Entries Tagged as 'Type 2 Diabetes'

Still Trying to Break the Sugar Addiction!

I am really having a rough time getting back on track after the Holidays.  I fell off the bandwagon (yes, I was appalled too!) and ate sweets and can’t seem to quit!  Man, now I have an idea of what quitting smoking is like!  I get headaches that are alleviated when I eat sugar – a sign of addiction – man this is not good!

This really doesn’t have anything to do with willpower, I just HAVE to have sugar!  My body is craving it – help!

I thought it would be good to do a little more research on the subject of sugar addiction and try to understand why my body is doing what it’s doing so maybe I can quit feeling guilty and move forward!  If it helps you as well, WONDERFUL!

Here are a few articles I came across that are really good.

Science and Reason: Sugar can be addictive – “We have the first set of comprehensive studies showing the strong suggestion of sugar addiction in rats and a mechanism that might underlie it,” [principal investigator Bart] Hoebel said. The findings eventually could have implications …

Sugar addiction in rats may shed light on human behavior – The … – At the annual meeting of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology in Scottsdale, Ariz., on Wednesday, psychology professor Bart Hoebel presented his innovative research that suggests …

The Sugar Addiction | DesiPundit – I am addicted to sugar. The Big Fat Desi Man tells us about his sugar addiction and how addicting it can be. This is an new and interesting blog written to share personal and social attitudes toward obesity. …

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I Can Still Have a Heart Attack Even if My Cholesterol is Low?

I know, it sounds absolutely crazy doesn’t it? But, it’s true.  There are many risk factors for heart disease and cholesterol is only one – although cholesterol is in the media and receives a lot of attention and is linked very heavily to heart attacks, there are 13 risk factors people need to think about, and act upon, to decrease their risk of having a heart attack.

Risk Factors for Heart Disease

1. Abnormal Cholesterol Metabolism related to diet, lack of exercise, etc.

2. Over 50 years of age

3. Men have a higher risk than women

4. 6 – 10% of heart attacks are related to your genes

5. High Blood Pressure caused by high insulin level in the blood and arterial wall damage

6. High insulin levels which cause plaques to form in your arteries

7. Menopause or perimenopause – Low estrogen levels increase clotting of blood

8. A Fat stomach, thighs, hips and butt – fat gain around your mid-section is a sign of insulin resistance

9. Sedentary lifestyle – lack of exercise predisposes you to insulin resistance

10. Stimulants like caffeine cause hormonal imbalances that cause blood clots and inflammation of your arteries

11. Stress which causes insulin resistance

12. Smoking which also causes insulin resistance

13. Type 2 Diabetes which is end-stage insulin resistance – your pancreas just finally gives up (The Schwarzbein      Principle, 1999)

Are you seeing a pattern here?  Insulin resistance seems to be a theme in causing heart disease.

We are seeing more people surviving heart attacks than did years ago due to our emergency medical systems (911) and great medical care that has advanced so much in the last 20-30 years, but that doesn’t mean we are seeing less people with heart disease and heart attacks.

There are actually more people suffering heart disease and heart attacks now than there ever was and we are getting YOUNGER!  10-15 YEARS YOUNGER for FIRST HEART ATTACKS than 20-30 years ago – This is not good – but why is this?

When you look at our diets today vs. back then, we are eating more fast foods, more simple carbohydrates (which turn into sugar and then fat in our bodies), and more bad fats and trans fatty acids than ever before.  As a society we are much fatter and think we are eating so much better with these low fat, low cholesterol, high carbohydrate diets, but these diets are actually making us fatter and causing heart disease.

Dr. Diana Schwarzbein, MD endocrinologist promotes eating healthy fats and following a low glycemic load diet to heal your hormonal imbalances to get your body back on track.  A diet of low glycemic index foods will  help you lower your total cholesterol, triglycerides, reverse insulin resistance and lose weight (without even trying!).

I have been following the glycemic foods index (low GI Diet) and have not felt better in years!  My joint pain has almost completely gone away and I don’t feel tired all the time like I use to, I have more energy. The food is great, easy to make, and inexpensive – that’s cool! I eat good fats and cholesterols and do not feel like I”m on a diet (because I’m not!).

Has it been easy?  Do I stay on it 100% of the time?  No (I am human!), I fall off the bandwagon once in awhile, but I have been eating bad things forever!  It takes time to make a permanent change in lifestyle when you are not used to it.  As long as you come back and remember how bad you felt when you went off the bandwagon, that’s what counts (and did I feel bad! My joints started to hurt and I was bloated – yuck!).  The longer you stay with it, the less times you fall!

What has really helped me is to have a meal delivery program. I use  the e-diets fresh food program “Deliciously Yours”, that way I have access to the dieticians and the e-diets team as well as having freshly prepared food made especially for me and my low glycemic diet.

You can try it and Get one FREE week of meals with your first eDiets’ Deliciously Yours meal delivery order

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Low Glycemic Foods Index Diet Proven Best for Type 2 Diabetes

A few years ago, I had the opportunity to work on a long term basis with one of the best endocrinologists and medical doctors in the state with one of my diabetic patients.  To make a long story short, this patient had difficult to control diabetes and we really were having a rough time figuring out what to do to make a difference.

After pouring over this patient’s diabetic diet plans, food journals (kept by staff), A1C results, etc. the endocrinologist figured out that by following the “typical diabetic diet” of low fat, low cholesterol, low sugar diet – this was not adequate to control her blood sugars and that is why she was having so many blood sugar spikes. A low “sugar” diet does not necessarily mean a low glycemic, complex carbohydrate diet, so people are still eating high glycemic carbohydrates causing spikes in blood sugar.

Our endocrinologist put our patient on a low glycemic index diet.  It actually worked! The low GI foods index controlled her blood sugars.

Recently there have been studies and articles touting the low glycemic index diet being the best diet gor type 2 diabetics…

Low-Glycemic Index Diet for Diabetes – Type 2 diabetic people who ate a low-glycemic-index diet had greater blood sugar control after six months than diabetic peple who followed another weight loss diet.

Low glycemic diet can control type-2 diabetes – TheMedGuru – The study, whose findings are published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, involved 210 Type 2 diabetes patients who were put on a low glycemic diet or a high-fiber diet. Both type of diets were low in saturated and …

Diabetes control better with low-glycemic diet – Health, Cholesterol Information – High cholesterol levels, low cholesterol diets, lowering cholesterol, LDL, HDL, testing, medication, medicine, cholesterol and heart disease, symptoms of high cholesterol, treatment.

It’s interesting how 15 years ago (and I’m sure much longer than that) certain doctors (specifically endocrinologists) knew about the fascinating results the low glycemic index foods had on controlling blood sugars in diabetics.  These physicians were considered “mavericks” and “main stream” physicians continued to prescribe the diets that didn’t work and were actually harmful in the long run causing increases in cholesterol and heart disease.

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