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Diabetic Lifestyle
A healthy lifestyle leads to a healthy life. Diet and exercise is a common prescription for a healthy life. For people with Type 2 diabetes, it is especially important to follow a healthy diet and get lots of exercise. Often this is enough to get blood sugar levels under good control, especially early in the illness.
The main problem in Type II Diabetes is that sugar in the blood is under-utilized. The decreased creation of cellular energy from blood-sugar, and also the excess of sugar in the blood cause the symptoms of diabetes. The goal is to lower blood sugar levels and help your body improve its use of insulin (which helps the body utilize blood sugar).
Meal planning, exercise, and weight loss are the main solutions. Doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun, does it? Indeed, Chinese Medicine explains why we may get stuck in a vicious cycle that makes most difficult what we need to do most.
Obesity: In all, 85% of type II diabetics are overweight when diagnosed (it's interesting though that people with very little body-fat are also disposed to get Type II Diabetes. So, you have to lose weight if you're overweight. But, how? Of course, by changing the diet and exercise.
Food Allergies: Many physicians overlook food allergies, an auto-immune process. Up to 10% of Type II Diabetes, at least in Caucasian populations, may be autoimmune.
Meal Planning
- Avoid refined sugar, sugar products, junk foods, alcohol, caffeine and tobacco
- Eat protein snacks between meals
- Eat complex carbohydrates (these sugars get into the bloodstream at a slower, more even pace)
- Reduce caloric consumption
- Increase exercise
- It has been said that milk consumption is related to the incidence of diabetes. However, subsequent studies have not proven that milk causes any kind of autoimmune process. There is indication that genetics are part of the cause, but the whole picture is by no means clear. The hope is that the completed human genome will help future researchers discover to what extent prevention is possible.
For a person with Type 2 diabetes, a healthy diet has to include three elements. These are foods:
- Low in saturated fat
- Balanced or low in carbohydrates
- Low in calories, if you are overweight
- Eating Foods That Is Low in Saturated Fat
Saturated fats are animal fats. They are found in meats, in dairy products like milk, cheese and ice cream, and in some kinds of cooking oils, such as lard. When you eat a lot of saturated fats your cholesterol and triglycerides tend to go up. When your cholesterol is high, you are at a higher risk of developing hardening of the arteries and getting heart attacks and strokes. When you have diabetes, you are especially prone to developing heart attacks and strokes, so you should do everything you can do to lower your risk of heart disease, and following a low saturated fat diet is very important. Also, if you tend to have high triglycerides (fats in the blood), then following a low-fat diet will help bring your triglycerides back down.
Not all fats are the same, though. Saturated fats are bad for you, but monounsaturated fats, in moderation, seem to be good for you. Monounsaturated fats include olive oil, canola oil, and nut oils. If you cut out the saturated fats in your diet and replace them with monounsaturated fats, you can avoid filling up on carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are hard on your blood-sugar levels. Talk to your doctor or your nutritionist about how to integrate foods with monounsaturated fats into your diet.
Eating Foods that are Balanced or Low in Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are sugars and starches. Examples of carbohydrates are: pasta, bread, rice, potatoes, yellow vegetables, sugars, fruit, fruit juice, baked goods, and regular sodas. You can tell how much carbohydrate is in a food by reading the label. When you eat any kind of carbohydrate, your stomach and intestine turn them into simple sugars.
If you want to predict how a meal will affect your blood sugar then all you need to account for is the amount of carbohydrate in the meal. If you want to get really good at assessing your meals, you can buy books or take lessons in "carbohydrate counting."
When you have diabetes, you need to try to balance how much carbohydrate you have at each meal. For example, if you had a breakfast that included a big glass of orange juice, sugared cereal with strawberries on top and a piece of toast, most likely your blood sugar after that meal would be way too high. That meal contains mostly carbohydrates-except for the little bit of fat and protein in the milk in your cereal. Instead, in order to better control your blood sugar, you should cut out some of the carbohydrates and substitute a little fat and protein.
