The appropriate dosage of cinnamon for Diabetes management can vary, but many studies suggest taking between 500 to 1,500 mg of cinnamon extract per day. It's important to consult with a healthcare provider before starting any supplement, as individual needs can differ based on overall health and specific medical conditions. Additionally, cinnamon should complement a balanced diet and lifestyle rather than replace traditional diabetes treatments.
It could be bad for someone with Diabetes. The important thing is to control carbohydrates. Sugar has more carbs than many foods, so it is not the best choice. However, cinnamon is good, so cinnamon sugar may be a reasonable compromise to other sweeteners.
many people dont know that cinnamon is helpful in curing blood sugar level. also juice of grapes is gud
If you have diabetes you should exercise and have a low sugar diet that does not include many junk food or snack food items as well as food that is designed for diabetics.
Cinnamon Skin has 275 pages.
Actually, that is what you should use. The brown coloring in Apple Butter does not come from ground cinnamon. It comes from cooking the apple sauce for many, many hours. My family has been making Apple Butter in a copper kettle over an open fire for many decades.
Cinnamon has about 2 grams of carbohydrates per tablespoon.
There are approximately 4 cups per pound of cinnamon.
One teaspoon of cinnamon sugar has 3g of carbs.
One cinnamon stick yields approximately 1/2 tsp. of ground cinnamon. So, 4 tsp. ground cinnamon = 8 cinnamon sticks.
there are precisely 6 calories in a soft pretzel with cinnamon
The weight of 1 teaspoon of cinnamon is 0.092 ounces, which is equal to 2.6 grams. There are only 6.4 calories in 1 teaspoon of cinnamon.
Answer 1: No but cinnamon doesAnswer 2: Somehow, I always get into trouble around here for such sarcasm as in the first answer, no matter how deserved, as it clearly is in this case. [sigh] Oh, well. [grin]There have been no truly comprehensive and long-term studies of cinnamon's effect on diabetes, but there have been at least a few informal ones. The results of those studies range from that cinnamon has no effect, all the way to that it can reduce blood sugar levels in some people by up to 60 percent. The study results, frankly, are kinda' all over the place! Someone needs to do a really comprehensive study of the kind that the FDA and AMA would bless. Maybe someone is, at this very moment... who knows.The article about cinnamon and diabetes on the WebMD website is particularly good; and I've placed a link to it down in the "sources and related links" section of this web page, below.The American Diabetes Association cites a study by W.L. Baker, et al, which found that cinnamon had no effect, whatsoever, on A1C results over time. I've placed a link to that web page down in the "sources and related links" section, too.See, also, the answer about how to control diabetes down in the "related questions" section of this web page, below.