So are Bernstein's books worth reading? If you had to recommend one of the
two, would you get the Diabetes Solution or the Diabetes Diet? Also, the
Diabetes Solution has a 1997, 2003, and 2007 edition. Is it worth it to get
the revised editions?
Kristina
>FBG should be roughly correlated with HBa1c--probably a bit lower.
Ideally, I'd want to monitor insulin levels directly, but this isn't
something you can do at home. I do think, however, that FBG is
relevant. According to Bernstein, whom I tend to regard as
authoritative on these things, when BG goes above about 83 mg/dl, the
pancreas begins to put out more insulin than baseline, which means that
the pancreas "thinks" BG should be at 83 or below. To my way of
thinking, that fact is conclusive evidence that if FBG is above 83 or
so, and one has functioning beta cells, then insulin levels are higher
than they should be. As for what's considered diabetic or pre-diabetic,
that judgment is based on norms that Bernstein doesn't accept, and
neither do I. While this website, http://www.rajeun.net/glucose.html,
is somewhat bombastic, it's consistent with Bernstein's observations,
and I accept the general principles.
> 2) Any thoughts on whether excessive calories could cause a rise in FBG??
I'm
> not sure how one would determine what is "excessive" -- because caloric
needs
> vary from person to person for a variety of reasons. But I know that for
> myself -- dairy products are a "trigger" food and it's easier for me to
avoid
> them than it is to eat small/reasonable portions. (My hubby will eat 1-2
oz and
> be satisfied -- I on the other hand could eat 8 oz and still want more...
> weird. Nuts are almost as bad for me...) So I am wondering if it's
possible that
> someone who is active and following a virtually zero carb diet such as Mr.
> Stanley (only meat, eggs and dairy) -- could take in "excessive" calories
in
> terms of overall health yet remain slim. I guess I'm beginning to believe
that
> just because a person can eat tons of food and not get fat doesn't mean
it's a
> good idea. I've been experimenting with intermittant fasting and some
calorie
> restriction and am amazed at how much extra food I've shoveled in over the
> decades just because of habit (ie it's noon, time to eat regardless of
hunger; or
> eating certain amounts just because I always have in the past regardless
of
> hunger cues) or boredom, to alleviate depression, as inappropriate reward
and
> because I could, without gaining weight -- not because of real need or
hunger.
> Maybe in terms of food, "less is more" as we age. Thoughts?
>
I'd bet the farm that calories do play a role in FBG. It's coming up on
a month since I started IF, with very low carbs, and my typical FBG has
dropped below 90 for the first time ever. I've been experimenting for
years, and no diminution in carbs alone was able to yield this result;
not even zero carbs. I don't think my net caloric restriction is huge,
since my weight loss is quite slow, but the effect on my FBG is
unmistakable.
Todd Moody
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