Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate
  • Sandra Ramacher
    Sandra Ramacher

    Diabetes, Glycemic Index and the Specific Carbohydrate Diet

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Journal of Gluten Sensitivity Winter 2008 Issue. NOTE: This article is from a back issue of our popular subscription-only paper newsletter. Some content may be outdated.

    Diabetes, Glycemic Index and the Specific Carbohydrate Diet - Chinese Fast Food. Image: CC BY-ND 2.0--Jonathan Kos-Read
    Caption: Chinese Fast Food. Image: CC BY-ND 2.0--Jonathan Kos-Read

    Celiac.com 02/13/2021 - I was interviewed for a national diabetes magazine the other day.  They wanted to know how a diet such as the Specific Carbohydrate Diet would be for diabetes sufferers, especially since, in Australia, 10% of diabetics are also diagnosed with celiac disease.  For diabetics the all important question is how carbohydrates affect their blood sugar level, and that the recommended foods have a low Glycemic Index.  The Glycemic Index (GI) is a measurement of the type of carbohydrates in a particular food, and how fast 50 grams of this carbohydrate raises blood glucose levels (and consequent insulin secretion and effects produced by the pancreas) as it is digested.  It is also important to consider the Glycemic Load of foods.  For those of you who aren't familiar with it, the Glycemic Load was devised to make the Glycemic Index useful in the real world.  

    The problem with the Glycemic Index is that the tests use 50 grams of carbohydrate from the food being tested.  On a practical level, that means they test a plateful of spaghetti, but a truckload of cucumbers! It doesn't take into account how food is eaten in the real world, making benign foods seem damaging.  

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    The Glycemic Index is the measurement of how rapidly a given carbohydrate food is absorbed, and therefore how fast it spikes blood sugar.  In general, a rapid rise in blood sugar triggers a large insulin release.  The Glycemic Load is the Glycemic Index multiplied by the actual number of grams of carbohydrate eaten.  Ten or less is a low Glycemic Load—11 to 20 is a medium load, and anything over 20 is high.  

    Take carrots.  Carrots have a high Glycemic Index for a vegetable—around 50.  But do you know how many carrots you'd have to eat to get fifty grams of carbohydrate? More than fifty! The carbohydrate content of eating two whole carrots with a meal is too small to cause a significant rise in blood sugar levels.  Oatmeal, on the other hand, has about the same GI as carrots, but a one cup serving of cooked oatmeal has 25 grams of carbohydrate, for a Glycemic Load of 12.5 in contrast to say 5 baby carrots which has 4 grams of carbohydrate and a Glycemic Load of 2—very low.  

    So how do the foods allowed on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet rate, in regard to the GI and GL? Is this a good thing for diabetics and everyone else wanting to be healthier? 

    The Specific Carbohydrate Diet is based on ‘Simple Carbohydrate Foods' or rather monosaccharides which are the single molecule carbohydrates which need no enzyme to be digested.  Carbohydrate foods naturally divide themselves into two groups: 1.  starches and refined sugars, and 2.  everything else.  It's the concentration of carbohydrates in the starches and refined sugars that makes them a problem to those with bowel disease and/or diabetes.  The specific carbohydrates allowed on the diet and used in the Healing Foods cookbook are the ones that are in most low GI foods.  These foods are simple fresh foods, such as fresh fruits and vegetables, some low starch pulses, nuts, meats, cheeses and yogurt.  Even the baked goods which are sweetened with honey are acceptable as the almond meal used instead of the wheat flour contain monounsaturated fats which slows the absorption rate of glucose from the honey into the bloodstream.  

    Considering all these factors, diabetics, digestive disease sufferers, and generally everyone who wants to live a more energetic and healthy life should be able to benefit from the recipes in Healing Foods: Cooking for Celiacs, Colitis, Crohn's and IBS.  



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    There are no comments to display.



