Diabetics must
choose any food they eat very carefully, as each food choice they make has a
profound impact on their overall health on a meal-to-meal basis. Diabetes
affects people of all ages, both genders, from all walks of life and
backgrounds. Untreated, it can cause wounds to heal slowly, infections take
longer to cure, blindness, and kidney failure. Diet is one of the most
important ways of controlling diabetes, and a vegetarian lifestyle with its emphasis
on low fat, high fiber, and nutrient-rich foods is very complementary.
Affecting more than 30 million people worldwide, this disease inhibits the
body from properly processing foods. Usually, most of the food we eat is
digested and converted to glucose, a sugar which is carried by the blood to all
cells in the body and used for energy. The hormone insulin then helps glucose
pass into cells. But diabetics are unable to control the amount of glucose in
their blood because the mechanism which converts sugar to energy does not work correctly.
Insulin is either absent, present in insufficient quantities or ineffective.
As
a result glucose builds up in the bloodstream and leads to problems such as
weakness, inability to concentrate, loss of co-ordination and blurred vision. If the correct balance of food intake and
insulin isn’t maintained, a diabetic can also experience blood sugar levels
that are too low. If this state continues for a prolonged period of time, it
can lead to coma and even death.
Though incurable, diabetes can be successfully controlled through diet and
exercise, oral medications, injections of insulin, or a combination. Instead of
counting calories diabetics must calculate their total carbohydrate intake so
that no less than half their food is made up of complex carbohydrates. Many
diabetic vegetarians have discovered that as a result of their meatless diet,
they’ve had to use insulin injections less, which gives them a feeling of power
and control over their disease.
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