PattiEvans
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
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- She/Her
So Inka and I were having a discussion in another thread, but I felt we were in danger of hijacking the OPs subject, so I suggested we discuss it elsewhere.
I was rather surprised when Inka said that low carbing caused insulin resistance as it goes against everything I have read. So I decided to do some research and I have to apologise to Inka as there is indeed evidence for that theory. However, it would appear that it is a physiological change that is triggered by a very low carb diet where the body has gone into ketosis.
The following quote comes from Marks Daily Apple - https://www.marksdailyapple.com/does-eating-low-carb-cause-insulin-resistance/
Or do we mean just moderating carbs and avoiding high carb meals? What is a high carb meal and what is a "normal" amount of carbs? To me, growing up in the 50s and 60s, we ate meat, fish, bread, potatoes and vegetables. Our diets did not consist of lots of pasta nor rice. Rice was for rice puddings, usually only after Sunday dinner. I well remember working with an Italian girl in the late 60s who gave me her recipe for Spaghetti Bolognaise. I decided to cook it for my parents. I had to scour the shops for spaghetti, eventually finding it in a specialist shop in a long long purple paper packet. The general public were largely unaware what a pizza or a curry was (except for Vesta curries which were dehydrated) In the 70s the majority of people were slim and an obese person stood out. It was in the 70s and 80s that carb creep crept in, takeaways became more available and between then and now people started to feel that if you don't have a huge pile of carbs on your plate it's not a meal. In part I do feel that the "Eatwell plate" which started to be touted in the 70s as "heart healthy" has a lot to blame with it's insistence that grains should be a large part of people's diets. That all goes back to a very flawed 7 countries study that Ancel Keys thrust upon the world and that the American grain industry latched on to. He omitted to mention that the study had started with 22 countries and that he had thrown out the results from the countries that contradicted his theory.
Sorry to hark back to DSF, but there we advised T2s to "eat to your meter" and frankly I do not think that's bad advice for T1s either. I know that if I have a couple of days where I overdo the carbs that I am going to suffer for several days afterwards, struggling to get back to over 70% Time in Target on the Libre. So where do I stand? I prefer to stick to 70g(ish) carb per day with the relevant insulin boluses. I would not consider 70g as normal carb in one meal. I'm more insulin resistant in the mornings, so I usually don't bother with breakfast. This week though I have a series of appointments in the late morning which means my lunch is later than usual and so I have been having a small breakfast, a single piece of Burgen (12g carb) with butter and marmite spikes me up into the 10s and 12s. This morning instead I had 100g greek yoghurt with strawberries. It was quite filling and I bolussed for 10g. I had barely a blip in BG. Anyway I digress, the thing is if a T1 eats something, pre-bolusses and counts carbs correctly then it spikes them, then I am likely to mention it might be better avoided in future. Just because we have insulin doesn't mean we can eat everything with impunity.
As we so frequently say, we are all different.
I was rather surprised when Inka said that low carbing caused insulin resistance as it goes against everything I have read. So I decided to do some research and I have to apologise to Inka as there is indeed evidence for that theory. However, it would appear that it is a physiological change that is triggered by a very low carb diet where the body has gone into ketosis.
The following quote comes from Marks Daily Apple - https://www.marksdailyapple.com/does-eating-low-carb-cause-insulin-resistance/
So what do we mean by "low carb" when talking to T1? Do we mean a very low carb diet as advocated by Bernstein? Or the TypeOneGrit group on FB (incidentally I did mention that I am a member, but it doesn't mean I follow it for anything other than the odd low carb recipe for a sweet treat). The article here https://www.diabetes.co.uk/news/201...ptional-type-1-diabetes-control-91241367.html discusses a study showing the exceptional control experienced by the type ones who adhere to this type of diet.However, going very low carb – to around or below 10% of calories, or full-blown ketogenic – can induce “physiological” insulin resistance. Physiological insulin resistance is an adaptation, a normal biological reaction to a lack of dietary glucose. As I’ve said in the past, the brain must have glucose. It can use ketones and lactate quite effectively, thus reducing the glucose requirement, but at the end of the day it still requires a portion of glucose. Now, in a low-glucose state, where the body senses that dietary glucose might not be coming anytime soon, peripheral insulin resistance is triggered. This prevents the muscles from taking up “precious” glucose that the brain requires. The brain’s sensitivity to insulin is preserved, allowing it to grab what glucose it needs from the paltry – but sufficient – levels available to it.
Or do we mean just moderating carbs and avoiding high carb meals? What is a high carb meal and what is a "normal" amount of carbs? To me, growing up in the 50s and 60s, we ate meat, fish, bread, potatoes and vegetables. Our diets did not consist of lots of pasta nor rice. Rice was for rice puddings, usually only after Sunday dinner. I well remember working with an Italian girl in the late 60s who gave me her recipe for Spaghetti Bolognaise. I decided to cook it for my parents. I had to scour the shops for spaghetti, eventually finding it in a specialist shop in a long long purple paper packet. The general public were largely unaware what a pizza or a curry was (except for Vesta curries which were dehydrated) In the 70s the majority of people were slim and an obese person stood out. It was in the 70s and 80s that carb creep crept in, takeaways became more available and between then and now people started to feel that if you don't have a huge pile of carbs on your plate it's not a meal. In part I do feel that the "Eatwell plate" which started to be touted in the 70s as "heart healthy" has a lot to blame with it's insistence that grains should be a large part of people's diets. That all goes back to a very flawed 7 countries study that Ancel Keys thrust upon the world and that the American grain industry latched on to. He omitted to mention that the study had started with 22 countries and that he had thrown out the results from the countries that contradicted his theory.
Sorry to hark back to DSF, but there we advised T2s to "eat to your meter" and frankly I do not think that's bad advice for T1s either. I know that if I have a couple of days where I overdo the carbs that I am going to suffer for several days afterwards, struggling to get back to over 70% Time in Target on the Libre. So where do I stand? I prefer to stick to 70g(ish) carb per day with the relevant insulin boluses. I would not consider 70g as normal carb in one meal. I'm more insulin resistant in the mornings, so I usually don't bother with breakfast. This week though I have a series of appointments in the late morning which means my lunch is later than usual and so I have been having a small breakfast, a single piece of Burgen (12g carb) with butter and marmite spikes me up into the 10s and 12s. This morning instead I had 100g greek yoghurt with strawberries. It was quite filling and I bolussed for 10g. I had barely a blip in BG. Anyway I digress, the thing is if a T1 eats something, pre-bolusses and counts carbs correctly then it spikes them, then I am likely to mention it might be better avoided in future. Just because we have insulin doesn't mean we can eat everything with impunity.
As we so frequently say, we are all different.