Posted on 07/08/2003 12:20:27 PM PDT by Nov3
Diabetes diet war By Dara Mayers
The nutrition advice given to most diabetics might be killing them
The bible says "make starches the star." That's the Diabetes Food and Nutrition Bible, published by the American Diabetes Association. "Grains, beans, and starchy vegetables form the foundation of the Diabetes Food Pyramid. The message is to eat more of these foods than of any of the other food groups." For 17 million Americans with diabetes, diet is a crucial part of treatment, And what the ADA bible preaches, many doctors, nutritionists, and patients believe.
But what if the ADA's high-starch diet--another way of saying high-carbohydrate--is not healthy for people with diabetes but harmful to them instead?
This possibility is now the source of heated debate in the diabetes community. It is "the most controversial aspect of diabetes treatment today," says Scott King, editor-in-chief of Diabetes Interview magazine. How controversial? "Malpractice!" is how physician and diabetes specialist Lois Jovanovic, chief scientific officer of the Sansum Medical Research Institute in Santa Barbara, Calif., describes conventional high-carb nutrition advice.
Excerpted, click for full article
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I was never real overweight, accept during one of my pregnancies.
I always excercised!!
I was an avid horseback rider( Eastern not Western), I took care of my own horses and tack, I enjoyed ice skating in the Winter or at an indoor rink for years, I am a former arobics addict and I loved hiking trips and camping.
I became a diabetic about 1986, according to old blood tests however, I was not diagnosted until 1993. My blood sugar was irregular all those years, but my doctor's just were not concerned. After all I was such an active person.
Well, here we are 10 years later and I follow a LOW CARBOHYDRATE diet but I also watch the fat in my foods.
I avoid sugar like it is the PLAGUE!!
I have problems with infections but heart is fine.
Just wanted you to know that I have several friends who are also type II and they are not fattys or hogs either.
I think the hidden sugar in the processed foods we have been consuming for years is making lots of folks fat and contributing to the epidemic of diabetics II.
Margarine? That is nasty stuff and it doesn't belong in a low-carb diet. Full of chemicals and trans-fats. You are far better off with real butter. Or olive oil. I use olive oil for a butter substitute sometimes. Olive oil is very good for you.
Well, mewzilla, meet someone whose blood sugar problems started at 28 years old and 112 lbs. I started to get shaky and have panic attacks when I ate high carb meals. Then I had my second child and developed gestational diabetes. Even though it's supposed to go away after childbirth, my blood sugars are borderline now. I was probably already a burgeoning Type II before I got pregnant, even though I had worked my tail off to be at a great weight.
By the way, you think your friends would have an easy time of it if they just ate a "proper" diet and exercised? When I had gestational diabetes, the prescribed diabetic diet sent my blood sugar through the roof. I eventually found that eating one piece of the wrong fruit could send my blood sugar shooting up too high as could a sandwich on whole wheat bread, a casserole with bread crumbs or a sweet and sour sauce.
And there is NO motivation to control your blood sugar like knowing your unborn baby will pay the price if you don't. Diabetes can be hard to control no matter how dedicated you are, and it's especially hard if you listen to the advice of doctors who tell you to get most of your calories from sugar.
That happens to me! I can crave something like caramel or candy corn that I wouldn't ever think about eating if I weren't on a diet.
When my 3 year old eats a lot of sugar, she's an emotional wreck. My husband and I were watching her wail in the kitchen one night, and I looked at him and said, "Nope. Sugar doesn't affect kids' behavior. No way."
I do use a lot of olive oil. But for chicken or for sautéing onions you just gotta add a little butter or butter surrogate for the taste. Plus for those few times we buy bread. (Yes, we do eat bread sometimes!) I forget: Does butter have better fats than margarine? They're both solid at room temperature, so I assumed they both had lots of saturated fats.
That's exactly the problem -- what does "just eating right" mean? Do you suppose there is one "correct" diet for everyone on the planet? I sure don't.
Normally, your body maintains a certain level of nutrients for it to function properly. With sodium, it has a certain amount it keeps, and if the sodium levels are too high the kidneys release the excess.
When you consume a high-carb diet, your body begins to pump out huge quantities of insulin to try to deal with the extra glucose. One thing, among many, that high insulin levels does is it tends to hold on to sodium, making it impossible for the body to 'pee' it out. So, in order to maintain the proper level of sodium, it instead begins to retain water in an attempt to dilute the sodium down. Hence, you suffer edema.
Once you start a low-carb diet, your insulin levels drop. One thing you will notice is that you will start making trips to the bathroom a lot more frequently then you did; your body is releasing excess sodium (btw, you should start drinking more water too, cause it actually helps you lose weight). Make sure you take a Potassium supplement, because as your body releases sodium, potassium tends to go right along with it.
Two and a half years ago, I lost my right foot. In the process, my kidneys got damaged and I have had to wear support stockings since because my legs would swell so bad. One of the benefits of the low-carb diet is my leg(s) aren't swelling up like they used to. Not to mention, you feel so much better, you sleep better, you think better, and I can even see better.
The plan I follow is called Protein Power by Michael and Mary Eades. They explained how the body operates in a way that made sense to me, and have actually been enjoying this way of eating. I started the day after last Easter, and have gone down three and a half belt notches since.
Yhwhsman
Well the only reason margarine is solid at room temperature is because it is made from hydrogenated vegetable oil. (The animal fats in butter are naturally solid at room temperature.) The hydrogenation process is very controversial and many health experts claim that foods made with hydrogenated oils are very bad for your health because they cannot be processed by the body in a normal manner. The results of this process is also known as "trans-fatty acids", something you will be likely to hear a lot more about as the FDA is under considerable pressure to have foodmakers put trans-fat information on their nutrition labels.
Bottom line, butter appears to be much better for you healthwise.
I haven't, but I do try to eat salmon and other foods with those oils in them quite regularly.
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