Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 In a message dated 4/3/2004 4:39:52 PM Central Standard Time, LCOVER@... writes: > Does it make a > difference how you eat your meal? > > Lynne > > In my opinion it makes all the difference......for me eating any carb alone will get me a spike and insulin surge.....eating the same thing with a fat and or protein cuts that down tremendously..... 1/2 apple and I am in trouble. 1/2 apple with cheese or peanut butter and I am in less trouble. Of course eating 1/2 apple with cheese and peanut butter and getting on the treadmill gives me no trouble at all....<grin> Ressy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 Lynn, the thing is, diabetes is a very YMMV disease so although you may get a lot of answers in one direction or other to your question, it's YOUR body that you're talking about. You already know that a potato with toppings eaten alone cause huge BG spikes. So just do a comiparison -- try the same item -- but this time eat some fat and protein with it, checking your BGs before eating, then 1 and 2 hours afterwards. Then you'll know how it affects YOU. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 Lynne Cover wrote: >I know that if I eat a baked potato by itself, >maybe with toppings to make it a meal, it >will cause a huge insulin surge. My >question is, if I were to eat a protein, >along with some low-index fiber (to slow >down the insulin) FIRST, and then had a >high-index item like half a potato at the >end of the meal, would that still cause >an insulin surge? Does it make a >difference how you eat your meal? > > I just want to echo what resmith315 recommended. Carbs by themselves, in some places, is called " naked carbs. " If you eat them with protein, or especially with fatty food, then their glycemic index is reduced, so they enter your blood stream as glucose much more slowly. Thus you need a smaller release of insulin to deal with the meal. Most of the discussion I've seen from others has merely talked about mixing these in the same meal. I've seen nothing about the merits of eating fats first followed by the carbs. Presumably, it's a non-issue. Edd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2004 Report Share Posted April 6, 2004 > Lynn, the thing is, diabetes is a very YMMV disease so although you may > get a lot of answers in one direction or other to your question, it's > YOUR body that you're talking about. People are different. My observation of the glycemic index is sampling used was too small to establish anything. I have not seen comments on this and have found very little information as to how the study is done. Perhaps I am wrong. So what if food " X " results in identical finding.....on 4 subjects. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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