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Want To Lose Weight, What Diet Is Best?


hwnw123glutenfree

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hwnw123glutenfree Newbie

Hi, I was diagnosed in Jan 2012 with celiac disease and then in June 2012 I learned I was diabetic. This has lead to an internal struggle like you would not believe. I did well initially on the gluten-free diet. I experiment with a few new recipes and had some fails and some success. But then with the new diabetic diagnosis just through me for a loop. I had several mishaps with gluten in the process of trying to watch my sugar and carbs. I have finally wrangled my gluten binges (I hope!) but really have to get some weight gone to aid my diabetes.

Any suggestions of diet plans or guideline? I know it will be a lifelong change of habit but it is very difficult learning to cope with diet restrictions. I really am not a huge fan of gluten-free bread or pasta. Maybe managing a meal once or twice a month. So to ease my stress I dropped it from my diet. I eat a higher protein breakfast usually consisting of extra lean ham and eggs. My lunch is usually protein based too, maybe a chicken salad or bean burrito. My supper is family oriented and more difficult due to time restaints. I am trying to make meal that are done in 30 minutes or less.

I would love some suggestions. Is a lower carb/higher protein diet okay? My dietician suggested I limit my carbs to 45 per meal unless I was active in which case I could increase it to 60 per meal. I am consuming less per meal but I still have my fruit and milk too. I also eat a lot of almonds and peanuts (in shell).

I am not losing weight though. I started back in Jan on a gluten-free diet and up to Aug I had only gained 4 pounds. My first week on my lower carb diet I lost 5 but the following week gained back 3. So it would seem I am stable, but I need to lose at least 50 pounds.

HELP!

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GottaSki Mentor

Your body has been thru a lot! It sounds like you are on the right track for eating the proper foods to allow for weight loss. Often the newly gluten-free body will not lose weight because it is still making up for the lack of nutrients it has experienced during undiagnosed Celiac Disease by remaining in starvation mode. Once your body heals and is properly absorbing nutrients your weight may regulate itself. Until then, try to keep your calories to 1500 a day and exercise - even brief walks every day.

I have used Open Original Shared Link - to monitor that I was getting enough of every nutrient, but it makes it very easy to monitor caloric, protein, carb and fat intake.

Hang in there :)

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DavinaRN Explorer

Been diabetic for awhile, just discovered the gluten issue (no diagnosis at this point). The best advice I can give is to calories in versus calories out (1500 is a good number or do a web search for calorie need calculator). Really measure/weigh your food. Most normal portions are really two portions. Nuts can run up calorie counts quickly

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Pauliewog Contributor

In mid Aug. I started following a "primal" diet (check out Marksdailyapple.com). I have lost about 10 pounds in what has felt like a rather "effortless" diet. I have not been able to drop a pound for years. I've been gluten free since Feb. and still lost no weight. I have found primal very easy to follow and very satisfying. What I like is that I can keep meals simple. Basically, I eat a protein and whatever veggies I want. Tonight was chicken wings with a big salad. Lunch was salmon with a side of asparagus and zucchini. All quick and easy to prepare. I actually had to go buy a belt because my pants are too loose! Love that problem!!!

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kittty Contributor

I'm gluten-free, and we recently found out that my husband had diabetes, so I can sympathize with the lack of food options. The first thing we did was go to the library and look for cook books that would work for both of us. We found tons of gluten free/diabetic options in these two books:

The All-Natural Diabetes Cookbook

Real Mexican Food for People with Diabetes

We spend a great deal of the weekend cooking and preparing lunches and dinners for the busy week, and either put them in containers in the fridge, or freeze them.

You will lose the weight in time. It took a few months being gluten free until my body stabilized, but now I'm losing weight very quickly (about 30 pounds in the last 3 and a half months).

I also can't stress how important exercise is, especially with diabetes. Even walking for 15 minutes per day will help regulate your blood sugar. It will also give your metabolism a kick, which will speed up the process.

EDIT: Sorry those links don't work. They were just links to books on Amazon, but apparently the forum views them as spam.

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hwnw123glutenfree Newbie

The primal diet sounds interesting. I have already cut out carbs from my breakfast and very low carb for my lunch. How do sauces, dressings, and marinades fit into this plan? And dairy? I love my milk. Would I have to give that up entirely? Soda, yeah, wouldn't miss it. Neither the bread or pasta. How about rice, potatoes or corn?

Would love some more input on this. I am already modifying my diet to lower my carbs so it wouldn't be too far of a stretch to cut out a little more.

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irish daveyboy Community Regular

This product may not be available in the US or Canada but it's a very interesting concept for losing weight.

Both Gluten Free and with Zero Carbohydrates it's ideal for Diabetics and weight loss.

Open Original Shared Link

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anabananakins Explorer

I eat low carb paleo, pretty much veges, meat, nuts and some fruit. Very little processed food. I'm experimenting with giving up dairy and so far I'm feeling really good without it (boo!). I do still eat butter.

The amount of protein required doesn't really change regardless of what type of diet you eat, so low carb means eating higher fat which is weird to get your head around at first but is a really nice way of living! I keep track of everything I eat using myfitnesspal and I'm on about 1700-1800 calories per day, approx 15% carbs, 20% protein and 65% fat. I've been losing weight steadily.

