TREATMENT OF DIABETES

Treatment of Diabetes, Nutrition and Diabetes,Cuse of Diabetes, Symptoms of Diabetes, Stage of Diabetes, Diet in Diabetes...

Monday, February 1, 2010

The Diabetes Food Pyramid: Fruit

Questions about fruit keep coming up. Will fruit juice increase blood glucose levels more quickly than a piece of fruit? Should you avoid fruit in the morning because your blood glucose might be higher than at other times in the day? Is it better to eat fruit with meals rather than snacks?
All carbohydrates, whether rice, potatoes or fruit juice, raise blood glucose about the same. In general, an equal amount of carbohydrate (15 grams) such as 1/2 cup grapefruit juice or 4 slices of Melba toast, should raise blood glucose at about the same speed and about the same amount.
However, that varies based on several factors -- whether you eat a piece of fruit after a high-fat meal or sip fruit juice on an empty stomach, what your blood glucose is when you eat the fruit, whether the fruit is cooked or raw, how much diabetes medication you have in your body, etc.
Also, people have individual differences. So, your challenge is to find out how fruit works in your body. Does eating fruit in the morning make it more difficult to keep your blood glucose controlled through the day? Does one particular kind of fruit send your blood glucose soaring? Or does a piece of fruit as an afternoon snack give you just enough carbohydrate

No comments:

Post a Comment