::Diabetic question:: what foods help lower your A1c
ozzra8
Posts: 80 Member
I've been in the bariatric program for years now and keep getting denied because I can't get my A1c out of the double digits. I cut out all the bad carbs but still have high glucose readings eating good carbs (mainly veggies)
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Replies
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Ironically, it may be that you need to lose the weight. Your liver may pump out too much glucose and you may be extremely insulin resistant if you have enough extra weight to be in a bariatric program.
Some people have a strong reaction to even commonly labelled "good" carbs like whole grains and beans. Some people even have sugar spikes from protein sources. This is one reason so many diabetics swear by keto. That is not a recommendation, as I was personally miserable on keto and it didn't actually lower my fasting glucose at all.
However, if you have double digit A1C, you should be on meds. How is that aspect coming along?
Are you cleared for exercise? Even if you just start with 5 minutes a day, it can help with blood sugar levels.
I recently started on Ozempic. I call it my chemical bypass. I am frequently naseous and only hungry after skipping meals. I also sleep a lot more than I used to. Frankly, it is miserable, maybe even more so than keto was, but I am doing some "diet skills" exercises to build new habits, so hopefully I can come off this crap in January and still be successful going forward.4 -
Thanks for the input. I've lost 70 lbs on my own since I started this weight-loss journey.. still have extremely high glucose lvls. Ive tried keto and Atkins and probably every other diet out there and still have high glucose readings. I also seem to butt heads with my nutritionists everytime I cut something from my diet or try a new diet. I pretty much get reprimanded like I'm a little child that doesn't understand her own body but it's my fault for being to honest with my care team thinking I didnt want to run into complications after surgery but now realize that they are all just as clueless as I am. so I'm pretty much going at it on my own at this point. When it comes down to it, I'm the one who is living with this illness and need to figure out how to take control before it destroys my body. I am on oral meds metformin and glipizide xl twice daily and on insulin lantus and humalin as well. They haven't tried me on any if the newer meds. no clue as to why. I'll ask my doctor about ozempic. I am also a very active person, no restrictions physically. I'm just a rear case where my body pretty much produces glucose even when fasting. I have high glucose readings.3
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Hmm I am a T2D myself, for 18 years now. You mention that you eat quite a few veges. So are carrots and beets included, because if they are they need to go. Once in a great while I will eat a baby carrot. But I know for a fact based on my BS readings and AC1. That if I ate baby carrots 5 of them everyday. They would spike my readings. I love beets but these days only have like 3 times a year.
I went round and round with my endocrinologist over Metformin, and finally got them to take me off it. I think because I took for so long, it after time failed to keep up with needs. Also I can say first hand getting off the pills has helped me with the gas/diarrhea that I had for a decade while on Metformin, also off the Actos.
Our weight loss is close, I started in May 2018 and have lost 77 pounds this year. I am not down to 42 for lantus, and working on weaning myself off the Humalog, still take about 10 per day. When I started this year I was taking 74 lantus, and 24 humulog. The humulog was 12 in morning and 12 at night. Has your Dr. given you a sliding scale of how much Humanlin to take based on what your BS readings are? For last 4 years I have had a sliding scale and that overall did help some.
The other one I take is Trulicity pen once a week at 1.5. I have found that it has helped as well.
Some of my big wins this year, and I decided I was making as a lifelong change. I no longer eat bread or crackers in any form. Same for Pasta. When I make mexican I allow myself 3 T of rice. I make once a month.
And white sugar and I have had a long affair, but for me to win and reduce my BS. It had to go. I have been learning to bake (yes I have a sweet tooth), using almond flour, and for sweetner honey, and at times Swerve or Monkfruit. Which I am finding does not spike BS the same way a regular sugar cookie would.
I follow low carb, not keto. And I find I can follow it and 99% of the time I am happy with it. I average 55grams net carbs, 50 grams for fat, and 80 for protein. All before any exercising is added in. I eat back about 20-30% of claories for when I am exercising. My main exercise is walking, doing about 2.5 miles 5 days per week at 3.5-4. mph. As I find the numbers on MFP to be way too high. I very rarely hit the sodium numbers and same with sugar. For sugar these days I average about 15-18 grams per day and that is all from fruit, veges. I really have made one of my mantras to get away from processed food, as it was causing part of my issue.
