How to Eat to Avoid Insulin Spikes
Simple tweaks to your diet can
help prevent insulin spikes.
Food is the most potent weapon in
your fight against diabetes, says Mark Hyman, MD, author of The Blood Sugar
Solution (Little, Brown and Company). Evidence shows that eating the right
foods can manage your blood sugar level and, according to Hyman, even help
reverse diabetes.
It's easier than you might think.
Consistently tune into the following factors when choosing your foods and
you'll be rewarded with stable blood sugar, insulin, and energy levels
throughout the day.
Glycemic Load
Glycemic load (GL) measures how
much carbohydrates in a food affect your blood sugar level. (Carbohydrates is
the food group that impacts blood sugar the most; protein and fat don't as
much.) Factors such as fiber content, serving size, and even shape come into
play when the body is breaking down food into sugar molecules. The more
challenging a food is to break down, the slower it digests and the more stable
your blood sugar will be. Foods made with refined carbs, such as white pasta,
are digested quickly and have a higher GL that causes blood sugar to rise
rapidly, but foods made with complex carbs, such as whole-wheat pasta, have a
lower GL that has a much smaller affect on blood sugar.
Portion Size
"Excessive portion sizes can
impact blood sugar," says Amy Jamieson-Petonic, RD, spokesperson for the
Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, and director of coaching at the Cleveland
Clinic. A large meal means more sugar (from carbohydrates) enters the
bloodstream at one time. Eating smaller portions beefed up by low GL snacks,
such as nuts, keeps your blood sugar even throughout the day.
Shape of Food
Food that's in its full
"package," such as a whole grain, takes longer to digest than food
that's been partially or fully processed. Whole barley, for instance, has a GL
that's less than half that of cracked barley.
Food Combinations
What you eat with your
carbohydrates matters, too. "Protein and fat slow the absorption of
glucose into the bloodstream, which helps prevent [insulin] spikes and
drops," says Jamieson-Petonic. Pairing an apple with peanut butter or
serving rice with beans and avocado can lessen the blood-sugar impact of the
whole plate.
That all might sound pretty
complex, but the bottom line is simple: The less processed your food and the
more work your body has to do to digest it, the better it is for your blood
sugar. "It's about eating real food," Hyman says. If a food's label
reads like a science project filled with ingredients you don't recognize,
"we shouldn't eat it," Hyman says. "If it's raised in a field,
we're good."
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