Diabetes and Diet: A Crucial Combination for Health
By
Angie Smith
With the rise in Type II diabetes over the
last couple of decades, many people have taken notice of
the dangers that are associated with its development as well
as some of the potential causes. But many people have yet
to understand what leads a body to have difficulties absorbing
sugar and what options they have for regaining their health.
The growing concern is in the connection between the rising obesity epidemic
and its link to Type II diabetes. About 80 percent of Type II diabetics are
obese. The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine has said that the
new approach to treating diabetes focuses on fat consumption instead of the
old method, which made the elimination of refined sugars and starchy foods
the main goal. They explain this by saying that the more fat there is in a
diet the harder time insulin has getting sugar into the cells. As of yet, there
is no known cause for this, but it has been proven that by reducing fat intake
as well as excess body fat, a person can help their body’s insulin maintain
a proper sugar balance.
Modern diabetic treatment programs, according to the Committee, drastically
reduce meats, high-fat dairy products, and oils, while at the same time increase
grains, legumes, and vegetables. One study they illustrated found that 21 of
23 patients who were taking oral medication for diabetes, and 13 of 17 patients
on insulin were able to get off their medications after 26 days on a near-vegetarian
diet and exercise program.
The benefit to a vegetarian diet for those who have or are at risk of diabetes,
is that most vegetarian diets are low in saturated fat and cholesterol. Saturated
fat is most commonly found in meat, eggs and dairy products and it has been
linked to high cholesterol levels as well as weight gain. Unsaturated fat,
which is found in olive and canola oil as well as nuts and seeds, is much healthier
for the body and can help to keep weight and cholesterol levels down.
It is estimated that 17 million people have diabetes and around 95 percent
of those cases are Type II, which most commonly affects adults over the age
of 40. According to Jay B. Lavine, M.D., a Diplomat of both the American Board
of Ophthalmology and the National Board of Medical Examiners, Type II diabetes
is associated with obesity, inactivity, family history of diabetes and ethnicity.
Lavine said that the difference between Type I and Type II diabetes, is that
Type I generally requires insulin treatment and it was formerly known as juvenile
diabetes. Type I appears to be an autoimmune disease in which the body’s
immune system destroys the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. In Type
II diabetes, however, the body still produces insulin, but the body is resistant
to its effects and so the sugar is unable to easily absorb into the cells where
it is needed, and backs up in the bloodstream. Lavine said that both types
of diabetes though, develop the same complications.
The good news for Type II diabetics, Lavine said, is if they change their lifestyle
by adopting healthier eating habits, described as a high fiber, plant-based
diet, and lose their excess weight, the diabetes can often be reversed and the need for medication eliminated.
Sources
Lavine, Jay B. “Diabetes and Diet.” October 2003. http://www.vegparadise.com/otherbirds312.html
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. ”Diet
and Diabetes.” October 2003. http://www.pcrm.org/health/prevmed/diabetes.html
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