet pastry...
So many congratulations on your good work! Re migraines... I hope you can get rid of them! I have a migraine condition called vestibular migraine. It doesn’t hurt a bit, but it messes very much with your perception of motion. I see motion where there is none, and it’s pretty freaky. But bothersome, not sick headache-y. I was pretty much on low level symptoms for some years, and drinking neither daily coffee nor decaf. Went to LCHF WOE last September, and started to have higher level symptoms! In the beginning I started daily decaf but not alot of high percentage chocolate. I have drifted up to daily 2 squares of 90%, about 3.2 carbs total. But the vestibular stuff had started before that. I don’t know, could be coincidence. Could be the LC. Could be the caffeine in the decaf and chocolate. I’ll never know.
 
Well done @Bildad, another winning story. So glad you found the righteous path to recovery! I too wish I’d have discovered LCHF sooner. I found these forums once I’d already beaten my diabetes. It would doubtless have been a much quicker process had a started here rather than ended here :nurse:



Indeed. A GP I saw yesterday felt that not dishing out test strips was a money saver for the NHS.

Unfortunately, the NHS saving money means that someone who influences the NHS is losing money...
 
@Bildad
Hello Bildad and welcome to the Forum :) Here is the Basic Information we give to new members and I hope you will find it interesting and helpful.


BASIC INFORMATION FOR NEW MEMBERS

Diabetes is the general term to describe people who have blood that is sweeter than normal. A number of different types of diabetes exist.

A diagnosis of diabetes tends to be a big shock for most of us. It’s far from the end of the world though and on this forum you'll find well over 147,000 people who are demonstrating this.

On the forum we have found that with the number of new people being diagnosed with diabetes each day, sometimes the NHS is not being able to give all the advice it would perhaps like to deliver - particularly with regards to people with type 2 diabetes.

The role of carbohydrate

Carbohydrates are a factor in diabetes because they ultimately break down into sugar (glucose) within our blood. We then need enough insulin to either convert the blood sugar into energy for our body, or to store the blood sugar as body fat.

If the amount of carbohydrate we take in is more than our body’s own (or injected) insulin can cope with, then our blood sugar will rise.

The bad news

Research indicates that raised blood sugar levels over a period of years can lead to organ damage, commonly referred to as diabetic complications.

The good news

People on the forum here have shown that there is plenty of opportunity to keep blood sugar levels from going too high. It’s a daily task but it’s within our reach and it’s well worth the effort.

Controlling your carbs

The info below is primarily aimed at people with type 2 diabetes, however, it may also be of benefit for other types of diabetes as well.

There are two approaches to controlling your carbs:

  • Reduce your carbohydrate intake
  • Choose ‘better’ carbohydrates
Reduce your carbohydrates

A large number of people on this forum have chosen to reduce the amount of carbohydrates they eat as they have found this to be an effective way of improving (lowering) their blood sugar levels.

The carbohydrates which tend to have the most pronounced effect on blood sugar levels tend to be starchy carbohydrates such as rice, pasta, bread, potatoes and similar root vegetables, flour based products (pastry, cakes, biscuits, battered food etc) and certain fruits.

Choosing better carbohydrates

The low glycaemic index diet is often favoured by healthcare professionals but some people with diabetes find that low GI does not help their blood sugar enough and may wish to cut out these foods altogether.

Read more on carbohydrates and diabetes.

Over 145,000 people have taken part in the Low Carb Program - a 10 week structured education course that is helping people lose weight and reduce medication dependency by explaining the science behind carbs, insulin and GI.

Eating what works for you

Different people respond differently to different types of food. What works for one person may not work so well for another. The best way to see which foods are working for you is to test your blood sugar with a glucose meter.

To be able to see what effect a particular type of food or meal has on your blood sugar is to do a test before the meal and then test after the meal. A test 2 hours after the meal gives a good idea of how your body has reacted to the meal.

The blood sugar ranges recommended by NICE are as follows:

Blood glucose ranges for type 2 diabetes
  • Before meals: 4 to 7 mmol/l
  • 2 hours after meals: under 8.5 mmol/l
Blood glucose ranges for type 1 diabetes (adults)
  • Before meals: 4 to 7 mmol/l
  • 2 hours after meals: under 9 mmol/l
Blood glucose ranges for type 1 diabetes (children)
  • Before meals: 4 to 8 mmol/l
  • 2 hours after meals: under 10 mmol/l
However, those that are able to, may wish to keep blood sugar levels below the NICE after meal targets.

Access to blood glucose test strips

The NICE guidelines suggest that people newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes should be offered:

  • structured education to every person and/or their carer at and around the time of diagnosis, with annual reinforcement and review
  • self-monitoring of plasma glucose to a person newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes only as an integral part of his or her self-management education

Therefore both structured education and self-monitoring of blood glucose should be offered to people with type 2 diabetes. Read more on getting access to blood glucose testing supplies.

You may also be interested to read questions to ask at a diabetic clinic.

Note: This post has been edited from Sue/Ken's post to include up to date information.
 
Back
Top