Lower
Your Grains & Lower Your Insulin Levels! A Novel Way To Treat
Hypoglycemia.
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Hypoglycemia is a common problem. Over the past fifteen years, our
dietary establishment has made a virtual industry of extolling the
virtues of carbohydrates.
We're constantly told that carbohydrates are the good guys of nutrition,
and that, if we eat large amounts of them, the world should be a
better place. In such a world, the experts tell us, there will be
no heart disease and no obesity.
Under such guidance, Americans are gobbling breads, cereals, and
pastas as if there were no tomorrow, trying desperately to reach
that 80 to 85 percent of total calories advocated by the high-carb
extremists.
This creates a terrible paradox: people are eating less fat and
getting fatter! No medical authority will tell you that excess body
fat makes you healthier. There is but one alarming conclusion to
reach: a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet may be dangerous to your
health.
Overeating carbohydrate foods can prevent a higher percentage of
fats from being used for energy, and lead to a decrease in endurance
and an increase in fat storage.
Eating fat does not make you fat. It's your body's response to
excess carbohydrates in your diet that makes you fat. Your body
has a limited capacity to store excess carbohydrates, but it can
easily convert those excess carbohydrates into excess body fat.
It's hard to lose weight by simply restricting calories. Eating
less and losing excess body fat do not automatically go hand in
hand.
Low-calorie, high-carbohydrate diets generate a series of biochemical
signals in your body that will take you out of the balance, making
it more difficult to access stored body fat for energy. Result:
you'll reach a weight-loss plateau, beyond which you simply can't
lose any more weight.
Diets based on choice restriction and calorie limits usually fail.
People on restrictive diets get tired of feeling hungry and deprived.
They go off their diets, put the weight back on (primarily as increased
body fat), and then feel bad about themselves for not having enough
will power, discipline, or motivation.
Weight loss has little to do with willpower. You need information,
not will power. If you change what you eat, you don't have to be
overly concerned about how much you eat. Adhering to a diet of low
carbohydrate meals, you can eat enough to feel satisfied and still
wind up losing fat-without obsessively counting calories or fat
grams.
Food Can Be Good or Bad
The ratio of macronutrients protein, carbohydrate, and fat-in the
meals you eat is the key to permanent weight loss and optimal health.
Unless you understand the rules that control the powerful biochemical
responses generated by food, you will never achieve optimal wellness.
Unfortunately, many people don't really know what a carbohydrate
is. Most people will say carbohydrates are sweets and pasta. Ask
them what a vegetable or fruit is, and they'll probably reply that
it's a vegetable or fruit-as if that were a food type all its own,
a food type that they can eat in unlimited amounts without gaining
weight.
Well, this may come as a surprise, but all of the above-sweets
and pasta, vegetables and fruits-are carbohydrates. Carbohydrates
are merely different forms of simple sugars linked together in polymers-something
like edible plastic.
Of course, we all need a certain amount of carbohydrates in our
diet. The body requires a continual intake of carbohydrates to feed
the brain, which uses glucose (a form of sugar) as its primary energy
source.
In fact, the brain is a virtual glucose hog, gobbling more than
two thirds of the circulating carbohydrates in the bloodstream while
you are at rest. To feed this glucose hog, the body continually
takes carbohydrates and converts them to glucose.
It's actually a bit more complicated than that. Any carbohydrates
not immediately used by the body will be stored in the form of glycogen
(a long string of glucose molecules linked together).
The body has two storage sites for glycogen: the liver and the
muscles. The glycogen stored in the muscles is inaccessible to the
brain. Only the glycogen stored in the liver can be broken down
and sent back to the bloodstream so as to maintain adequate blood
sugar levels for proper brain function.
The liver's capacity to store carbohydrates in the form of glycogen
is very limited and can be easily depleted within ten to twelve
hours. So the liver's glycogen reserves must be maintained on a
continual basis. That's why we eat carbohydrates.
The question no one has bothered to ask until now is this: what
happens when you eat too much carbohydrate? Here's the answer: whether
it's being stored in the liver or the muscles, the total storage
capacity of the body for carbohydrate is really quite limited.
