Alas no - you will still gain weight but your big levels may be more stable at least in the short term. Added weight = more pressure on your system. Low calorie diets seem to cause larger fluctuations in bg levels than low carb but will reduce weight and often quicker. Low carb will reduce weight with a counter balance of fats to compensate for the carb lack but still require monitoring and within daily intake guidelines. It's why
@Newbie777 was advised to watch his cheese intake! There are no real cheats with this.
With diets like the Atkins I think the carb limit is 20g per day from friends who have done it. That's about an apple - anymore and full ketosis won't kick in. It is not a healthy or sustainable diet. My mate became really quite thin but was turning yellow. And he regained it all once on a normal diet.
Yes am a low carb diet with about 70g per day, most of the carbs come from my two salads!
I have lost weight too, I would say actually fat of 6.5kg in 3 weeks.
I have also reduced my medication, but have still not started any exercise due to a recent eye operation.
Also my BG doesn't go into double figures any more
Yes, the low carb diet is working for me and would also say that the amount of carbs is short term, I would eventually go to about 150g a day. I have also had to cut out on the 200g of cheese I was we eating each day, this is is allowed as it is low carb, but it's not actually that good for you, especially for my Chlorestral!
My personal opinion is you cannot eat 4000plus calories of pure fat in one go, unless you were an explorer in the Antarctic were you need 6000 calories plus to stay alive and would need consume pure lard for energy.
Also, I watched something on TV regarding where a non-diabetic person went on a pure fat diet for 1 week and another went on a pure sugar diet. Interestingly they gained similar weight in the first few days and then there weight platoed. However, the key finding was if you eat both fat with sugar, you definitely put loads of weight on and it sticks!
Also, there are people who have gone into remission on a 700 calorie diet with supervision and key nutrients, it can be done but it's not for me.
My belief they can do better with a solution for diabetes, the current medicines are suppressants, but then why would the multi billion dollar industry want to find a cure and lose money?