    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate
  • About Me

    Sandra Ramacher

    Sandra was born in 1964 in Toronto, Canada and moved to Germany at an early age with her parents, who eventually immigrated to Australia in 1974. From 18 – 26 Sandra worked in the fashion industry and eventually settled in Noosa, Australia to have her son Reuben. It was just after the birth of her son that she was diagnosed with severe Ulcerative Colitis and it was then that she went on the search for alternatives to the steroidal drugs that her doctors put her on. She eventually found out about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet* and cured herself with the help of this diet. “As a photographer and passionate cook I realized that there was a need for a comprehensive visual reference to all the wonderful recipes that can be achieved with this diet” Her book ‘Cooking for Celiacs, Colitis, Crohn’s and IBS’ is a visually stunning and delectably written cookbook, which will please and inspire everyone out there, wanting to help and heal themselves from these debilitating diseases.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Related Articles

    Carol Frilegh
    Celiac.com 12/20/2007 - The Specific Carbohydrate Diet is an excellent option in dietary intervention for celiac disease and was originally developed for that purpose over fifty years ago by Dr. Sydney Valentine Haas. Dr. Haas treated over 600 cases of celiac disease with his Specific Carbohydrate Diet, maintaining his patients on it for at lease twelve months, and found that the prognosis of celiac disease was excellent. "There is complete recovery with no relapses, no deaths, no crisis, no pulmonary involvement and no stunting of growth."

    Specific Carbohydrate Diet - A Dietary Intervention for Celiac Disease and Autism
    A fifty-year-old diet used by adults to combat Celiac Disease and other digestive and bowel problems is also having a remarkable effect on autistic children.The...


    Carol Frilegh
    Celiac.com 12/26/2007 - Can children with Autism Spectrum Disorder eat their way out of their cocoons?
    Eight yearsago I knew little about autism. Fifty years ago I heard that a distantacquaintance of mine had an autistic child. It was extremely unusual at thetime. I needed it explained to me and was told that the child was almost totallyunresponsive.
    Recent statistics show that between one and one and ahalf million people in the USA are afflicted with autism, making it the fastest growing developmentaldisability. There has been a thirteen percent increasein autism since 1990.
    The term "autism" wasfirst coined by Eugen Bleuler a Swiss psychiatrist, and the term was also applied to those with adult schizophrenia. Initially parents were blamed andpsychological rejection was cited...


    Carol Frilegh
    The Specific Carbohydrate Diet - Still Yummy After All These Years!
    Celiac.com 04/15/2010 - Ten years ago, I embarked on a life that came with a warning about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet from my naturopathic  practitioner, "it is a great diet, but a hard one." Those were fighting words to someone who has made a lifetime of  "cosmetic" dieting  with tendencies to yo yo back and forth into the obesity zone. The Specific Carbohydrate Diet diet was chosen to relieve pain.
    Starting a new weight-loss diet had always been  inviting and exciting. The magic of the initial water weight-loss, the restrictive ruthless regimentation, calorie counting, portion control and forced water consumption were as exciting as hair shirts and beds of nails for religious fanatics. Dieting was my religion, food was like the duplicitous friend who is an enemy at the same tim...


    Carol Frilegh
    The Specific Carbohydrate Diet and the Two Percent Solution
    Celiac.com 05/03/2010 - Place a single tiny droplet of food coloring on a solid surface, a small plate will do nicely. Don't move it or touch it. What happens? Usually nothing.
    Do the same thing in a saucer of water and now what happens? The color spreads and permeates the water.
    This similar to the effects of eating a tiny amount of food restricted from your Celiac diet.  I follow The Specific Carbohydrate Diet and it demands scrupulous attention to the kind of food I use and what is in it.
    The reason is that minuscule amounts of what we consider "The Undigestibles," feed bad gut bacteria, strengthen them, allow them to multiply and subdue friendly bacteria, all at the expense of a compromised digestive system.
    There are ways to determine food ingredients. We have all become ...


  • Recent Activity

    1. - Newhere19 replied to Newhere19's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      New to all of this

    2. - jjiillee replied to jjiillee's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      13

      Daughter waiting for appointment

    3. - trents replied to jjiillee's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      13

      Daughter waiting for appointment

    4. - Scott Adams replied to jjiillee's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      13

      Daughter waiting for appointment


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      126,514
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Kaylag
    Newest Member
    Kaylag
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.9k
    • Total Posts
      69.5k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Popular Now

    • Art Maltman
      4
    • JA917
      13
    • Dana Gilcrease
      5
    • marion wheaton
      6
    • Jula
  • Popular Articles

    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
  • Upcoming Events

×
×
  • Create New...