So how often are you checking your BS daily? Are you getting the AC1 checked, and then the next time they do the Fructaine (I know I messed that spelling up).
Do you have chronic kidney disease? I ask because I am stage 3A. And if your AC1 is consistently running high, it will impact the kidneys, and even though my AC1 is now at 6.4 down from over 12 at beginning of year. I cannot undo the damage already done to kidneys. I can only work on trying to make sure they do not get worse. Also if the kidneys are having an issue that can cause a negative issue with the AC1.
If you are not seeing eye to eye with the nutritionist you have been working with, find a new one. They are supposed to help, not hinder progress. I have changed more than once when they were being too rigid.
Best of luck, I totally understand where you are coming from.
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No sliding scale. I'm on 30 units of lantus twice a day and 50 units of humalin once a day. 1000mg of metformin in the am and 1500 in the pm. 10mg of glipizide xl twice a day. I had an intolerance to the metformin in the beginning but am fine now.
I do eat carrots but no beets. Ill cut out there carrots and see if that helps. I switched to squash in place of potatoes but just realized that acorn squash is pretty high as well so cutting that out too. Spaghetti squash is still good. Also oatmeal. I eat steel cut oats in the am. Just found out that this can beet the root to my sugar spikes as well. Fingers crossed0 -
No sliding scale. I'm on 30 units of lantus twice a day and 50 units of humalin once a day. 1000mg of metformin in the am and 1500 in the pm. 10mg of glipizide xl twice a day. I had an intolerance to the metformin in the beginning but am fine now.
I do eat carrots but no beets. Ill cut out there carrots and see if that helps. I switched to squash in place of potatoes but just realized that acorn squash is pretty high as well so cutting that out too. Spaghetti squash is still good. Also oatmeal. I eat steel cut oats in the am. Just found out that this can beet the root to my sugar spikes as well. Fingers crossed
You need to start counting total carbs. Do you log here at MFP? It is a quick and easy was to see how many carbs you are eating. If so, make sure you weigh all solids and semi solids and measure all liquids. Has your doctor or Registered Dietician given you a total carb number to stay under? If not, you need to talk to them. They may give you a daily number or a number to stay under per meal (I have been given a daily number) Have you taken classes taught by a Certified Diabetic Educator (most healthcare organizations offer them for those diagnosed with T2Dm or pre-diabetes). They can help you learn food substitutes. I find substituting turnips instead of potatoes in my stews significantly lowers the carb count.
Individual foods don't matter as much as the totality of what you have eaten during the day. I can eat a teaspoon of sugar in my tea (4 grams of carbs) but that means I need to have a smaller piece of fruit or forego the bread on my sandwich so I can stay under my maximum of daily carbs.8 -
The class of medication that both responders mentioned are called GLP-1 agonists. They mimic a hormone found in healthy adults that tends to be very low in diabetics. There are several classes of diabetic medicines that can cause weight gain in trying to normalize the blood sugar (several were mentioned above.) The GLP-1 meds are associated with weight loss, these are Ozempic, Trulicity, Victoza, Bydureon, and byetta. If your A1c is in the double digits, or even if you are not making headway on your current regimen, I urge you to go see an endocrinologist or at least talk to your doc about trying a newer medication. There is another class called SGLT-2 that can lead to weight loss and can help protect the kidneys while lowering your blood sugar.
Your insulin regimen leaves a lot to be desired. You can help someone help you by checking your sugar multiple times per day, fasting, before meals, and before bed. I recommend that you make a chart and write these readings down by time of day.
Please, go see someone informed and ask about the GLP-1s, find an exercise routine that helps to lower your insulin resistance, and be aware of the types and volume of food you are eating to get better control of your diabetes before you suffer severe complications.2 -
No sliding scale. I'm on 30 units of lantus twice a day and 50 units of humalin once a day. 1000mg of metformin in the am and 1500 in the pm. 10mg of glipizide xl twice a day. I had an intolerance to the metformin in the beginning but am fine now.
