Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 GREETINGS -- I am a Type 2 who was placed on insulin the day I was diagnosed 10+ years ago. I followed the ADA diet (and exercised) but gained weight and had poor blood sugar control. In my case (I am still insulin resistant), and I count carbs -- and I need one unit of insulin (I use Humalog)to offset every 8 grams of carbs and one unit for one ounce of protein-- and I need to inject insulin (I use Lantus) to cover most of my basal needs. The carbs that I do eat are generally low glycemic fruits and vegetables. By choice I limit my carbs to 10- 15% of the calories I consume which is an adaptation of Dr. Bernstein's recommended strategy (I am 6'4 " and weigh 230#) and have normalized my blood sugars doing this. wambo1941 In alldiabeticinternational , dnevessr@a... wrote: > In a message dated 7/19/2004 5:49:08 AM Pacific Standard Time, > wambo1941@y... writes: > Joe, what a great post. It makes so much sense to me. I fall into the type > 2 category, and still produce some insulin I guess, because I can generally > test well (less than a 40 point raise, which I am told is my target) after most > meals. Seeing it qritten down like this, explaining the differences between > type 1 and 2, makes it clear why type 1's would avoid them. As a type 2, we > have no problem with the amount of carbs I post. So, I guess the answer is for > type 1's to avoid recipes all together, and eat plain fare. As for type 2's, > we have no problem with the recipes I send, as we do not have to tighten the > grips on carbs so tightly. Make sense? Sorry to the type 1's out there, I do > not desire it to be this way, but I see no alternative. > Typically, 150 grams of carbohydrate would be a good-sized bowl of > cooked pasta. You may think that by reading the ingredients label on > the package you can precisely compute how much of the dry pasta you > must weigh out to dispense exactly 150 grams of carbohydrate. Now, if > you're a nonobese type 1 diabetic who weighs 150 pounds (68 > kilograms) and makes no insulin, 1 gram of carbohydrate will raise > your blood sugar by about 5 mg/dl. By using methods that we'll later > describe, you can calculate exactly how much insulin you must inject > to keep your blood sugar at the same point after the meal as it was > before the meal. This may sound elegant, but it will rarely work for > a high-carbohydrate meal. > > What neither the ADA nor the package tells you is that food producers > are permitted a margin of error of plus or minus 20 percent in their > labeling of ingredients. Furthermore, many packaged products†" for > example vegetable soup†" cannot even match this error range, in spite > of federal labeling requirements. So even if you perform the > necessary calculations, your blood sugar after the meal can be off by > a carbohydrate error of 5 mg/dl multiplied by ± 30 grams (± 20 > percent of 150 gm), or by a whopping ±150 mg/dl for just this one > meal. If your target blood sugar level is approximately 85 mg/ dl, > you've now got a blood glucose level anywhere between 235 mg/dl and 0 > mg/dl. Either situation is clearly unacceptable. > > Let's try another example. Say you're a type 2 diabetic, obese, and > make some insulin of your own but also inject insulin. You've found > that 1 gram of carbohydrate only raises your blood sugar by 3 mg/dl. > Your blood sugar would be off by ±90 mg/dl. If your target blood > sugar value is, say, 90 mg/dl, you're looking at a postmeal blood > sugar level of anywhere from 180 mg/dl to 0 mg/dl. That's one of the > many problems with the ADA guidelines. Big inputs and big > uncertainty. > > Marilyn > Moderator for > Diabetic_Recipes > dnevessr@a... > Opinions expressed are solely > my own and should not be > mistaken for > Professional advice. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 Hey Joe---You sound a lot like me (I am 6'3 " )....my only problem is that this year I got a small ulcer on a toe and my walking has been restricted so I have gained about 20 lbs.....I am about to end my busy season at work, so I will get back on my bike and hope to get back to my normal 230, or if any luck, maybe a little lower---When I was diagnosed in 97 I had an untreated diabetes induced weight of 195, but on a diabetic diet and meds and now insulin I climbed to 230. I have been up to 250 before, and down to 230, so I hope I can do again. For each 15gr carb I need 4 units Humolog plus I take 100 units Lantus before bed and metformin---(I am classic example of Metabolic Syndrom including Cardiac Arrest)....ROLF [alldiabeticinternational] Re: Law of Small