Hi I’m Ashley,
I’m a type 2 diabetic and have been since March 2013. I currently live in Portsmouth with my fiancee.
The medication I currently take is:
- Metformin
- Ramparill
- Simvastatin
- Insulin
- Exenatide
But recently I have come across a diet completed by Newcastle University. On this diet I am only allowed to consume 800 calories a day. This is a substantial reduction in the amount of intake for me, as a male I should normally be having 2000 calories roughly. 600 calories from meal replacement shakes and soups and 200 calories from green vegetables. They also say to drink around 3 liters of water or calorie free drinks per a day.
My blog site: http://pompeydiabetic.wordpress.com/about-me/
My twitter page: https://twitter.com/PompeyDiabetic
Please like and share.
Good luck lad, rather you than me. Get some whole food low carb good grub down ya neck, you know it makes sense, why fight it !
Eddie
8 comments:
This is a banquet for Sid. The portion control man.
The only problem with Sid's diet he is close to bedridden, and his calorie requirements are that of a trainee corpse.
Only saying !
Eddie
so sad. so lead astray. Meat and veggies. Eggs. Some nuts and seeds. An occasional fruit. SO EASY. So nutritious and healthy!
I am the blog owner, I took it upon myself as nothing is working and I'm getting annoyed that nothing is working in terms of the medication. Please keep reading my blog. Thanks :D
Pompey,
You cannot expect medication as the answer to your problems, you have to put some effort in yourself with regard to foods and testing.
I have yet to read a Newcastle Diet has worked after the 8 weeks because people are not learning how to control diabetes but are given a starvation diet to lose weight on. You may not put the weight back on immediately but what will it teach you about food choices?
I have made drastic changes to my diet. I home cook everything, nothing comes out of a packet. I only eat sweet stuff once in a month or two months. I never have sugar in my tea or anything. I exercise regularly whether it be walk, jogging or cycling.
How many carbohydrates do you eat per day?
Normally I'm in agreement with almost everything you post, Eddie, but I find the Newcastle Diet stuff to be pretty convincing as a kickstart for change. I wish I'd found out about it when I was first diagnosed and started dieting. There are reports of people using a real food version of it and it making big changes for them. I can understand why someone who is desperate to lose weight and/or come of ghastly meds would want to try it:
http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/may/12/type-2-diabetes-diet-cure
I also found Professor Taylor's paper on the subject pretty convincing - and they have the MRI scans to back up their theories:
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/781719 -
(you need to join up to read it - you can join for free as a consumer, not as an HCP)
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm
I've no doubt that if people who've done the diet go back to exactly how they were eating before that they'll end up in the same place they started - but the researchers make it clear that regaining weight will null the effect.
I don't quite get why you're so against it - as Dr Bernstein says, "what works, works" - if it works for people, more power to them. Far better than doing nothing or guzzling drugs believing they'll save you, IMO.
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