I do eat carrots but no beets. Ill cut out there carrots and see if that helps. I switched to squash in place of potatoes but just realized that acorn squash is pretty high as well so cutting that out too. Spaghetti squash is still good. Also oatmeal. I eat steel cut oats in the am. Just found out that this can beet the root to my sugar spikes as well. Fingers crossed
You need to start counting total carbs. Do you log here at MFP? It is a quick and easy was to see how many carbs you are eating. If so, make sure you weigh all solids and semi solids and measure all liquids. Has your doctor or Registered Dietician given you a total carb number to stay under? If not, you need to talk to them. They may give you a daily number or a number to stay under per meal (I have been given a daily number) Have you taken classes taught by a Certified Diabetic Educator (most healthcare organizations offer them for those diagnosed with T2Dm or pre-diabetes). They can help you learn food substitutes. I find substituting turnips instead of potatoes in my stews significantly lowers the carb count.
Individual foods don't matter as much as the totality of what you have eaten during the day. I can eat a teaspoon of sugar in my tea (4 grams of carbs) but that means I need to have a smaller piece of fruit or forego the bread on my sandwich so I can stay under my maximum of daily carbs.
I've been seeing a nutritionist and endocrinologist for over a decade and not once have I been given a daily number of carbs. Just was taught the difference between good carbs and bad carbs and that "good carbs" under a certain net carb index shouldn't effect my blood sugar. My new nutritionist that I just started seeing (new insurance) doesn't want me on a diet at all stating that restricting food from my diet is only going to cause me to cheat. I literally laughed in her face asking if she read my file and said you do realize that I'm seeing you because of my diabetes not just my weight, right? So yeah.. I can't eat sugar or anything out of the good carb index even in moderation or I'll have sugars in the 400-500's and that's with taking all of the meds listed above.0 -
LeslieMedic wrote: »The class of medication that both responders mentioned are called GLP-1 agonists. They mimic a hormone found in healthy adults that tends to be very low in diabetics. There are several classes of diabetic medicines that can cause weight gain in trying to normalize the blood sugar (several were mentioned above.) The GLP-1 meds are associated with weight loss, these are Ozempic, Trulicity, Victoza, Bydureon, and byetta. If your A1c is in the double digits, or even if you are not making headway on your current regimen, I urge you to go see an endocrinologist or at least talk to your doc about trying a newer medication. There is another class called SGLT-2 that can lead to weight loss and can help protect the kidneys while lowering your blood sugar.
Your insulin regimen leaves a lot to be desired. You can help someone help you by checking your sugar multiple times per day, fasting, before meals, and before bed. I recommend that you make a chart and write these readings down by time of day.
Please, go see someone informed and ask about the GLP-1s, find an exercise routine that helps to lower your insulin resistance, and be aware of the types and volume of food you are eating to get better control of your diabetes before you suffer severe complications.
I am seeing an endocrinologist. Been seeing one since I became a diabetic over a decade ago. I'm very much aware of the health risks and this is the #1 main reason why I was placed in the bariatric program because there is a very high chance that it will put my diabetes in remission. I apologize if I made anyone think that I'm not educated on my disease. I appreciate all the feed back but my initial question to the public was if anyone knew of any foods that help lower ones A1c. This is the knowledge I am seeking.1 -
No sliding scale. I'm on 30 units of lantus twice a day and 50 units of humalin once a day. 1000mg of metformin in the am and 1500 in the pm. 10mg of glipizide xl twice a day. I had an intolerance to the metformin in the beginning but am fine now.
I do eat carrots but no beets. Ill cut out there carrots and see if that helps. I switched to squash in place of potatoes but just realized that acorn squash is pretty high as well so cutting that out too. Spaghetti squash is still good. Also oatmeal. I eat steel cut oats in the am. Just found out that this can beet the root to my sugar spikes as well. Fingers crossed
You need to start counting total carbs. Do you log here at MFP? It is a quick and easy was to see how many carbs you are eating. If so, make sure you weigh all solids and semi solids and measure all liquids. Has your doctor or Registered Dietician given you a total carb number to stay under? If not, you need to talk to them. They may give you a daily number or a number to stay under per meal (I have been given a daily number) Have you taken classes taught by a Certified Diabetic Educator (most healthcare organizations offer them for those diagnosed with T2Dm or pre-diabetes). They can help you learn food substitutes. I find substituting turnips instead of potatoes in my stews significantly lowers the carb count.
