Question:
Try searching the web for glycemic index, or try a boot store. Barnes and Noble carries a book with a list.
Thanx. Betty.
Response:
http://www.mendosa.com/gi.htm.
Thank you. Betty.
Response:
No pineapple
Totally out of curiosity? How come no pineapple? — John F Davis in Delightful Detroit Remove the obvious "no.spam." if replying via E-mail Diabetic? Visit http://go.compuserve.com/diabetesforum No membership needed to read, AOL-IM members can post
Response:
No pineapple Totally out of curiosity? How come no pineapple?
I’m not the one who said it, but probably becuase it’s high in simple sugars. Might be OK for some, you never can tell without checking on yourself. Speaking only for myself, Joe Durusau
Response:
Totally out of curiosity? How come no pineapple?
I was told it had a high GI. Betty.
Response:
John as Tess said the glycemic index of pineapple and watermelon is one of the highest around. For diabetics such fruit is spike material just like sugar saturated cordial. Note the white bread index is 100 , good ol watermelon is higher!!!. It is widely proven that High GI foods create swings in BSI because of the glucose levels. The low Gi food groups produce gradual rises in BSI and have many health benefits accordingly. This includes decreasing the amount of insulin "dumped" which increases insulin sensitivity at the cellular level. Which simply means insulin becomes more effective in your body. Just like gently increasing the throttle in a car instead of jerking it. For fat loss one of the main problems with T2’s the hardest part of dieting is the hunger. Low GI foods are natural appetite suppressants. (which is one reason why the Atkins folk stick better to his diet than low fat. because they don’t get hungry!~) If you can help control insulin by eating low GI food it ensures fat is burned and you have some drive left at the end of the day (another problem with low fat diets – you feel stuffed by the end of the day or an hour after breakfast!) Benefits of Low A glycemic Foods: 1. do not stimulate fat storage, 2. reduce appetite, 3. enhance sports performance, 4. improve energy levels while reducing sugar-related energy and/or mood swings, 5. improve muscle to fat ratio, 6. enhance mental alertness, 7. allow you to eat more calories, and, 8. may help lower blood lipids. 9. Low-glycemic foods have been proven to reduce the incidence of Type II diabetes and to help control Type I and II diabetes, hypoglycemia and hypertension. (UNSW) This is t he fruit you should eat in preference from low to high! So Tess is on Target!!!! Note all the super sweet fruit is not so good for you!!! Also never drink juice especially if its concentrated. Recently someone posted a non sugar apple pie recipe here. It had 2 cups of concentrated apple juice. unfortunately it was not mentioned that it had 2lbs of sugar per pint of juice!!!!! Cherries 32 Grapefruit 36 Apple 38 Apple juice, unsweetened 40 Apricots, dried 44 Pear, fresh 53 Apple 54 Plum 55 Apple juice 58 Peach, fresh 60 Orange 53 Pear, canned 63 Grapes 66 Pineapple juice 66 Peach, canned 67 Grapefruit juice 69 Orange juice 74 Kiwi 75 Banana 77 Fruit cocktail 79 Mango 80 Apricots, fresh 82 Raisins 91 Apricots, canned syrup 91 Pineapple 94 Rockmelon (muskmelon, canteloupe) 93 Watermelon 103 – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – No pineapple Totally out of curiosity? How come no pineapple? — John F Davis in Delightful Detroit Remove the obvious "no.spam." if replying via E-mail Diabetic? Visit http://go.compuserve.com/diabetesforum No membership needed to read, AOL-IM members can post
Response:
says… I’m not the one who said it, but probably becuase it’s high in simple sugars. Might be OK for some, you never can tell without checking on yourself.
Ok, thanks, Kind of wondered about it is all — John F Davis in Delightful Detroit Remove the obvious "no.spam." if replying via E-mail Diabetic? Visit http://go.compuserve.com/diabetesforum No membership needed to read, AOL-IM members can post
Response:
Should I just shut the hell up and be happy with my good fortune?
version of the Serenity prayer here: Accept the things you cannot change, Have the courage to change the things you can, and the wisdom to know the difference. BL
Response:
… Are the long term effects of consuming as many medications as I do likely to form a problem of their own (such as kidney and liver damage and who knows what else)? I worry about this in light of the fact that I have 40 years to go before I can reach a normal life span, yet my drug diet is already comparable to your average senior citizen.
I don’t know, and I don’t think anyone else does either. However, it does seem like a pretty severe regimen. Tell me, what does your exercise plan look like? Should I just shut the hell up and be happy with my good fortune?
Yes and no. Yes, you’re lucky that your doctor is on the ball and is treating your condition aggressively. This is the best way to avoid complications. No, you shouldn’t simply take a raft of medications without looking into the alternatives. By this I don’t mean "alternative medicines." Diet and exercise can bring about dramatic improvements in diabetic control, blood pressure and cholestorol. However, if you are already exercising and your diet is good, then instead of worrying about the consequences of taking all those meds, you should have a think about the consequences of NOT taking them. Even before I was diagnosed, I knew of two people who chose to ignore their diabetes. Both required lower limb amputations and died of heart attacks in their 50s. Cheers, John Carney.