Check out Mark's Daily Apple for info about Primal (which is pretty much paleo plus dairy). He has a great blog, tonnes of well written info. Lots of people still enjoy good quality dairy.

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kittty Contributor

How about rice, potatoes or corn?

Rice is probably the worst thing a diabetic can eat. As my husband's doctor said "Eating plain white sugar is better for a diabetic than eating white rice." It spikes blood sugar very quickly. Potatoes and corn should be eaten in moderation.

Paying attention to the glycemic index of each food is so important, and it doesn't always make a lot of sense. White bread is bad, but whole grain bread isn't that bad. Apples are good, but melon is very bad.

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june27 Apprentice

a few years prior to celiac diagnosis, i went on weight watchers. the things that i really liked about it are:

- it encourages you to make choices, and helps you to make smart choices (for example, if i have this small bag of chips, then it means i can't have as much for dinner. if i have an apple or veggies instead, then i can have the big dinner i was planning on. sometimes i would opt for the bag of chips, and have the smaller dinner...)

- if you exercise a lot, you can eat more (makes sense based on calories in versus calories out)

- you can do it all on-line (no meetings/weigh-ins necessary)

- you can eat whatever food you want to - but if you choose bad for you food, you need to make up for it at other times. so, if you know you are going to a big event on the weekend, then you can eat less during the week, to allow you more calories for the party

- it encourages healthy weight loss (no more than 2 lb per week)

i have just started it up again this week, because i have started to put on a few pounds. i don't see any issues following it with gluten-free diet. i am not sure how well it works for diabetic diet, but i would think that it would adapt well there too...

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mbrookes Community Regular

I have been gluten free for almost six years. Last May I started on weight Watchers and have lost 34 pounds so far. I don't see why there would be a conflict with the diabetic diet. So many things ar ealike on the two... portion control, healthy choices, important exercise. The Weight Watcher diet is based on your learning to make good choices, which is also what you face with the diabetes.

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DavinaRN Explorer

Prior to lung surgery and now the tummy issues. I did calories in vs out. Now once I feel better I'll be doing it again with gluten and diabetic restrictions :)

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celiac-mommy Collaborator

My boyfriend is doing advocare but I can't afford all the supplements and stuff so I'm just doing the diet plan with him. I've lost 12# this month and it's really easy and REALLY healthy. If you google the advocare 21 day challenge it should give you the do's and don'ts

Cravings are gone and I'm not really that hungry anymore.

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eglassman88 Newbie

Newbie here, but a great tool to determine how many calories you can eat each day is the BMR formula for women. The formula is Women: BMR = 655 + ( 4.35 x weight in pounds ) + ( 4.7 x height in inches ) - ( 4.7 x age in years ). This is just a basic guideline. The number that you get from that formula is the amount of calories you can eat each day to MAINTAIN your current weight. That is if you lay in bed all day and eat that exact number of calories, you'll gain no weight. If you want to lose weight, subtract calories from that number and you'll be well on your way :).

All The Best,

Edward

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  • 2 weeks later...
frieze Community Regular

Hi, I was diagnosed in Jan 2012 with celiac disease and then in June 2012 I learned I was diabetic. This has lead to an internal struggle like you would not believe. I did well initially on the gluten-free diet. I experiment with a few new recipes and had some fails and some success. But then with the new diabetic diagnosis just through me for a loop. I had several mishaps with gluten in the process of trying to watch my sugar and carbs. I have finally wrangled my gluten binges (I hope!) but really have to get some weight gone to aid my diabetes.

Any suggestions of diet plans or guideline? I know it will be a lifelong change of habit but it is very difficult learning to cope with diet restrictions. I really am not a huge fan of gluten-free bread or pasta. Maybe managing a meal once or twice a month. So to ease my stress I dropped it from my diet. I eat a higher protein breakfast usually consisting of extra lean ham and eggs. My lunch is usually protein based too, maybe a chicken salad or bean burrito. My supper is family oriented and more difficult due to time restaints. I am trying to make meal that are done in 30 minutes or less.

I would love some suggestions. Is a lower carb/higher protein diet okay? My dietician suggested I limit my carbs to 45 per meal unless I was active in which case I could increase it to 60 per meal. I am consuming less per meal but I still have my fruit and milk too. I also eat a lot of almonds and peanuts (in shell).

I am not losing weight though. I started back in Jan on a gluten-free diet and up to Aug I had only gained 4 pounds. My first week on my lower carb diet I lost 5 but the following week gained back 3. So it would seem I am stable, but I need to lose at least 50 pounds.

HELP!

I am betting that portion control is your biggest issue, invest in a good scale.

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Juliebove Rising Star

My daughter did well with South Beach for a while. Sadly her weight loss has stalled but I think she is eating too much of some things. Particularly applesauce!

The first two weeks are mostly low carb and then you add in good carbs, slowly. Such as brown rice, quinoa and sweet potatoes. You can also have gluten-free oats so long as they are not the quick cooking kind. You add fruits back in too. So that you are having 3 carb servings and 3 fruit servings daily. You eat 3 meals and 2 snacks each day. For some reason, dried beans can be eaten freely even during the first two weeks.

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