Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 GREETINGS -- As an engineer by training and 40+ years of practice I learned (often the hard way) that the Law of Small Numbers governs many actions and events in our lives. However, until I read Dr Bernstein's Diabetes Solution I completely ignored the affect on managing my diabetes. The following is excerpted from his book and explains how a diabetic can use this principle to better manage his/her blood sugars. If you have not read this book I uirge all of you to do so. It is written by a 60 something year old endocrinologis who has been a Type I diabetic for 50 something years. wambo1941 PS You can read the entire chapter at www.diabetes-normalsugars.com - - going to the Read on Line section. The Laws of Small Numbers Big inputs make big mistakes; small inputs make small mistakes. " That is the first thing my friend Kanji Ishikawa says to himself each morning on arising. It is his mantra, the single most important thing he knows about diabetes. Kanji is the oldest surviving type 1 diabetic in Japan (he is, by the way, younger than I, but afflicted with numerous long-term diabetic complications because of many years of uncontrolled blood sugars). Many biological and mechanical systems respond in a predictable way to small inputs but in a chaotic and considerably less predictable way to large inputs. Consider for a moment traffic. Put a small number of automobiles on a given stretch of highway and traffic acts in a predictable fashion: cars can maintain speed, enter and merge into open spaces, and exit with a minimum of danger. There's room for error. Double the number of cars and the risks don't just double, they increase geometrically. Triple or quadruple the number of cars and the unpredictability of a safe trip increases exponentially. The name of the game for the diabetic in achieving blood sugar normalization is predictability. It's very difficult to use medications safely unless you can predict the effect they'll have. Nor can you normalize blood sugar unless you can predict the effects of what you're eating. If you can't accurately predict your blood sugar levels, then you can't accurately predict your needs for insulin or oral blood sugar–lowering agents. If the kinds of foods you're eating give you consistently unpredictable blood sugar levels, then it will be impossible to normalize blood sugars. One of the prime intents of this book is to give you the information you need to learn how to predict your blood sugar levels and how to ensure that your predictions will be accurate. Here the Laws of Small Numbers are exceedingly important. Predictability. How do you achieve it? THE LAW OF CARBOHYDRATE ESTIMATION The old American Diabetes Association (ADA) dietary recommendations allowed 150 grams of carbohydrate per meal. This, as you may know by now, is grossly excessive for people trying to control their blood sugars. Here is one reason why. 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. But if you eat an amount of carbohydrate that will affect your blood sugar by one-tenth of that margin of error, then you're going to have a much simpler time of normalizing blood sugar levels. My diet plan, which we will get into in Chapters 9–11, aims to keep these margins in the realm of ±10–20 mg/dl. How do we accomplish this? Small inputs. Eating only a tenth of a serving of pasta is not the answer. Even small amounts of some carbohydrates can cause big swings in blood sugar. And anyway, who would feel satisfied after such a small serving of pasta? The key is to eat foods that will affect your blood sugar in a very small way. Small inputs, small mistakes. Sounds so simple and straightforward that it may make you want to ask why no one has told you about it before. Say that instead of eating pasta as the carbohydrate portion of your meal, you eat salad. If you estimate 2 cups of salad to total 12 grams of carbohydrate and are off not by 20 percent but by 30 percent, that's still an uncertainty of only 4 grams of carbohydrate— a maximum potential 20 mg/dl rise or fall in blood sugar. A big bowl of pasta for a couple of cups of salad? Not much of a trade, you may say. Well, we don't intend that you starve. As you decrease the amount of fast-acting carbohydrate you eat, you can often simultaneously increase the amount of protein you eat. Protein can, as you may recall, also cause a blood sugar rise, but this takes place much more slowly, to a much smaller degree, and is more easily covered with medication. In theory, you could weigh everything you eat right down to the last gram and make your calculations based on information provided by the manufacturer or derived from some of the books we use. This information, as noted above, is only an estimate, with considerable margin for error. You will have only a vague idea of what you're actually consuming, and of the effect it will have on blood sugar. The idea here is to stick with low levels of slow-acting, nutritious carbohydrates. In addition, stick with foods that will make you feel satisfied without causing huge swings in blood sugar. Simple. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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