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06-09-2008, 08:53 PM
| | Junior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Australia
Posts: 22
| | My head is still spinning with the amount of combined knowledge here, unbelievable  thanks so much.
Emm - i take 2 x 500 mg Metformin tabs per day and usually my levels first thing in the morning are between 4.4 - 4.9 , 2 hours after meals are normally always below 8.0 which my doc recommended.
I have not tested again after the 2 hour period as yet.
When i had the meat only [corned beef and roast chicken, no skin ] but they flew up to the 12.0 mark 2 hours after consuming them, which prompted my post.
Previously, for a main meal i have had mainly just boiled cape cod fish, no veg's with it and measured my levels 2 hours after and they have been under the 8.0 score, no problems. | 
06-10-2008, 12:05 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1.5 | | Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: Kapiti, New Zealand
Posts: 797
| | | Aha! Corned Beef is full of additives etc - in my experience it's one of the worst meats and it shoots me up miles high if I don't 'overdose' on the insulin.
I really don't know what it is about the corned beef (surely it's mostly beef, then salt... what else could be so bad?) but it's a troublesome meal for me.
__________________ .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., Em Taking on diabetes one meal at a time. It wins the odd battle but I'm winning the war.
Addicted to my Lantus, Novorapid and medicinal chocolate *cough* .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., | 
06-10-2008, 02:03 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Dublin, Ireland
Posts: 2,067
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Johny My head is still spinning with the amount of combined knowledge here, unbelievable  thanks so much.
Emm - i take 2 x 500 mg Metformin tabs per day and usually my levels first thing in the morning are between 4.4 - 4.9 , 2 hours after meals are normally always below 8.0 which my doc recommended.
I have not tested again after the 2 hour period as yet.
When i had the meat only [corned beef and roast chicken, no skin ] but they flew up to the 12.0 mark 2 hours after consuming them, which prompted my post.
Previously, for a main meal i have had mainly just boiled cape cod fish, no veg's with it and measured my levels 2 hours after and they have been under the 8.0 score, no problems. | Sounds like you are doing well with your numbers, those morning ones are excellent! Many of us aim for slightly lower numbers for 2 hours after meals, around 7.7 (140) and you could achieve this with a little tweaking of what you eat. Did you eat veg with the corned beef and chicken? a meat only meal may sounding tempting and like a good idea, but as with most things with this disease, balance is important. It would be better to include veg in your meals, especially veg with plenty of fibre will help counter the carb you eat so that you get a slower and more even release of the sugar from the carbs and so don't spike.
In relation to the corned beef, are you talking about the canned variety or the "fresh" version. I'm not a fan of either version (and I'm a meat lover and Irish!) but I believe that both versions would be high in salt, the canned version probably has other ingredients which may account for the spike.
Keep up the good work!
__________________
It's a pity that common sense isn't a very common thing.
" The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." - Socrates
Diagnosed Type II on 26th November 2007
Metformin 500mg twice daily
Enap 5mg
Initial A1c (14th Dec07): 11.6%
15th Jan'08: 9% 
3rd March'08 6.8% 
6th June'08 6.1% | 
06-10-2008, 05:34 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,505
| | | Johnny, you have shown that eating a pure meat such as fish was no problem, when you had processed meat, it went up. There tends to be carbs associated with the processing of meat. This plus the glycemic load can drive you up. Any carbs in a large volume of meats will tend to make people rise. Carrots, peas and corn in a crustless shepards pie will probably be fine at a slice or 2. But eat half of it and the loading may come into effect.
It is a lot to "digest". It is complicated, but so is our bodies. Very complicated machines and while many alike, there are so many different models.
Even 2 people considered the same, would have different reactions due to the day activities, and what they had at previous meal
__________________
Diabetes is a condition that you have to manage or it will manage you. The care team is only there in a supporting role
| 
06-10-2008, 08:44 AM
| | Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Oak Hill, VA
Posts: 501
| | | Understanding the way that our bodies respond to different foods is just very complex. I eat a high protein diet, often over 200g/day. I have to believe given the low amount of carbs that I eat that much of my blood sugar level comes from gluconeogenesis from the protein. As Bluesky pointed out, I probably only need 50-75g/day to sustain normal bodily operations, excess becomes available for gluconeogenesis. However, I may very well eat a chicken breast for lunch, which according to fitday has 60 g of protein.