Response:
Excuse me if im wrong, your drugs indicate you may be severely overweight? Yet in your post you do not mention diet and exercise? T2 diabetes is a triangle. Diet , Exercise and Medication. If you don’t change your diet to limit carbs and you don’t exercise you need more and more medication. What should be happening is that you should be walking an hour a day and replacing high GI food with low GI food. Medication is the last resort except for most people it is the first choice! On top of your diabetes you have other conditions that need exercise! One hour walking each day !!!! If you cant walk because of your legs you need to swim until you can walk or do both. You should remove flour and sugar and root veges from your diet replacing them with other vegetables and changing fruit types. eg pineapple and bananas get changed to cherries and peaches. Buy a book on food GI and eat low GI food. I am sorry this is harsh, its exactly what I told myself looking in the mirror after many years of relying on medication and dieticians. Diabetes is a personal disease – only you can manage it. Ask yourself which came first? the hypertension hyperlipidemia or the diabetes? All your illnesses are continuing alarm bells that your body need better food and exercise…… Your last question – no don’t shut up ever ….. ask ask ask – Do not rely on any one source of information, Retake control of your body!
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Background – I’m a 28 year old with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and ’statistically borderline’ diabetes. I say this not to downplay the seriousness (or permanency) of the condition, but to distinguish the fact that my bg numbers (at their apex prior to treatment) were on the edge between IGT and diabetes and never way out of control. In fact, my peak hba1c was 5.1%, which would indicate the problem was caught in its infancy and that I didn’t endure much in the way of sustained spikes. When my high blood pressure and high cholesterol were diagnosed, my bg numbers were normal. A year into the successful treatment of the blood pressure and cholesterol and . . . wham! blood glucose numbers started saying goodbye to normal, and my doctor intervened further. My current drug regimen looks like this – 2000 mg Metformin daily (blood sugar) 20 mg Lisinopril daily (blood pressure) 5 mg Bisoprolol daily (blood pressure) 20 mg Lovastatin daily (cholesterol) 20 mg Fluoxetine daily (depression) 81 mg aspirin (cardiovascular risk factors) I feel very fortunate that my condition was discovered within 12 months of its detectability in a blood test, and that this list of drugs presently allows me to manage the conditions. I am aware that the utilization of multiple drugs (in treatment of the typical diabetic and his horde of conditions) is commonplace. Let’s arrive at my question – pretend that the rest of my life is nearly perfect. No additional conditions come up. No cancer. No MS. No Parkinson’s. Nothing. Furthermore, my current diabetes/blood pressure/cholesterol treatment plan always works perfectly and never requires modification (keep in mind I do not actually consider this a possibility). Are the long term effects of consuming as many medications as I do likely to form a problem of their own (such as kidney and liver damage and who knows what else)? I worry about this in light of the fact that I have 40 years to go before I can reach a normal life span, yet my drug diet is already comparable to your average senior citizen. Should I just shut the hell up and be happy with my good fortune?
Response:
What should be happening is that you should be walking an hour a day and replacing high GI food with low GI food.
The food I am doing. No white flour, rice or potatoes. No pineapple. Using TOPS 1220 cal. food program. Weigh in is Thursday. There is no way I can walk an hour a day at one time. Maybe broken up into segments. Along with the new diagnosis of diabetes, I have fibromyalgia. I have a TotalGym. Would that be the right type of exercise? Betty.
Response:
- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – www.mendosa.com What should be happening is that you should be walking an hour a day and replacing high GI food with low GI food. Where can I find a list or book about GI of foods? This is all totally new to me as of last week. Doc said he is not going to treat at this time. I am to get the weight off and exercise. One test he did was 6.6. Said anything below 7 was acceptable. Any help appreciated. Betty.
Try searching the web for glycemic index, or try a boot store. Barnes and Noble carries a book with a list. Speaking only for myself, Joe Durusau
Response:
http://www.mendosa.com/gi.htm. – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Where can I find a list or book about GI of foods? This is all totally new to me as of last week. Doc said he is not going to treat at this time. I am to get the weight off and exercise. One test he did was 6.6. Said anything below 7 was acceptable. Any help appreciated. Betty.
Response:
What should be happening is that you should be walking an hour a day and replacing high GI food with low GI food.
Where can I find a list or book about GI of foods? This is all totally new to me as of last week. Doc said he is not going to treat at this time. I am to get the weight off and exercise. One test he did was 6.6. Said anything below 7 was acceptable. Any help appreciated. Betty.
Response:
www.mendosa.com – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – What should be happening is that you should be walking an hour a day and replacing high GI food with low GI food. Where can I find a list or book about GI of foods? This is all totally new to me as of last week. Doc said he is not going to treat at this time. I am to get the weight off and exercise. One test he did was 6.6. Said anything below 7 was acceptable. Any help appreciated. Betty.