Individual foods don't matter as much as the totality of what you have eaten during the day. I can eat a teaspoon of sugar in my tea (4 grams of carbs) but that means I need to have a smaller piece of fruit or forego the bread on my sandwich so I can stay under my maximum of daily carbs.
I've been seeing a nutritionist and endocrinologist for over a decade and not once have I been given a daily number of carbs. Just was taught the difference between good carbs and bad carbs and that "good carbs" under a certain net carb index shouldn't effect my blood sugar. My new nutritionist that I just started seeing (new insurance) doesn't want me on a diet at all stating that restricting food from my diet is only going to cause me to cheat. I literally laughed in her face asking if she read my file and said you do realize that I'm seeing you because of my diabetes not just my weight, right? So yeah.. I can't eat sugar or anything out of the good carb index even in moderation or I'll have sugars in the 400-500's and that's with taking all of the meds listed above.
If you have been seeing the same medical professionals for 10 years and their advice is not working I would change doctors. Also, I am surprised your insurance will pay for a nutritionist. You should talk to your doctor about seeing an actual Registered Dietician. They have much more education and many of them specialize in diabetes.
If you don't know how many grams of carbs you can eat, how do you know you are not eating too many of them? Overeating "good carbs" will affect your BG just as much as eating bad carbs. The amount will vary, but most newly diagnosed T2Dm will be given a number somewhere between 150-180 grams per day (or a max of 40-45 per meal with 10-15 grams allowed per snack) and adjusted in 3 or 6 months depending on what the A1c is doing.
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LeslieMedic wrote: »The class of medication that both responders mentioned are called GLP-1 agonists. They mimic a hormone found in healthy adults that tends to be very low in diabetics. There are several classes of diabetic medicines that can cause weight gain in trying to normalize the blood sugar (several were mentioned above.) The GLP-1 meds are associated with weight loss, these are Ozempic, Trulicity, Victoza, Bydureon, and byetta. If your A1c is in the double digits, or even if you are not making headway on your current regimen, I urge you to go see an endocrinologist or at least talk to your doc about trying a newer medication. There is another class called SGLT-2 that can lead to weight loss and can help protect the kidneys while lowering your blood sugar.
Your insulin regimen leaves a lot to be desired. You can help someone help you by checking your sugar multiple times per day, fasting, before meals, and before bed. I recommend that you make a chart and write these readings down by time of day.
Please, go see someone informed and ask about the GLP-1s, find an exercise routine that helps to lower your insulin resistance, and be aware of the types and volume of food you are eating to get better control of your diabetes before you suffer severe complications.
I am seeing an endocrinologist. Been seeing one since I became a diabetic over a decade ago. I'm very much aware of the health risks and this is the #1 main reason why I was placed in the bariatric program because there is a very high chance that it will put my diabetes in remission. I apologize if I made anyone think that I'm not educated on my disease. I appreciate all the feed back but my initial question to the public was if anyone knew of any foods that help lower ones A1c. This is the knowledge I am seeking.
And this is the knowledge you are being given. The only foods that will lower A1c are foods that do not contain carbs.5 -
Listen to earlnabby, she knows what she is talking about on this topic!3
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LeslieMedic wrote: »The class of medication that both responders mentioned are called GLP-1 agonists. They mimic a hormone found in healthy adults that tends to be very low in diabetics. There are several classes of diabetic medicines that can cause weight gain in trying to normalize the blood sugar (several were mentioned above.) The GLP-1 meds are associated with weight loss, these are Ozempic, Trulicity, Victoza, Bydureon, and byetta. If your A1c is in the double digits, or even if you are not making headway on your current regimen, I urge you to go see an endocrinologist or at least talk to your doc about trying a newer medication. There is another class called SGLT-2 that can lead to weight loss and can help protect the kidneys while lowering your blood sugar.
Your insulin regimen leaves a lot to be desired. You can help someone help you by checking your sugar multiple times per day, fasting, before meals, and before bed. I recommend that you make a chart and write these readings down by time of day.
Please, go see someone informed and ask about the GLP-1s, find an exercise routine that helps to lower your insulin resistance, and be aware of the types and volume of food you are eating to get better control of your diabetes before you suffer severe complications.
