Guest guest Posted July 10, 2004 Report Share Posted July 10, 2004 > ... what this means is it was > close to the amount of carbs a > diabetic in normal eating pattern > ... is allowed to eat for one > meal. I had a feeling that is what you meant, Marilyn! But didn't you agree that we weren't going to tell people what they were " allowed " to eat and what not? Didn't you agree that everybody is different and has different requirements? Otherwise, who needs nutritionists? They could just print it out in a pamphlet to be handed out to one and all for ever more! For one, I certainly would not let anybody tell me what I am " allowed " to eat and what not! This might be a part of one particular nutritionist's personal notions for one particular patient but I have never seen any *evidence* for any general limit *per meal*. These things average out over the day or in some cases over many days. > Sometimes, with some meals, it is > easy to have some now, then wait > an hour or two and have the rest > of your portion. This causes less > of a spike in BG's. I certainly do not accept that idea. That way you are extending the period of elevated BG past the minimum time for AGEs to form and are more likely to get a contribution to your HbA1c out of it, not less. The relationship is not linear. I have tried dividing a standardized meal into parts and spreading them out over a period. It was clear to me that there is an elevated BG " overhead " per sitting. In other words, if a particular meal on a particular day causes a particular person's BG to rise to a maximum (here I mean the real maximum, not just the reading at any particular time) of 40 mg% above baseline for the whole meal, dividing it into two parts will result in each half reaching a maximum not of 20 mg% above baseline but, for example, 30 mg%. The sum of the parts is more than the whole. According to my results, there is a significantly greater (30% greater) " total area under the curve " from breaking up a carbohydrate-heavy meal into parts than from eating it all in one go and waiting 4-5 hours before eating the next meal. I believe that this is because the diabetic glucose response is asymmetric - it rises much faster than it falls (whereas in a non- diabetic both take place at about the same rate). So by dividing a meal into parts, a diabetic gets two or more slow falls ( " tails " ) instead of just one and hence a significantly higher total average elevated BG than they would get from eating all at one sitting - and it is the time-average elevated BG over several days, and not a spot BG reading taken at any particular time that has been shown clinically to correlate the closest with the HbA1c. > So by watching the carbs amounts, > I can pretty much tell what a meal > is going to do to me. I think that you mean you get a good idea of what your BG meter is going to indicate when you decide to take a reading some time after but by a long way that is not the whole story of " what a meal is going to do " to you! You may have a BG meter but you do not have a glycosylation meter! To me, steering your nutrition on the basis of isolated BG meter readings is like steering a car by glancing at the fuel gauge every time you turn a corner! In the long run, it is not going to give optimum results. I am just giving my personal views on the subject, Marilyn (just like the nutritionists do!) as a Type 2 diabetic and I don't expect anybody to agree with me but the basic objection to claims that there is an " allowed " way for diabetics to eat remains the same. There must be a better expression for it than that! If you claim that it is " recommended " then you might want to say who recommended it and on the basis of what evidence. Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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