If you're an average person, you can store about three hundred
to four hundred grams of carbohydrate in your muscles, but you can't
get at that carbohydrate. In the liver, where carbohydrates are
accessible for glucose conversion, you can store only about sixty
to ninety grams.
This is equivalent to about two cups of cooked pasta or three typical
candy bars, and it represents your total reserve capacity to keep
the brain working properly.
Once the glycogen levels are filled in both the liver and the muscles,
excess carbohydrates have just one fate: to be converted into fat
and stored in the adipose, that is, fatty, tissue.
In a nutshell, even though carbohydrates themselves are fat-free,
excess carbohydrates ends up as excess fat. That's not the worst
of it. Any meal or snack high in carbohydrates will generate a rapid
rise in blood glucose. To adjust for this rapid rise, the pancreas
secretes the hormone insulin into the bloodstream. Insulin then
lowers the levels of blood glucose.
The problem is that insulin is essentially a storage hormone, evolved
to put aside excess carbohydrate calories in the form of fat in
case of future famine. So the insulin that's stimulated by excess
carbohydrates aggressively promotes the accumulation of body fat.
In other words, when we eat too much carbohydrate, we're essentially
sending a hormonal message, via insulin, to the body (actually,
to the adipose cells). The message: "Store fat."
Hold on; it gets even worse. Not only do increased insulin levels
tell the body to store carbohydrates as fat, they also tell it not
to release any stored fat. This makes it impossible for you to use
your own stored body fat for energy.
So the excess carbohydrates in your diet not only make you fat,
they make sure you stay fat. It's a double whammy, and it can be
lethal.
Insulin is released by the pancreas after you eat carbohydrates.
This causes a rise in blood sugar. Insulin assures your cells receive
some blood sugar necessary for life, and increases glycogen storage.
However, it also drives your body to use more carbohydrate, and
less fat, as fuel. And, insulin converts almost half of your dietary
carbohydrate to fat for storage. If you want to use more fats for
energy, the insulin response must be moderated.
Diets high in refined sugars release more insulin thereby allowing
less stored fat to be burned. High insulin levels also suppress
two important hormones: glucagon and growth hormone. Glucagon promotes
the burning of fat and sugar. Growth hormone is used for muscle
development and building new muscle mass.
Insulin also causes hunger. As blood sugar increases following
a carbohydrate meal, insulin rises with the eventual result of lower
blood sugar. This results in hunger, often only a couple of hours
(or less) after the meal.
Cravings, usually for sweets, are frequently part of this cycle,
leading you to resort to snacking, often on more carbohydrates.
Not eating makes you feel ravenous shaky, moody and ready to "crash."
If the problem is chronic, you never get rid of that extra stored
fat, and your energy is adversely affected.
Does this sound like you? The best suggestion for anyone wanting
to utilize more fats is to moderate the insulin response by limiting
(ideally, eliminating) the intake of refined sugars, and keeping
all other carbohydrate intake to about 40% of the diet. Generally,
non-carbohydrate foods-proteins and fats-don't produce much insulin.
Insulin responses can vary greatly from person to person. But generally,
more refined foods evoke a stronger and/or more rapid insulin reaction.
One reason for this is refined carbohydrates lack the natural fiber
which helps minimize the carbohydrate/insulin response.
Consumption of natural fiber with carbohydrates can reduce the
extreme blood sugar reactions described above. Low-fat diets cause
quicker digestion and absorption of carbohydrates in the form of
sugar. By adding some fats to the diet, digestion and absorption
is slower, and the insulin reaction is moderated.
Recommendations for them include long-term restriction of carbohydrates
and an increase in dietary fats. For some of these people, it means
lowering carbohydrate intake to below 40%, sometimes even as low
as 20%. By moderating carbohydrate intake you can increase your
fat burning as an optimal and efficient source of almost unlimited
energy.
Perhaps a third to a half or more of our population is unable to
process carbohydrates-sugars and starches efficiently. In many people
it's due to genetics, with lifestyle contributing to the condition.
