spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Low-carbohydrate diet beneficial for kids, youth with type 1 diabetes: Study

New Delhi, Sep 14, 2024
A diet low in carbohydrates could be beneficial for children and young adults with Type 1 diabetes, claimed a study.

People suffering from Type 1 diabetes — an autoimmune disease that results in the loss of beta cell mass — have insulin deficiency and hence need lifelong insulin therapy.

Researchers from Charles University and Motol University Hospital in the Czech Republic showed that a short-term low-carbohydrate diet led to an improvement in glycemic parameters.

To achieve optimal metabolic control, T1D requires frequent insulin administration and daily control of carbohydrate intake and physical activity. While the targets are often missed, especially in children and adolescents, dietary interventions can be a promising way to achieve the goal, said the team.

A low carbohydrate diet (LCD) is defined by American Diabetes Association (ADA) for adults as more than 130 grams of carbohydrates per day or less than 26 per cent of daily recommended energy intake from carbohydrates.

The study comes amidst clinical guidelines from the International Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Diabetes (ISPAD) recommending against low carb diet for children and adolescents with or at risk for developing diabetes.

Despite ISPAD’s recommendation of 45-50 per cent of daily energy intake from carbohydrates for children and young people with type 1 diabetes, there is growing evidence that carbohydrate reduction is a popular strategy, the team said.

For the study, they investigated whether a short period of tightly controlled low-carbohydrate diet leads to a higher time in range without increasing the associated risks in children and young people with diabetes.

They included 35 children and young people with type 1 diabetes in a randomised controlled cross-over study. The interventions were five and five weeks of ready-made food box deliveries of isocaloric diets in random order: either a low-carbohydrate diet (LCD) or recommended carbohydrate diet (RCD).

Children are known to be at risk of hypoglycemia — a condition when blood sugar levels drop too low — with a low-carb diet.

However, the study results published in the journal Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice showed that short-term LCD led to an improvement of glycemic parameters without increasing time in hypoglycemia.

It did not “disturb the lipid profile or negatively affect the quality of life of children and young people with diabetes”, said the researchers.(Agency)

YesPunjab Logo
YesPunjab has a WhatsApp Channel
Follow it for the latest updates and headlines.

Stay Connected

219,202FansLike
109,267FollowersFollow
PM-Narendra-Modi-Govt
Jalandhar, July 17, 2026 In a major push to rail and road infrastructure projects, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday inaugurated and laid the foundation...
Harjit Singh Grewal
New Delhi, July 17, 2026 (Yes Punjab News) Senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Harjit Singh Grewal has been appointed as the Chairman of the National Commission for...
Kolkata, July 17, 2026 The sports circles in West Bengal have been rocked by the mysterious disappearance of a national level shooter, Damayanti Sen, from...
Washington, July 17, 2026 A sweeping US federal indictment has alleged that a Punjab-based criminal gang evolved into a sprawling transnational organised crime syndicate with...
Washington, July 17, 2026 The FBI has arrested Indian national Nitish Kaushal in Vermont, days after placing him on its Most Wanted list, in what...
Jind (Haryana), July 17, 2026 Indian Railways on Friday added another feather to its cap in clean mobility with Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagging off...
London, July 17, 2026 (Yes Punjab News) A 24-year-old Punjab-origin woman was fatally stabbed inside her home in west London while she slept beside her husband and...

Popular - Latest

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Ajj Da Hukamnama

showbiz

SPORTS & GAMES

BUSINESS

transfers & postings

OPINIONS