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The Diabetes Triangle Print E-mail
by Terri Clapsaddle, RD, LDN, CDE   
Saturday, 08 July 2006
Control and maintenance of diabetes includes 3 important components: Nutrition, Exercise, and Medication.
This is the diabetes triangle that connects lifestyle choices to living longer with diabetes. How do these components work together?
  • Proper nutrition does several things. By proper variety, you will get the vitamins and minerals you need from your food, and will increase glucose control. By proper timing of meals, you can make sure that your medications will be working at the time they are designed to. By proper portion control, weight loss can be achieved, and often time a decrease need for diabetes medications.
  • Exercise is extremely important to the life of someone with diabetes. Exercise also helps with weight loss, but helps directly decrease blood glucose levels in most cases. Medications may need to be adjusted around an exercise schedule; often less medications have to be used before a bout of exercise. Proper nutrition will give you energy to do exercise. Carbohydrates are particularly important for providing this energy.
  • Medications are designed to work either with or around the food you consume, depending on which diabetes medication your health care provider has you on. Again, often medications can be decreased on exercise days. (ask your doctor before you make any adjustment in your medications.)
  • Exercise is extremely important to the life of someone with diabetes. Exercise also helps with weight loss, but helps directly decrease blood glucose levels in most cases. Medications may need to be adjusted around an exercise schedule; often less medications have to be used before a bout of exercise. Proper nutrition will give you energy to do exercise. Carbohydrates are particularly important for providing this energy.
  • Medications are designed to work either with or around the food you consume, depending on which diabetes medication your health care provider has you on. Again, often medications can be decreased on exercise days. (ask your doctor before you make any adjustment in your medications.)


    Diabetes is a condition that you can control. To find out more how these components work together, contact 1-800-DIABETES or go to http://www.diabetes.org/.


    Terri Clapsaddle, RD, LDN, CDE is a Registered and Licensed Dietitian and a Certified Diabetes Educator  with 19 Years of Clinical and Wellness experience, currently practicing in Diabetes Self-Management and Consulting. Terri  is currently at The Center for Diabetes Health at Caldwell Health Care System. www.caldwell-mem.org  

     

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    Last Updated ( Saturday, 08 July 2006 )
     
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