This can be termed insulin resistance or IR. Like many problems,
IR is an individual one, affecting different people different ways.
You must determine if you are carbohydrate intolerant, and if so,
to what degree. Blood tests will only diagnose the problem in the
later stages, but the symptoms may have begun years earlier.
As we now know, insulin has many functions. While it can't get
glucose into the cells efficiently when they're in a state of insulin
resistance, insulin still performs its other tasks, including converting
carbohydrates to fat and inhibiting stored fat from being burned.
In a normal person, 40% of the carbohydrates eaten is converted
to fat. In the IR person, that number may be much higher. Many people
with IR have a family history of diabetes.
Don't think of IR itself as a disease, although left unchecked,
it can create problems that lead to disease. It may be quite normal
for some humans to be unable to eat large or even moderate amounts
of carbohydrates.
As a matter of fact, we evolved for hundreds of thousands of years
from the so-called cave man's diet," which consisted solely
of meat and vegetables.
With the onset of modern civilization about 5,000 years ago, our
physiology suddenly was asked to digest and metabolize larger amounts
of sugar and starch especially refined sugars. But if we are unable
to utilize the amount of carbohydrates we eat, certain symptoms
will develop.
Below is a list of some of the most common complaints of people
with IR Many symptoms occur immediately following a meal of carbo-hydrates,
and others are constant. Keep in mind that these symptoms may also
be related to other problems.
1. Fatigue. Whether you call it fatigue or exhaustion, the most
common feature of IR is that it wears people out. Some are tired
just in the morning or afternoon; others are exhausted all day.
2. Brain fogginess. Sometimes the fatigue of IR is physical, but
often it's mental (as opposed to psychological); the inability to
concentrate is the most evident symptom. Loss of creativity, poor
memory, failing or poor grades in school often accompany IR, as
do various forms of "learning disabilities."
3. Low blood sugar. Brief, mild periods of low blood sugar are
normal during the day, especially if meals are not eaten on a regular
schedule. But prolonged periods of this "hypoglycemia,"
accompanied by many of the symptoms listed here, especially mental
and physical fatigue, are not normal.
Feeling jittery agitated and moody is common in IR, with an almost
immediate relief once food is eaten. Dizziness is also common, as
is the craving for sweets, chocolate or caffeine.
These bouts occur more frequently before meals or first thing in
the morning. The old hypoglycemic diet, still in use today, recommends
frequent snacks, and individuals with IR usually know to eat often.
However, the hypoglycemic diet contains too much carbohydrate for
most IR people.
4. Intestinal bloating. Most intestinal gas is produced from dietary
carbohydrates. IR sufferers who eat carbohydrates suffer from gas,
lots of it. Antacids or other remedies for symptomatic relief, are
not very successful in dealing with the problem.
Sometimes the intestinal distress becomes quite severe, resulting
in a diagnosis of "colitis" or "ileitis," although
this is usually not a true disease state. However, IR is often associated
with true gastrointestinal disease, which must be differentiated
from simple intestinal bloating.
5. Sleepiness. Many people with IR get sleepy immediately after
meals containing more than 20% or 30% carbohydrates. This is typically
a pasta meal, or even a meat meal which includes bread or potatoes
and a sweet dessert.
6. Increased fat storage and weight. For most people, too much
weight is too much fat. In males, a large abdomen is the more evident
and earliest sign of IR. In females, it's prominent buttocks, frequently
accompanied by "chipmunk cheeks."
7. Increased triglycerides. High triglycerides in the blood are
often seen in overweight persons. But even those who are not too
fat may have stores of fat in their arteries as a result of IR.
These triglycerides are the direct result of carbohydrates from
the diet being converted by insulin. In my experience, fasting triglyceride
levels over 100 may be an indication of a carbohydrate problem,
even though 100 is in the so-called "normal" range.
8. Increased blood pressure. It is well known that most people
with hypertension have too much insulin and are IR. It is often
possible to show a direct relationship between the level of insulin
and the level of blood pressure: as insulin levels elevate, so does
blood pressure.