Numbers and Diabetes--Low Carb Type 2 GREETINGS -- I am a Type 2 who was placed on insulin the day I was diagnosed 10+ years ago. I followed the ADA diet (and exercised) but gained weight and had poor blood sugar control. In my case (I am still insulin resistant), and I count carbs -- and I need one unit of insulin (I use Humalog)to offset every 8 grams of carbs and one unit for one ounce of protein-- and I need to inject insulin (I use Lantus) to cover most of my basal needs. The carbs that I do eat are generally low glycemic fruits and vegetables. By choice I limit my carbs to 10- 15% of the calories I consume which is an adaptation of Dr. Bernstein's recommended strategy (I am 6'4 " and weigh 230#) and have normalized my blood sugars doing this. wambo1941 In alldiabeticinternational , dnevessr@a... wrote: > In a message dated 7/19/2004 5:49:08 AM Pacific Standard Time, > wambo1941@y... writes: > Joe, what a great post. It makes so much sense to me. I fall into the type > 2 category, and still produce some insulin I guess, because I can generally > test well (less than a 40 point raise, which I am told is my target) after most > meals. Seeing it qritten down like this, explaining the differences between > type 1 and 2, makes it clear why type 1's would avoid them. As a type 2, we > have no problem with the amount of carbs I post. So, I guess the answer is for > type 1's to avoid recipes all together, and eat plain fare. As for type 2's, > we have no problem with the recipes I send, as we do not have to tighten the > grips on carbs so tightly. Make sense? Sorry to the type 1's out there, I do > not desire it to be this way, but I see no alternative. > Typically, 150 grams of carbohydrate would be a good-sized bowl of > cooked pasta. You may think that by reading the ingredients label on > the package you can precisely compute how much of the dry pasta you > must weigh out to dispense exactly 150 grams of carbohydrate. Now, if > you're a nonobese type 1 diabetic who weighs 150 pounds (68 > kilograms) and makes no insulin, 1 gram of carbohydrate will raise > your blood sugar by about 5 mg/dl. By using methods that we'll later > describe, you can calculate exactly how much insulin you must inject > to keep your blood sugar at the same point after the meal as it was > before the meal. This may sound elegant, but it will rarely work for > a high-carbohydrate meal. > > What neither the ADA nor the package tells you is that food producers > are permitted a margin of error of plus or minus 20 percent in their > labeling of ingredients. Furthermore, many packaged productsâ? " for > example vegetable soupâ? " cannot even match this error range, in spite > of federal labeling requirements. So even if you perform the > necessary calculations, your blood sugar after the meal can be off by > a carbohydrate error of 5 mg/dl multiplied by ± 30 grams (± 20 > percent of 150 gm), or by a whopping ±150 mg/dl for just this one > meal. If your target blood sugar level is approximately 85 mg/ dl, > you've now got a blood glucose level anywhere between 235 mg/dl and 0 > mg/dl. Either situation is clearly unacceptable. > > Let's try another example. Say you're a type 2 diabetic, obese, and > make some insulin of your own but also inject insulin. You've found > that 1 gram of carbohydrate only raises your blood sugar by 3 mg/dl. > Your blood sugar would be off by ±90 mg/dl. If your target blood > sugar value is, say, 90 mg/dl, you're looking at a postmeal blood > sugar level of anywhere from 180 mg/dl to 0 mg/dl. That's one of the > many problems with the ADA guidelines. Big inputs and big > uncertainty. > > Marilyn > Moderator for > Diabetic_Recipes > dnevessr@a... > Opinions expressed are solely > my own and should not be > mistaken for > Professional advice. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2004 Report Share Posted July 20, 2004 Rolf Utegaard wrote: >For each 15gr carb I need 4 units Humolog plus I take 100 units Lantus >before bed and metformin---(I am classic example of Metabolic Syndrom >including Cardiac Arrest)....ROLF That's about the same dosage ratio that I generally use for Humalog. But the amount of Lantus you take speaks loudly that you happen to be T2 with insulin-resistance. As a T1 (who makes NO insulin), I usually take 25-26 units of Lantus daily (and no oral diabetes meds). 100 units of Lantus would put me in an ER (with a glucose drip IV) very quickly with severe hypoglycemia. That's a major difference between T2 and T1. Sandy T1 - 1979 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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