jdl
Member
Originally Posted by DeMartini
http:///forum/post/2932946
You're saying that a sugar free candy bar has more sugar than an actual candy bar which is wrong. You're basing the sugar content off carb counts. Companies add sugar Alcohols like malatol or Splenda in place of actual sugar. They still have to add the sugar alcohols to the carb count, but unlike real sugar, sugar alcohols don't cause an insulin spike...therefore they are ok for diabetics. How do you think companies that specialize in diabetic candy sweeten their products?
no i am not wrong. This thread is about food for a diabetic, and they base everything off of carbs. It doesnt matter how the carbs get there, a carb is a carb is a carb.
when a diabetic eats, all they do is look at a label or a book that shows the carbs and then take x amount of insulin / carb.
just so you know, i've had this disease for 30+ years and count everything from the smallest to the largest item. I have had an A1C of 6.4 for years and am in perfect health/weight. I dont care how the carb was formed, all i care about is the carb. (and fat/protein if it is a meat)
[hr]
edit: to adjust the carb is a carb is a carb comment. Some are low glycemic and some are high. Still count them the same way but may alter the way the same amount of insulin is delivered.
http:///forum/post/2932946
You're saying that a sugar free candy bar has more sugar than an actual candy bar which is wrong. You're basing the sugar content off carb counts. Companies add sugar Alcohols like malatol or Splenda in place of actual sugar. They still have to add the sugar alcohols to the carb count, but unlike real sugar, sugar alcohols don't cause an insulin spike...therefore they are ok for diabetics. How do you think companies that specialize in diabetic candy sweeten their products?
no i am not wrong. This thread is about food for a diabetic, and they base everything off of carbs. It doesnt matter how the carbs get there, a carb is a carb is a carb.
when a diabetic eats, all they do is look at a label or a book that shows the carbs and then take x amount of insulin / carb.
just so you know, i've had this disease for 30+ years and count everything from the smallest to the largest item. I have had an A1C of 6.4 for years and am in perfect health/weight. I dont care how the carb was formed, all i care about is the carb. (and fat/protein if it is a meat)
[hr]
edit: to adjust the carb is a carb is a carb comment. Some are low glycemic and some are high. Still count them the same way but may alter the way the same amount of insulin is delivered.