9. Depression. Because carbohydrates are a natural "downer,"
depressing the brain, it is not uncommon to see many depressed persons
also having IR.
Carbohydrates do this by changing the brain chemistry. Carbohydrates
increase serotonin, which produces a depressing or sleepy feeling.
This is the reason nice hotels place candy on your pillow in the
evening; it literally helps you sleep. (Protein, on the other hand,
is a brain stimulant, picking you up mentally.
Here's another example of how trends distort the real picture:
many people have been taught that sugar is stimulating. This is
a significant consideration for those trying to learn, whether at
school, home or work.)
10. Insulin Resistance is also prevalent in persons addicted to
alcohol, caffeine, cigarettes or other drugs. Often, the drug is
the secondary problem, with IR being the primary one. Treating this
primary problem should obviously be a major focus of any therapy.
IR sufferers may have other symptoms as well. However, when a person
with this problem finally lowers carbohydrate intake to tolerable
levels, many if not most of the other symptoms may disappear.
With the stress of IR eliminated, the body is finally able to correct
many of its own problems. It is possible, although unlikely, that
so many of these symptoms can be found in someone who tolerates
carbohydrates quite well.
RULES OF THE ROAD TO REACH BALANCE
1. Protein. Know how much protein your body needs. Never consume
more protein than your body requires. And never consume less. For
precise measurements our nurse can determine that for you.
You can also perform the calculations reviewed in The Zone. Generally
adult protein requirements range from a low of 35 grams per day
or a sedentary 100 pound obese individual to as much as 200 grams
per day for a lean heavily exercising 250 pound athlete.
You should have protein as EVERY meal and the total per day should
equal your daily requirement. For every three grams of protein at
a meal you need to have four grams of carbohydrate and 1.5 grams
of fat.
You can multiply protein by 1.25 to obtain the amout of carbohdrate
and by 0.5 to obtain the amount of fat. This is a rough estimate
and you should not become overwhelemed trying to get this absolutely
precise. It is important though to be in the general area.
Corrinne Netzer wrote a book The Complete Book of Food Counts that
can help you make this calculation. You might also want to make
an appointment with our diet counsellor Anne to help you with this
process.
Choose your protein based on those recommended for your blood type.
This can be found in Dr. D'Adamo's book Eat Right For Your Type.
If you are seriously ill you should have your blood subtyped so
we can provide an even more accurate recommendation for you.
2. Carbohydrate. You should also chose your carbohydrates from
Dr. D'Adamo's book. If you are insulin resistant, (have high blood
pressure, high cholesterol, high blood pressure or are overweight)
then you need to specifically restrict your carbohydrates based
on the Heller's book The Carbohydrate Addict's Lifespan Program.
Combining all three authors is the most powerful method know to
lower your insulin levels and produce optimum health.
If you find yourself hungry and craving sugar or sweets two to
three hours after a meal, you probably consumed too many carbohydrates
that last meal. Whenever you have a problem with hunger or carbohydrate
cravings, look to your last meal for a clue to the reason why.
No matter how consistently you follow this dietary strategy, you
are bound to make mistakes. This is especially true at parties or
when traveling. Remember, if you're only unbalanced for a short
period of time, you're only one meal away from rebalancing. It's
like falling off a bike-you just get back up and continue your journey.
3. Fat. Choose your fats based on Dr. D'Adamo's recommendations.
Most people can tolerate olive oil and is the oil of choice. It
is best purchased in small glass bottles. Fish is a good source
of EPA which is beneficial fat that will help balance out your hormone
levels and decrease inflammation.
4. Water. Try to drink at least 64 ounces of pure water per day.
If you are a heavy caffeine user, gradually reduce caffeine intake
to zero whenever possible as the breakdown products of caffeine
will tend to increase insulin levels.
5. Exercise. Try to get 30 to 60 minutes of walking in four to
five days a week if the weather permits. If you are seriously debilitated
you will have to wait until your health improves. As you are healthier
and if you are blood type 0 or B you can shift to more aggressive
exercises. |