That depends on your blood sugar.
Most experts recommend checking blood sugar between four times per day and four times per week,
depending on your blood sugar control and stability.
Not exact matches
Ella is right when she says that they are all unrefined thus not bad for you, but it
depends on your sweet tooth There are also fats, proteins and fibers so the
blood sugar level should stay pretty stable Hope this helps.
* You can switch out these fruits
depending on which ones you like; I prefer those listed here since they don't mess with my
blood sugar levels, they aid in digestion, and they enhance the flavor of the smoothie in general.
This is the best for you and your baby, and your exact nutrient demands will
depend on how active you are, how much your baby is nursing, your
blood sugar tolerance, weight, and a variety of other factors.
The frequency of
blood sugar tests will, in part,
depend on your test results soon after you deliver your baby.
Insulin levels rise and fall
depending on the body's energy needs and how much
blood sugar is available for storage.
Blood sugar levels vacillate widely
depending on a number of factors such as what someone chooses to eat and whether they exercise.
It also
depends on how level your
blood sugar is and if you're getting those hypoglycaemic symptoms, sometimes those people need to increase their protein, while decreasing some of the carbohydrates, especially those refined carbohydrates, and give their body more fibre - rich carbohydrates that the body has to work harder to extract and release into the bloodstream.
Insulin secretion and
blood sugar levels all
depend on the type carbohydrates you consume.
It may
depend on the other grains and the grain ratios in the bread
on what the
sugar spike ends up being, but the general public may be concerned with
blood sugar spikes can certainly enjoy some bread of some types.
* You can switch out these fruits
depending on which ones you like; I prefer those listed here since they don't mess with my
blood sugar levels, they aid in digestion, and they enhance the flavor of the smoothie in general.
So
depending on starch, or no starch.Keeping grains out, keeping inflammatory foods out, keeping toxins out, and stabilizing your
blood sugar, or not letting your
blood sugar drop and not letting yourself get hungry is gonna be a great starting point for most people.
Yes, a blended smoothie * might * cause a bigger
blood sugar spike and insulin rebound, but this
depends on the ingredients, and is significantly less than the same effect found with straight up juice.
In addition, don't forget that balanced
blood sugar levels don't only
depend on what you eat, but also how and when you eat.
Although agave may have a low glycemic index and does not spike
blood sugars like other sweeteners can, the truth is MOST agave syrup has a higher fructose content than any commercial sweetener — ranging from 70 to 97 percent,
depending on the brand, which is far higher than high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which averages 55 percent.
This all
depends on what you aim to achieve for a low - carbohydrate diet — you may not necessarily be looking to lose weight, and you may be following a low - carb diet in order to control
blood sugar levels for diabetes, pre-diabetes and many other ailments.
It's obvious that everyone is going to have a different level of tolerance for carbohydrates —
depending on our previous intake of carbohydrate, what we're used to keeping our
blood sugar levels at, and how active we are in using up that energy from carbohydrates.
«As it was explained to me by Craig Thompson, who has done much of this research and is now president of Memorial Sloan - Kettering Cancer Center in New York, the cells of many human cancers come to
depend on insulin to provide the fuel (
blood sugar) and materials they need to grow and multiply.
So being healthy
depends on establishing both level
blood sugars and restorative sleep.
Depending on your post-meal
blood sugars, your doctor may tell you to begin taking mealtime insulin with your largest meal to start.
Ideally our
blood sugar is so
on point that we have 3 big meals a day (or 2 for some people, maybe 4 for others), spaced out by about 5 to 6 hours, and then a nice, long nightly fast of about anywhere from 12 to 15 hours, or longer,
depending on your body, goals, and so
on.
In a nutshell, the glycemic index rates foods
on a scale of 1 to 100
depending on how quickly or slowly the carbs impact your
blood sugar levels.
It also
depends on individual body responses (some people will experience
blood sugar spikes even with small amounts).
The amount of insulin secreted
depends on how high your
blood sugar is AND how well your body heeds insulin's message.
And
depending on your personal carb tolerance, they may greatly reduce your ability to meet goals for weight loss or maintenance,
blood sugar control, and / or staying in ketosis.
However, this dramatic
blood sugar spike and dip
depends on which food is being juiced or blended.
Depending on your symptoms, Anne may also recommend advanced laboratory tests for gluten and / or other food sensitivities, GI imbalances, adrenal and
blood sugar imbalances, hypothyroid, autoimmune thyroid, anemia, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, leaky gut, hidden infections, methylation defects etc..
Keep in mind that the insulin - and
blood sugar - lowering effects of protein
depend on the type of protein consumed.
Dr. D'Adamo suggests that the type of
sugars that get bound
depend a lot
on your
blood type and the type of food that you consume.
Depending on the results of the bloodwork, dogs need their
blood sugar monitored regularly, to receive dextrose IV to avoid a
blood sugar crash, and to get medications to protect the liver from potential damage.
I put all my people with
blood sugar levels that are highly dysregulated
on insulin manager taking 1 - 2 caps with each meal
depending upon the carbohydrate content of the meal.
The amount they increase your
blood sugar, however, will
depend on the type you choose, how much you eat and what you eat with your noodles.
When ingested, carbohydrates cause the body to respond by releasing insulin into the
blood stream — a hormone responsible for shuttling the broken down carbohydrates (which break into molecules of
sugar) into the cells to be used for energy production (immediate or stored energy
depending on what the body needs at the time).
As for oatmeal negatively impacting your
blood sugar, that really
depends on the type of oatmeal you eat.
Whether intermittent fasting will help you manage your Hashimoto's hypothyroidism
depends largely
on how stable your
blood sugar is and how sturdy your adrenal function is.
Your
blood sugar levels will ebb and flow throughout the day
depending on when and what you've eaten last, but those are good rules of thumb.
The effect of green plantains
on your
blood sugar will
depend in part
on how much you eat, how they are prepared and what other foods you eat at the same time.
Foods with carbohydrates affect your body's
blood sugar levels differently,
depending on their individual ingredients and nutrient profile.
Lactose would have a effect
on blood sugar but it
depends on the amount.
In such a case it is important to add insulin to prevent
blood sugar to raise too high, the amount needed
depends mainly
on the amount of carbs in the food.
How a carbohydrate - containing food affects
blood sugar depends on how quickly the digestive system can break apart the food into its component
sugar molecules.
But don't go crazy here now — chocolate also has
sugar added in various amounts
depending on the type you're eating, and
sugar increases inflammation, which can be a problem for
blood vessels and your
blood pressure.
However, this can
depend on how young you were when you were diagnosed with type 2, how well controlled your
blood sugar has been over time, or the progression of the condition over time.
That of course
depends somewhat
on blood sugar control and I certainly will be doing more
on that.
How long your cat is likely to live
depends on how early the problem is discovered and how well you succeed in controlling your cats
blood sugar level.
But you do it, you take the medications, you monitor your diet, you check your
blood sugar, you go for a walk - every day - because your life
depends on it.
Alcohol can cause either high or low
blood sugar,
depending on how much you drink and if you eat at the same time.
Depending on where and what you read those vital stats range from monitoring hear rate,
blood pressure, sleep tracking, oxygen saturation, and even
blood sugar tracking - ideal for diabetics.