D
Deleted member 33898
Guest
just over a year with type 1 diabetes. I don't have the knowledge and experience of others but this is what I found
I was told like others you can eat whatever but in moderation and learn to dose for it. I've largely stuck to my diet before diagnosis but reduced my portions after finding an upper limit for carbs I could have in one meal were I was happy with the post meal spikes. Again told I could have as much as I want and just dose more but that hasn't worked for me, might for you. I have swapped most carbs for healthier options like having wholemeal rice, sweet potato etc but I still have the bad kind a few times a week and eat out once a week. I eat plenty of fruit and veg everyday. I found when increasing the fat and protein in each meal I saw less huge spikes after each meal but also having too much can cause problems. Too much protein and you'll push post meal levels higher, too much fat and you'll delay the release of glucose and before that you'll go low with the insulin on board. Its all about testing. If you aren't too concerned with losing weight then adding some protein and fat to a meal can help, you'll find a threshold for each before seeing issues. I still eat treats like chocolate and ice cream but just not crazy amounts, days of eating a tub in one sitting are behind me.
I have tried lower carb meals a few times, especially at breakfast were I'm normally quite insulin resistant. I found my insulin to carb ratio didn't work as well and I needed even more insulin to fix my levels. Every meal will need different bolus timing and perhaps different amounts of insulin. For example I find for sweet potato in a meal I can dose straight before but plain chips need at least 15 minutes. The downside I find with more carbs is the more insulin that is needed and the increased likelihood of hypos.
Here's what I had yesterday:
breakfast : Branflakes, milk, peanut butter, banana, raspberries and an egg ( carbs 75g)
Lunch: 2 slices wholemeal bread, chicken with veg, coleslaw, apple, almonds and protein bar (carbs 70g)
dinner: baked potato, lasagne , few squares of dark chocolate with soya greek yogurt (70g)
snacks throughout the day: biltong, pear, almonds, belvita biscuit, rich tea biscuit. (carbs 30g)
averaged 6 mmol that day, spiked to 7.5 at breakfast and lunch, dinner 6 and had a bit of a low after but that was more to do with exercise.
if you are able, exercise helps to get the insulin to work harder. And you could time exercise round bigger meals. If I head out for a meal with friends we'll go for a walk after. I jog twice a week, do strength routine twice a week, walk everyday and do the odd hike each month.
I could say a lot more but don't want to bore you haha
I was told like others you can eat whatever but in moderation and learn to dose for it. I've largely stuck to my diet before diagnosis but reduced my portions after finding an upper limit for carbs I could have in one meal were I was happy with the post meal spikes. Again told I could have as much as I want and just dose more but that hasn't worked for me, might for you. I have swapped most carbs for healthier options like having wholemeal rice, sweet potato etc but I still have the bad kind a few times a week and eat out once a week. I eat plenty of fruit and veg everyday. I found when increasing the fat and protein in each meal I saw less huge spikes after each meal but also having too much can cause problems. Too much protein and you'll push post meal levels higher, too much fat and you'll delay the release of glucose and before that you'll go low with the insulin on board. Its all about testing. If you aren't too concerned with losing weight then adding some protein and fat to a meal can help, you'll find a threshold for each before seeing issues. I still eat treats like chocolate and ice cream but just not crazy amounts, days of eating a tub in one sitting are behind me.
I have tried lower carb meals a few times, especially at breakfast were I'm normally quite insulin resistant. I found my insulin to carb ratio didn't work as well and I needed even more insulin to fix my levels. Every meal will need different bolus timing and perhaps different amounts of insulin. For example I find for sweet potato in a meal I can dose straight before but plain chips need at least 15 minutes. The downside I find with more carbs is the more insulin that is needed and the increased likelihood of hypos.
Here's what I had yesterday:
breakfast : Branflakes, milk, peanut butter, banana, raspberries and an egg ( carbs 75g)
Lunch: 2 slices wholemeal bread, chicken with veg, coleslaw, apple, almonds and protein bar (carbs 70g)
dinner: baked potato, lasagne , few squares of dark chocolate with soya greek yogurt (70g)
snacks throughout the day: biltong, pear, almonds, belvita biscuit, rich tea biscuit. (carbs 30g)
averaged 6 mmol that day, spiked to 7.5 at breakfast and lunch, dinner 6 and had a bit of a low after but that was more to do with exercise.
if you are able, exercise helps to get the insulin to work harder. And you could time exercise round bigger meals. If I head out for a meal with friends we'll go for a walk after. I jog twice a week, do strength routine twice a week, walk everyday and do the odd hike each month.
I could say a lot more but don't want to bore you haha