I am seeing an endocrinologist. Been seeing one since I became a diabetic over a decade ago. I'm very much aware of the health risks and this is the #1 main reason why I was placed in the bariatric program because there is a very high chance that it will put my diabetes in remission. I apologize if I made anyone think that I'm not educated on my disease. I appreciate all the feed back but my initial question to the public was if anyone knew of any foods that help lower ones A1c. This is the knowledge I am seeking.
And this is the knowledge you are being given. The only foods that will lower A1c are foods that do not contain carbs.
This is correct. All carbs, meaning foods that comes from any plant (excluding oils) will raise BG and A1C to varying degrees.
The worse offenders tend to be carbs that are refined and highly processed such as juice, soda, sugar, syrup, foods made from flour (bread, muffins, crusts, noodles, cereal).
Next worst is often grains like rice, oats, corn, etc.
Dried fruits (raisins, dates, figs) and tropical fruit like mango, banana and grapes will raise BG a lot unless you eat very small amounts.
Root vegetables are also high in glucose (starches turn to glucose very easily) so potatoes, yams, turnips, sweet potatoes, beets, onions, etc. may affect your BG a fair bit.
Temperate fruits like apples, oranges, plums and nectarines raise BG too. Berries less so.
Other vegetables will raise your BG too, but not as much. Same with most tree nuts and seeds.
All foods from plants will raise your BG to varying amounts. Testing your BG after eating is the only way to know how different carbs affect you. Use a blood glucose monitor before and after meals.
Foods that will barely raise, or not raise, BG is meats, seafood, eggs, full fat unsweetened dairy, fats and oils.
I eat an almost carnivorous diet and my A1C and BG is incredibly steady. A lack of sleep or stress now affects it more than eating does. I would consider cutting more carbs from your diet if the level you are at now is not working.
Fung's Obesity Code d Diabetes Code are good reads. So is Dr Bernstein's Diabetes Solution. Both doctor have websites with videos and information. Dr Sarah Halberg is another to look up online. Good luck.9 -
Often doing the opposite of what you think is what you need to do. Fasting makes your liver kick up the glucose so your brain especially can function. They always told me to cut my protein. Well, proteins keep me satisfied so that I don’t eat junk carbs. Fiber keeps you satisfied too. My A1c is 5.7 on no meds with these 3 things. I agree, find new people to work with. And carbs are carbs, I don’t fall in with this net carbs or adding calories back in because of them. Everyone is different and what you do has to work for you. Are you sure you have no food allergies?1
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1. Reduce the carbs, big time. All carbs, not just sugar. Complex carbs become sugar eventually. T2. Portion control. This means COUNT CALORIES. Don't fall for that "balance carbs with protein" thing. This takes discipline. Log all food in the My Fitness Pal app. 3. Exercise. No need to explain the benefits of this. At least go walking if nothing else.
You know these things already.
Eat things like protein shakes, salad, eggs, chicken breast, and veggies. Do what I do and buy the Nutri Ninja Auto IQ blender, and buy Vega Organic Vegetable based protein powder (available at Costco) Have at least one shake a day. Try it or don't. This is what works for me. It may not work for me3 -
this might help too https://diabetes.org.uk/research/research-round-up/research-spotlight/research-spotlight-low-calorie-liquid-diet
You could also start by taking a daily multivitamin and an insoluble fiber (like psyllium) supplement and then just start a few days on healthy proteins and fats. What I am getting at is completely remove plant based foods for a day and check your A1C. Then gradually add low GI fruits and vegetables one per day and keep checking your sugars. Additionally make sure you are not eating anything processed (packaged) and start ensuring you make your food from raw natural sources.
I also agree with a previous poster regarding your "care" team. Some doctors simply have no clue and rely far too much on prescription drugs to treat patients. If they can't seem to find a solution, it's time for a second or third opinion. I have personal experience with this. I saw a Neurologist about 20 years ago regarding the neuropathy in my legs. Fast forward to about 5 years ago: I got a second diagnosis (due to complications) from a different Neurologist and was shocked to find the the first diagnosis was far too generic...meaning the first Neurologist I saw gave me an incorrect diagnosis, either through lack of experience with the particular disorder or sheer ignorance. Either way a second diagnosis helped manage the disorder much better.