The paper that Bluesky cited is very interesting. It confirms many of the things that we have heard in the past. In particular, it states that insulin response is not always proportional to blood glucose, and that several factors are known to affect insulin response, including f"ructose, certain amino acids and fatty acids, and gastrointestinal hormones such as gastric inhibitory peptide, glucagon, and cholecystokin." The further supports the idea that protein itself may invoke an insulin response beyond just gluconeogenesis. It also explains why fructose is not such a good thing for diabetics, as it invokes and insulin response disproprotionate with the effect on glucose. I mostly avoid fruit and have tried to eliminate HFCS from my diet. The final thing of interest is that the "chinese restaurant effect" is perhaps the gastrointestinal hormones (and cholecystokin which helps digest protein and fat), and that eating a big meal, even one with no carbs and no protein could invoke an insulin response is interesting.
The most important take away for a diabetic is that even if we monitor blood sugar exactly and figure out how the foods we eat affect the blood sugar we are still not done. None of the tools we have for self management tell us about insulin response and thus we just have to deal with some uncertainty.
__________________
...brian T2 since 7/05. 48 yrs. 5'11 195 lbs.
Exercise, very low carb diet
HbA1c 9/07 - 6.3%, 3/08 - 6.2%, 6/08 - 6.2% | 
06-10-2008, 09:20 AM
| | Junior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: May 2008 Location: Ohio
Posts: 82
| | | Great info in this post. I will start to tinker with my bolus dosages and see what happens. So far, carb counting seems to be keeping me in the 130s 2 hours after I eat. But, I do notice that after a dinner high in meats my levels tend to rise to the 180s 2 hours after. I've been thinking it was my carb counting mistakes. Nice to know that the proteins may be the gremlins in my after dinner highs. | 
06-10-2008, 12:32 PM
| | Junior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Australia
Posts: 22
| | It sure is excellent information everyone is providing.
Emm - i would not have ever thought of the chemicals used in the pickling process of the topside beef, i will be very careful with it in the future.
davef - no veg's with either meat meal just the meat itself, it was the fresh corn beef, the one you cook at home.... my first Ac test was 6.0, doc said it was good, normally breakfast and lunch readings are always well under 7.0, the main meal is bigger & of course, i get the highest reading then but i am learning to tweak it around with lower GI vegetables & portion control.
volleyball - It sure is a lot to digest & our bodies are very complicated, but you guys have helped me a lot in trying to understand it, much, much more than a diabetic instructor i had initially when first diagnosed, who only liked the sound of her own fast talking voice and didn't like to answer any questions, so that didn't last long, i have been trying to learn myself.
BrianS - i am starting to get more of an idea of the whole picture to some extent, it is very complex to say the least.
I guess the best thing to do is test, test, test with all foods but also take in account the variable amount of exercise in comparison to what ever food we have, but i do understand
the uncertainly we still face with insulin.
Thanks very much everyone, you all have been very helpful.
Johny  | 
06-10-2008, 01:49 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Vermont
Posts: 1,196
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by BrianSCohen ... and that eating a big meal, even one with no carbs and no protein could invoke an insulin response is interesting... | This must be a hypothetical meal but...
I'm having trouble even imagining a 'big meal' that has no carbs and no protein. I'm stumped. What are we talkin' about here, just fat and micronutrients? Maybe some insoluble fiber (carbs that don't count)? EVOO with a crushed up vitamin pill? Help me understand!
I mean, even if your meal was just a huge bowl of avocado ( nutrition info) it's still 8.5% carbs, 2% protein, 15% fat and 73% water. Avocado is the closest thing I can think of that is actually food and mostly fat. Even then for every 8 parts fat you're getting 4 parts carbs and 1 part protein.
I guess the practical implication here is that no matter what you eat (assuming it's actually food) you should expect blood glucose to rise. All foods are something like 99% water+carbs+protein+fats, the rest is micronutrients. We all know too well that certain specific kinds of carbs will have the greatest effect. The new info is that proteins and fats will also have some effect. Add to this the fact that stress, infections, medications and various normal internal workings of the body itself will raise blood glucose.
The net seems to be that our ability to effect blood glucose is, in practical terms, limited to a mere fraction of the variables at work. There is no ideal food. Variety which is itself vital, necessarily brings with it things that are guaranteed to raise blood glucose even if you cut way back on carbs. It is up to us to manage it all as well as we can.