A good nutritionist trained in diabetic teaching will help you review what you usually eat to find the meals that have too much carbohydrate in them. To figure this out for yourself, you could start checking your blood sugars two hours after a meal. If you keep track of what you are eating and then look at your blood sugar levels after meals, you can pick out which meals probably had too much carbohydrate in them.
Eating Foods that are Low in Calories if You are Overweight
The majority of people with Type 2 diabetes are overweight. If you are overweight and you really want to control your blood sugar without medicines, the only way you are going to be able to do that is by losing weight. For reasons that are not currently understood, being overweight makes it hard for your body’s insulin to work. It causes what we call insulin resistance. That’s the bad news. The good news is that if you lose some weight-often only about 10 pounds, even if you are more than 50 pounds overweight-you can usually get your blood sugars back down to normal.
Tips for Losing Weight
We all know that losing weight is hard to do. But you can be successful if you make up your mind that it is important for your health. Here are some tips:
Take it slow
If you lose weight too quickly by going on a crash diet, you will probably only gain it right back when you stop. Aim to lose at most two pounds of weight per month. That will add up to fifty pounds over two years, and that’s about how much time you should give yourself to reach your weight goals.
Decrease the total number of calories in your diet
Try not to focus on decreasing only one kind of food in your diet. For example, if you focus only on eating low-fat foods you’ll probably just overdo it on carbohydrates and not eat fewer calories at all in the end. In fact, if you look closely at foods advertised as low fat, you will find that they are loaded with carbohydrates. The same applies with following a low-carb diet-you will not lose weight by substituting the carbohydrate calories with fat calories. In order to lose weight, you have to eat fewer calories.
Move around
Those with the best weight loss results are those who follow a low-fat diet and exercise, at the same time. Our weight is controlled by a pretty simple equation: Energy In (what you eat) = Energy Out (what you burn by exercising). If you eat too much or exercise too little you will gain weight. Anything-anything-that you do during the day to move around is good! You should spend at least thirty minutes every day exercising. For some, this could be briskly walking to work. For those who are able to do more strenuous exercise, it could be jogging, aerobic classes, or a sport. Important-if you have not been active and you are considering starting an exercise program, please check with your doctor first. If you are at risk for heart disease, you may need to have a stress test to check out your heart before you begin.
Get your family and friends involved
It is impossible to lose weight if you don’t have a little bit of help from your environment. For example, if you are trying to follow a low-calorie diet but you have to cook regular high-calorie meals for your family, it will be very difficult to find success. Or, if your friends bring lots of cakes and candy to work and urge you to have some, you’re going to have to show enormous will power to refuse. Bring your family to your meetings with your doctors or nutritionists. Ask them to help you and tell them why it is so important.
Set aside time during the day to pay attention to yourself
Most of the patients tell that they would like to exercise but they just can’t find time during the day. But don’t forget that when we tell you to exercise it is not for your vanity or to make you look better in a bathing suit. We want you to exercise because exercise is the best and most powerful treatment that we have for Type 2 diabetes. There is something about moving around that helps your insulin work better. It is literally the best thing you can do for yourself. You have to make it a priority in your life.
Understand that your diet and exercise regimen has to become a permanent part of your life. Unfortunately, you are not going to be able to go on a diet for a few months, lose weight, and then go back to your old eating habits and stop exercising. That never, ever works. Our bodies and brains are very smart and as soon as you lose weight, the brain starts sending powerful subconscious signals that usually result in gaining the weight back. Studies have shown that, after you lose weight, your body’s metabolism actually slows down so that you need fewer calories than when you were heavier. So, try to find a regimen that you can live with for the rest of your life.
| Last Modified : Mar 3, 2004. |
| Compiled and edited by Editorial Team and approved by Expert Panel of DiabetoValens.com |
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