diabetes
No, low carb diets do not cause diabetes. Low carb diets do the opposite. A low carbohydrate diet helps to treat diabetes.
No but most diets high in sugar are also usually high in fat, and those diets usually lead to becoming overweight which can definitely lead to a diagnosis of diabetes. It's not the sugar you take in but the body's regulation of insulin which affects how the body transforms the sugar that causes the problem.
Diabetes comes from consuming too much sugar. Too much sugar results in a high insuline level, which gives you diabetes.
In diabetes there is improper metabolism that results in acetone. Acetone can confuse the Breathalyzer, since it give results as ethanol (alcohol).
It seems like there are thousands of diabetes diets out there! You want to choose foods that are low in carbs and sugars and high in dietary fiber. The Mayo Clinic offers an exchange list that will help you choose foods: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/diabetes-diet/DA00077
Diet is a crucial tool for diabetics to manage their diabetes. Dieting can also help people who are overweight prevent type 2 diabetes. A diabetes diet is simply a healthy eating plan that is high in nutrients.
type 2 Diabetes
No, diabetes has no effect on blood alcohol content. That depends on what type of test you are referring to... Acetone (or other ketones) in the blood/body, whether because of Diabetes, other illness, or some Diets CAN, and often DOES cause false positive alcohol test results if tested with a Breathalyzer. It may not affect the actual blood alcohol content, but it CAN cause false positive test results... THAT is why the result is called a FALSE positive.
type 2 diabetes
type 2 Diabetes
type 2 Diabetes