Response:
Actually, I am not overweight (nor was I). In fact, I have dropped nearly 20 pounds in the past 5 months (passively) and that puts me at 5′10" and 160 pounds today. At my heaviest, I was 180 pounds. Though I didn’t mention the exercise and diet components of my current treatment plan, rest assured they are indeed in place. My exercise includes walking for 30 minutes daily. As far as diet goes – it’s an evolutionary thing. I started by simply eating less (with no regard to what I was eating, just consuming less of everything). Moving on, I then put an end to my ‘feast or famine’ policy of eating, which I am certain is bad for diabetic type conditions no matter WHAT it is that you are eating (let alone the garbage that has made up my diet for 28 years). I started eating smaller meals in regular cycles. Eventually, I started tinkering with the actual choices in my diet. I eliminated Coke and Mountain Dew entirely in favor of water. I look at this as a significant development (39g of sugar per can of soda X 6 = a lot of sugar). Recently, I have nearly eliminated bread from the picture. This evolution will go on like this until I find a decent balance between nutrition and tastiness. I’m on top of my condition so early in the game thay I expect to have the luxury of eating a ‘traditional’ healthy diet (everything in moderation) as opposed to going nuts and eating like the full-on diabetic (counting carbs and the like). Just a theory, though. I won’t be entirely crestfallen if this turns out to be fallacy. For those that like the shortened version – at no point did I, do I or will I ever believe that my laundry list of medications (no matter how effective they are now and no matter how early my condition was detected and managed) is a substitute for the diet and exercise part of the diabetic’s ‘triangle’ of successful treatment.
Response:
My question to you would be… Other than the meds, what else are you doing to ensure yourself a good long healthy life? Exercise? Food? Meds are just one leg of the health tripod. Instead of worrying, take a hike ; ) Literally. If you do ALL you can, then that’s all you can do. Jennifer – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Background – I’m a 28 year old with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and ’statistically borderline’ diabetes. I say this not to downplay the seriousness (or permanency) of the condition, but to distinguish the fact that my bg numbers (at their apex prior to treatment) were on the edge between IGT and diabetes and never way out of control. In fact, my peak hba1c was 5.1%, which would indicate the problem was caught in its infancy and that I didn’t endure much in the way of sustained spikes. When my high blood pressure and high cholesterol were diagnosed, my bg numbers were normal. A year into the successful treatment of the blood pressure and cholesterol and . . . wham! blood glucose numbers started saying goodbye to normal, and my doctor intervened further. My current drug regimen looks like this – 2000 mg Metformin daily (blood sugar) 20 mg Lisinopril daily (blood pressure) 5 mg Bisoprolol daily (blood pressure) 20 mg Lovastatin daily (cholesterol) 20 mg Fluoxetine daily (depression) 81 mg aspirin (cardiovascular risk factors) I feel very fortunate that my condition was discovered within 12 months of its detectability in a blood test, and that this list of drugs presently allows me to manage the conditions. I am aware that the utilization of multiple drugs (in treatment of the typical diabetic and his horde of conditions) is commonplace. Let’s arrive at my question – pretend that the rest of my life is nearly perfect. No additional conditions come up. No cancer. No MS. No Parkinson’s. Nothing. Furthermore, my current diabetes/blood pressure/cholesterol treatment plan always works perfectly and never requires modification (keep in mind I do not actually consider this a possibility). Are the long term effects of consuming as many medications as I do likely to form a problem of their own (such as kidney and liver damage and who knows what else)? I worry about this in light of the fact that I have 40 years to go before I can reach a normal life span, yet my drug diet is already comparable to your average senior citizen. Should I just shut the hell up and be happy with my good fortune?
Response:
Background – I’m a 28 year old with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and ’statistically borderline’ diabetes. I say this not to downplay the seriousness (or permanency) of the condition, but to distinguish the fact that my bg numbers (at their apex prior to treatment) were on the edge between IGT and diabetes and never way out of control. In fact, my peak hba1c was 5.1%, which would indicate the problem was caught in its infancy and that I didn’t endure much in the way of sustained spikes. When my high blood pressure and high cholesterol were diagnosed, my bg numbers were normal. A year into the successful treatment of the blood pressure and cholesterol and . . . wham! blood glucose numbers started saying goodbye to normal, and my doctor intervened further. My current drug regimen looks like this – 2000 mg Metformin daily (blood sugar) 20 mg Lisinopril daily (blood pressure) 5 mg Bisoprolol daily (blood pressure) 20 mg Lovastatin daily (cholesterol) 20 mg Fluoxetine daily (depression) 81 mg aspirin (cardiovascular risk factors) I feel very fortunate that my condition was discovered within 12 months of its detectability in a blood test, and that this list of drugs presently allows me to manage the conditions. I am aware that the utilization of multiple drugs (in treatment of the typical diabetic and his horde of conditions) is commonplace. Let’s arrive at my question – pretend that the rest of my life is nearly perfect. No additional conditions come up. No cancer. No MS. No Parkinson’s. Nothing. Furthermore, my current diabetes/blood pressure/cholesterol treatment plan always works perfectly and never requires modification (keep in mind I do not actually consider this a possibility). Are the long term effects of consuming as many medications as I do likely to form a problem of their own (such as kidney and liver damage and who knows what else)? I worry about this in light of the fact that I have 40 years to go before I can reach a normal life span, yet my drug diet is already comparable to your average senior citizen. Should I just shut the hell up and be happy with my good fortune?