As long as you keep up with your insulin injections, you can eat what you want. I have it, and i know i can eat what i want but i eat it in moderation, so i dont ridk any hypers/hypos
There are lots of cookbooks that specialize in diabetic cooking. The biggest thing involved is that you need to substitute certain ingredients (like sugar, for example) for something that is safe for a diabetic.
Sugar levels in a diabetic child can be controlled by diet and medication. Insulin and insulin substitutes may be used to keep levels in safe ranges.
A good recipe for a diabetic safe carrot cake would be one that uses artificial or natural sweeteners as opposed to sugar. artificial sweeteners tend not to raise blood pressure as much as sugar does.
A diabetic pound cake recipe is a pound cake recipe that presumably substitutes the sugar in the normal cake recipe for Splenda or some other diabetic safe sugar substitute. There are many such recipes you can find on the web.
I am a diabetic and this product is a very good sugar substitute that is safe for us diabetics.
In general yes it is safe to feed the hole family. They usually consist of less sugar, which benefits everybody in the family, but it might not impress the kids.
bananas contain 12.23 grams of sugar per 100 grams of fruit. As to whether it safe for a diabetic, consult your medical practitioner
Well, I'm a diabetic, and I do eat beets without worry. However, I haven't checked with a doctor, but I haven't checked about any other veggies, either. We have to be careful, and I want to get a diabetic book naming foods that are definitely safe for us. I do take medication for Diabetes, which is supposed to keep our sugar level safe. I assume you check your blood sugar each day. I suppose you could eat some beets and then check your sugar in about 2 hours to see if your sugar is escalated. Good luck! '
yes. :)
not really
Yes, it is. It could actually significantly help with her diabetes because your sugar intake can decrease if you maintain a decent diet after the surgery.
Eating right is one way to keep diabetes under control. All five food groups should always be represented in a diabetic meal plan, as well as foods that are low in sugar content.