Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Diabetic? Don't Skip Breakfast

IANS, 29 Jul, 2015 12:48 PM
    Diabetics who skip breakfast may have elevated blood sugar levels throughout the day, warns new research.
     
    Fasting until noon triggers major blood sugar spikes and impairs the insulin responses of Type-2 diabetics throughout the rest of the day, the researchers said.
     
    "For Type-2 diabetic individuals, the omission of breakfast is associated with a significant increase in all-day blood sugar spikes and of HbA1C, which represents average blood glucose levels over the preceding three months," said researcher Daniela Jakubowicz, a professor at the Tel Aviv University in Israel.
     
    The study was conducted on 22 Type-2 diabetics who averaged 56.9 years old, with a mean body mass index of 28.2 kg/m2. 
     
    Over the course of two days, the participants consumed precisely the same number of calories and the same balanced meal for lunch and dinner. 
     
    The only difference was that one day they ate breakfast and the second day they fasted until lunch.
     
    The researchers found that participants experienced extraordinary glucose peaks of 268 mg/dl (milligram per decilitre) after lunch and 298 mg/dl after dinner on days they skipped breakfast versus only 192 mg/dl and 215 mg/dl after eating an identical lunch and dinner when they ate breakfast.
     
    "This means that reducing the amount of starch and sugars in lunch and dinner will have no effect on reducing elevated glucose levels if diabetic individuals also skip breakfast," said Jakubowicz.
     
    According to the researchers, pancreatic beta cells which produce insulin lose their "memory" due to the prolonged period between one evening's dinner and the next day's lunch. 
     
    In other words, they "forget" their vital role. 
     
    Another factor is that fasting until lunch increases the fatty acids in our blood, which renders insulin ineffective in reducing blood glucose levels, the researchers explained.
     
    The findings were detailed in the journal Diabetes Care.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    'Women seeking anti-ageing therapy to treat menopausal symptoms'

    'Women seeking anti-ageing therapy to treat menopausal symptoms'
    More US women are seeking hormonal treatments for menopausal symptoms from anti-ageing clinicians, feeling that conventional doctors do not take their suffering...

    'Women seeking anti-ageing therapy to treat menopausal symptoms'

    High-intensity exercise 'safe' in heart transplant patients

    High-intensity exercise 'safe' in heart transplant patients
    High-intensity exercise can help stable heart transplant patients reach higher levels of exercise capacity and gain better control of their blood pressure than moderate...

    High-intensity exercise 'safe' in heart transplant patients

    Egg Whites Or Whole Eggs For A Healthy You?

    Egg Whites Or Whole Eggs For A Healthy You?
    Do you always toss out the yolks when you make an omelette? If studies are to be believed, avoiding egg yolks could mean you are missing out on good nutrition.

    Egg Whites Or Whole Eggs For A Healthy You?

    Single enzyme triggers diabetes, says study

    Single enzyme triggers diabetes, says study
    A single enzyme promotes the obesity-induced oxidative stress in the pancreatic cells that leads to pre-diabetes and diabetes, researchers have discovered...

    Single enzyme triggers diabetes, says study

    Autistic adults at higher risk of sexual victimisation: Study

    Autistic adults at higher risk of sexual victimisation: Study
    The lack of sexual knowledge in adults with autism puts them at a higher risk of sexual victimisation - sexual coercion, unwanted sexual contact attempted rape...

    Autistic adults at higher risk of sexual victimisation: Study

    Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response

    Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response
    Researchers have revealed how Ebola virus blocks and disables the body's natural immune response - paving the way for developing a drug to treat...

    Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response