Good luck y'all!
__________________ Diagnosed Type 2 on Sept 11, 2007 - A1c 8.8, Dec 2007 A1c 6.0, Apr 2008 A1c 5.7
No meds, daily 81mg aspirin and multivitamin, nutrition & exercise. Lacto-ovo vegetarian since Sept 1986You can call me  | 
06-10-2008, 04:15 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Posts: 1,954
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Evermont ... We all know too well that certain specific kinds of carbs will have the greatest effect. The new info is that proteins and fats will also have some effect. ... | Keith,
That proteins and fat require substantial amounts of insulin has more significant implications for people who inject insulin. It makes a nonsense of the popular practice of basing bolus dosing on the number of grams of carbohydrate that will be consumed. Insulin:carbohydrate ratios are applied to the amount of carbs in the meal, giving the amount of insulin to be injected/infused. Fat and protein are normally ignored. Pumps are even designed like this. You enter the carb count and it tells you how many units you need, based on the carb ratio. When I was trialling a pump, I had to over ride all the dosing suggestions and insulin-on-board corrections.
DEs have always insisted that, if the carb:insulin ratio isn't delivering in-target blood glucose, I must be doing it wrong. Either I have got the Insulin:carb ratio wrong, or I haven't counted the carbs correctly. I know from many years of trial and error that this is not so. From the graph we can see that fish uses as much insulin as grain bread. And ignoring protien/fat foods in insulin dosing decisions is a bad idea  .
We should be basing our bolus insulin doses on an insulin index, not the carb count. Mixing foods creates complications, of course. And the different rates at which insulin is used by different foods also needs to be taken into account. But as long as the insistence that bolus doses should be based on carb counts, a lot of T1 diabetics will continue to feel like failures. 
__________________
In my humble opinion
Type1 since 1977
MDI using Lantus, Protophane, Novorapid and Actrapid
| 
06-10-2008, 04:42 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Vermont
Posts: 1,196
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by BlueSky ...has more significant implications for people who inject insulin... | Oh yeah, I keep forgetting that my insulin is running on auto-pilot but many aren't. So I understand that these things are factors for dialing in your dosages. You express yourself with impressive ease and effectiveness Bluesky.
__________________ Diagnosed Type 2 on Sept 11, 2007 - A1c 8.8, Dec 2007 A1c 6.0, Apr 2008 A1c 5.7
No meds, daily 81mg aspirin and multivitamin, nutrition & exercise. Lacto-ovo vegetarian since Sept 1986You can call me  | 
06-10-2008, 08:32 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Mind -Langhorne PA Heart - The Shenandoah Valley
Posts: 635
| | Here is a link that will provide more answers to your question its called how things work. Howstuffworks "Fat Cells: Lots More Information"
__________________
Byetta 5mcg twice a day
Sugar busters life style
Exercise = cardio and running after twins Ben & Josh
"Oh for Pete's sake" -Ben "Let me think" - Josh
Ok Wildcards watch your six.
You too will be assimilated! You will become one with the Borg. You will all become one with the borg."
To lose this war means more than defeat. To surrender is to never go home. All of us must rise to the call above and beyond". Lt Col TC McQueen | 
06-11-2008, 06:35 AM
| | Member
I am a: Type 2 | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Oak Hill, VA
Posts: 501
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Evermont This must be a hypothetical meal but...
I'm having trouble even imagining a 'big meal' that has no carbs and no protein. I'm stumped. What are we talkin' about here, just fat and micronutrients? Maybe some insoluble fiber (carbs that don't count)? EVOO with a crushed up vitamin pill? Help me understand! |
Evermont,
Here is a meal to try. Get a bag of Shiritaki noodles, as much as you want. Here is a 1 lb bag ( Konjac Glucomannan Wet Noodles (Shirataki). Use more if you are really hungry. Each 1 lb bag contains 0 grams fat, 0 grams protein, and 9 grams of carb, however all 9 grams are soluble fiber. Cook the Shiritaki and then serve it with olive oil. Of course olive oil has no protein or carbs either. If one bag of this is not enough several of them would surely be enough to give you "chinese restaurant" effect.
__________________
...brian T2 since 7/05. 48 yrs. 5'11 195 lbs.
Exercise, very low carb diet
HbA1c 9/07 - 6.3%, 3/08 - 6.2%, 6/08 - 6.2% |  | | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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