Here is an explanation of the Diabetes and recommendations from the world's foremost Naturopathic Doctor, Andrew Weil https://drweil.com/health-wellness/body-mind-spirit/diabetes/diabetes-type-2/5 -
I would recommend reading "Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution". He also has as related book, "The Diabetes Diet" (by Richard K. Bernstein).2
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Ok ... lurker ... first time posting here. I used to have the same issue. I would exercise twice a day, eating a balanced healthy diet, and still my BG was over 160. Then my endo put me on trulicity and synjardy. Let me tell you, over night weight started coming off and BG went to below 120. Seems that for me Lantus was over compensating and causing my liver to misbehave.
All this was 1 year. I have since lost 48lbs, and am no longer in meds. Plus my BG is 110 consistently.
My advise, for what its worth, talk to your endo about trulicity.1 -
T2 here. On met, lantus, and novolog. Was recently in the hospital for sepsis and sugars were over 400. Came down on meds, but not where I personally wanted them to be. December 1st I cut out all land-animal products. Seafood is the only animal product I consume now. I eat beans and lots of good, complex carbs, eat smaller portions, and stick to about 1700 calories. Since going mostly plant-based my fasting numbers are now in the 80s and my 2hr post-prandial numbers are in the very low 100s, sometimes without any meal-time insulin at all. My diabetes nutritionist has my macro goals at Carbs (30%), Fat (50%), and Protein (20%). For good fats I eat avocado, nuts, seeds, peanut butter. Proteins I have seafood, nuts, peanut butter, and beans. I use a food scale to measure portions and I use the MySugr app to log my glucose readings. I was nervous at first to cut out land-animal products because they are easy protein sources, but I have been feeling so much better without them and my numbers have been great.
Hoping you can find a way to get your numbers down so you can get approved for the surgery!2 -
Thing that worked for me, cut all carb heavy food. No more oatmeal, fruit (including dried fruits) bread, pasta, squash (except zucchini) because all those things were causing insulin spikes and keeping my a1c up. I use chia to replace oatmeal, I don't miss bread or pasta and the fruits are something I use only on cheat days. Once I removed all carb heavy foods, and cut my carb percentage to between 10 and 20% the numbers started dropping.2
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this might help too https://diabetes.org.uk/research/research-round-up/research-spotlight/research-spotlight-low-calorie-liquid-diet
What I am getting at is completely remove plant based foods for a day and check your A1C.
Here is an explanation of the Diabetes and recommendations from the world's foremost Naturopathic Doctor, Andrew Weil https://drweil.com/health-wellness/body-mind-spirit/diabetes/diabetes-type-2/
Did you mean check the blood glucose? Because one day has minimal effect on A1c, as it takes a few weeks to alter an A1c reading.1 -
I know you asked about food but have you considered getting a long walk in daily? I have a friend who is diabetic and she walks to lower her sugar. Just a thought but it would have to be a daily thing and long enough to let your sugars drop a bit. Be sure you check with your doc first of course.3
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this might help too https://diabetes.org.uk/research/research-round-up/research-spotlight/research-spotlight-low-calorie-liquid-diet
What I am getting at is completely remove plant based foods for a day and check your A1C.
Here is an explanation of the Diabetes and recommendations from the world's foremost Naturopathic Doctor, Andrew Weil https://drweil.com/health-wellness/body-mind-spirit/diabetes/diabetes-type-2/
Did you mean check the blood glucose? Because one day has minimal effect on A1c, as it takes a few weeks to alter an A1c reading.
A1C is basically a 3 month reading on BG numbers - a one day change is likely to have very minimal effect on the A1c reading.0 -
this might help too https://diabetes.org.uk/research/research-round-up/research-spotlight/research-spotlight-low-calorie-liquid-diet
What I am getting at is completely remove plant based foods for a day and check your A1C.
Here is an explanation of the Diabetes and recommendations from the world's foremost Naturopathic Doctor, Andrew Weil https://drweil.com/health-wellness/body-mind-spirit/diabetes/diabetes-type-2/
Did you mean check the blood glucose? Because one day has minimal effect on A1c, as it takes a few weeks to alter an A1c reading.
A1C is basically a 3 month reading on BG numbers - a one day change is likely to have very minimal effect on the A1c reading.
Right, exactly. That’s why checking A1c after altering one’s diet for only one day is pointless. Checking blood glucose, however, would show a change.1
This discussion has been closed.
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