Drummer
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
I am very sensitive to carbohydrate, so my advice is coloured by that - but as you have a meter you might - with luck find that you can cope with more than I can.
At diagnosis I returned to eating 50 gm of carbs a day as I did Atkins for as long as I could get away with it and found that it controlled my weight.
I would advise not bothering about your weight at all - it will either go away of its own accord or when you begin to feel better you will be running about more and will burn it off - the thing to concentrate on is control of blood glucose levels. I have seen the consequences of uncontrolled diabetes and it is not good at all.
Firstly - carbohydrates are starches and sugars. If you are lucky simply eating smaller amounts will do the trick - but I would advise switching to low carb foods, salads, stirfries, roasted veges so they can provide all the micronutrients you need - small amounts of bread or oats have very little nutrition, and I'd find them very boring.
Secondly what you can eat, and should eat are protein and fats - because contrary to popular belief, fats are essential for good health and wellbeing and they make an excellent fuel source. Type twos in ketosis are as a rule, not about to keel over - if blood glucose levels are normal along with feeling 110 percent energised it is usually a good sign.
At diagnosis I returned to eating 50 gm of carbs a day as I did Atkins for as long as I could get away with it and found that it controlled my weight.
I would advise not bothering about your weight at all - it will either go away of its own accord or when you begin to feel better you will be running about more and will burn it off - the thing to concentrate on is control of blood glucose levels. I have seen the consequences of uncontrolled diabetes and it is not good at all.
Firstly - carbohydrates are starches and sugars. If you are lucky simply eating smaller amounts will do the trick - but I would advise switching to low carb foods, salads, stirfries, roasted veges so they can provide all the micronutrients you need - small amounts of bread or oats have very little nutrition, and I'd find them very boring.
Secondly what you can eat, and should eat are protein and fats - because contrary to popular belief, fats are essential for good health and wellbeing and they make an excellent fuel source. Type twos in ketosis are as a rule, not about to keel over - if blood glucose levels are normal along with feeling 110 percent energised it is usually a good sign.