Why is carbohydrate counting important?
Carbohydrate counting helps prevent low or high blood sugar levels,
which can cause medical emergencies. Over time, high blood sugar levels can
damage many body tissues and organs.
Counting carbohydrate grams allows you to match insulin to the food
you eat every day to keep blood sugar at a safe level. This method is effective
because carbohydrate is the main nutrient that causes blood sugar to rise after
meals, increasing the need for insulin. Carbohydrate turns into glucose within
2 hours of eating.
If you use an
insulin pump or take multiple insulin injections, you
need to know how many grams of carbohydrate are in a meal to calculate how much
rapid-acting insulin to take before you eat. A pump provides a continuous (also
known as basal) rate of insulin throughout the day, but it must be programmed
at meals to provide extra insulin to allow for the rise in blood sugar after
meals. Once you know how much carbohydrate you will eat, you can program extra
units, or boluses, of insulin to cover your meals.
You figure out how much insulin to use based on your own
insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio. This ratio may be different from one person to
another, and even your own ratio may change over time. You and your diabetes
health professional will calculate the ratio by recording the food you eat and
testing your blood sugar after meals.
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Carbohydrate counting for people who use insulin