Big breakfasts and small dinners might be a healthier
way to eat for people with type 2 diabetes, according to a small new
study.
Diabetics
in the study who ate big breakfasts and small dinners had fewer episodes of
high blood sugar than those who ate small breakfasts and large dinners,
researchers found.
Blood
sugar – also known as blood glucose – is controlled by the body’s internal
clock, with larger blood sugar peaks after evening meals.
People
with type 2 diabetes often time their meals in opposition to their internal
clock.
They
frequently skip breakfast while eating a high-calorie dinner, adding that
skipping breakfast is linked to obesity and poor blood sugar control.
The
new study involved eight men and ten women with type 2 diabetes, ages 30 to 70,
who were being treated with either the diabetes drug metformin and dietary
advice or diet advice alone.
Type 2 is the most common form of
diabetes and is often linked to obesity. In type 2 diabetes, the body's cells
are resistant to the hormone insulin, or the body doesn't make enough of it.
Insulin gives blood sugar access to the body's cells to be used as fuel.
The
participants were randomly assigned to follow a meal plan that consisted of
either a 700-calorie breakfast and 200-calorie dinner or a 200-calorie
breakfast and a 700-calorie dinner. Both diets included a 600-calorie lunch.
After
following the assigned meal plans for six days at home, the participants spent
a day at the clinic, where blood tests were taken.
They repeated the experiment
two weeks later with the other diet plan.
The
study team found that post-meal glucose levels were 20 percent lower, and
levels of insulin were 20 percent higher, when the participants consumed the
large breakfasts and small dinners, according to the results in Diabetologia.
This
study demonstrated that a large breakfast and reduced dinner is a beneficial
alternative for the management of glucose balance during the day and should be
considered as a therapeutic strategy in type 2 diabetes.
The
new results support the advice to eat like a king at breakfast, a prince at
lunch and a pauper at dinner.
Select
your calories with care, however; what you eat, how you eat, and when you eat
all play an important role in your nutrition as well as your health.
Furthermore,
it’s important for people to keep in
mind that the study’s participants took few medications and had no major
complications.
The
results might therefore not apply to other groups with diabetes.
Finally, people with diabetes who take
insulin should speak to their endocrinologists before experimenting with
drastic dietary adjustments.
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