Type 2 diabetes meal plans...all help welcome
vanessamontoya89
Posts: 9 Member
Does anyone have experience with eating better to get rid of type 2 diabetes? I’m newly diagnosed and want to avoid medication so weight loss is my only saving grace
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Replies
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Keto is one way, I've known several people to reverse their Type 2 diabetes. It might be hard to switch but could be medically beneficial for you.8
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consider a whole foods plant based diet in addition to exercise which should include resistance training. There is evidence that type 2 is related to lipotoxicity and the goal should be a low fat plant based diet to encourage fat loss. Just something else to consider. If yet to meet a physician would would not advise eating healthy, non processed foods. Best of luck to you!!7
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Weightloss and high protein low carb. My husband was able to his levels back to normal in 3 months.4
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Thanks I will definitely take that into account when I make my meal plans.0
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Thank you all for the suggestions. I have cut out most processed foods right now and have added more veggies to my meals. But I will look into the different suggestions and test them out.
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First of all a substantial weight loss especially coupled with increase in moderate exercise (something as simple as walking) has good potential to mitigate / postpone / reverse type 2.
Therefore achieving that loss if you are currently obese or substantially overweight and increasing your activity level comes first.
Beyond that, there is some evidence that people with type 2 see improvements with low carb diets and ketogenic diets independent of weight loss.
I elected not to follow a lifestyle / diet that I have personally seen a lot of people fail to maintain long term. So I did not low carb when losing weight or now that I am maintaining.
However I note that MFP has a higher than average share of rare people.
People who have lost weight and maintained their loss, and people who do low carb long term.
Some MFPeops even belong to both categories!!!
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If you are a diagnosed full fledged diabetic, I recommend buying a meter and learning how much of different foods you can eat while maintaining appropriate blood glucose levels. This is very individual and what works for someone else may not work for you. For example, I can eat quite a lot of fruit, while I have type 2 friends who can't eat fruit without spikes. MFP is very useful for tracking net carbs - add a column for fiber so you can easily see the net carbs in your meals.
Exercise is crucial to improve insulin resistance. Studies have found that three ten minute walks timed after meals are better for glucose control than one thirty minute walk. Again, having a meter is good because different people react differently to exercise. Some for example get spikes during exercise from stress, while others see their levels decrease.
The other important thing is to get down to normal weight. Log those calories.
When diagnosed my A1c was 11. Currently 4.9. I eat a moderately low carb diet, about 150g net carbs per day, more on days when I run. I don't avoid processed foods, I don't eat a plant based diet, I don't do keto. I do avoid refined flour and sugar because they spike my levels. You won't know what diet is best for you until you test and find out.10 -
I agree with eating to a glucose meter, it is the best easy to discover what foods are okay (dont raise BG) and which foods are not.
I really recommend Dr Bernstein's Diabetes Solution. It is a fantastic book, written by a doctor, who pioneered home testing because he is t1d, about how to stabilize BG and reduce a need to extra insulin . It is a lchf to keto book.
I followed it when i discovered I was prediabetic. It worked perfectly.
Good luck0 -
Weight loss and lower carbs. It doesn't have to be the <20 g net carbs of keto, but it would be really helpful if you'd get few enough carbs in your food that your blood glucose spends most of the day below 100.
I do not and never did have diabetes.0 -
OP, see if your doctor can refer you to an RD that specializes in diabetes or a certified diabetes counselor. They will be able to help you come up with ways to meal plan and monitor your results, and will probably have experience with dozens of patients and their results.
The different diets will not affect your weight loss - your calorie deficit will do that, regardless of what you eat. Different food choices will I assume affect your BG however, and it seems different people have had success with different strategies.
Welcome and best of luck!2 -
Thanks for the feedback guys!0
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Watch the movie Forks Over Knives.5
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Had Type 2 diabetes 8 -10 years ago. Lost weight (mostly still off). The diabetes came back in 2018. Taking Metformin, working to have low carb, high protein diet.1
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