14 Natural Ways to Improve Your Insulin Sensitivity
Insulin is an essential hormone that controls your blood sugar levels.
It’s made in your pancreas and helps move
sugar from your blood into your cells for storage. When cells are insulin
resistant, they can’t use insulin effectively, leaving your blood sugar high.
When your pancreas senses high blood sugar,
it makes more insulin to overcome the resistance and reduce your blood sugar.
Over time, this can deplete the pancreas of
insulin-producing cells, which is common in type 2 diabetes. Also, prolonged
high blood sugar can damage nerves and organs.
You’re most at risk of insulin resistance if
you have prediabetes or a family history of type 2 diabetes, as well as if you
are overweight or obese.
Insulin sensitivity refers to how responsive
your cells are to insulin. Improving it can help you reduce insulin resistance
and the risk of many diseases, including diabetes.
Here are 14 natural, science-backed ways to
boost your insulin sensitivity.
A good night’s sleep is important
for your health.
In contrast, a lack of sleep can be harmful
and increase your risk of infections, heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
Several studies have also linked poor sleep to
reduced insulin sensitivity.
For example, one study in nine healthy
volunteers found that getting just four hours of sleep in one night reduced
insulin sensitivity and the ability to regulate blood sugar, compared to
getting eight and a half hours of sleep.
Fortunately, catching up on lost sleep can
reverse the effects of poor sleep on insulin resistance.
Regular exercise is one of the best ways
to increase insulin sensitivity.
It helps move sugar into the muscles for
storage and promotes an immediate increase in insulin sensitivity, which lasts
2–48 hours, depending on the exercise.
For example, one study found that 60 minutes
of cycling on a machine at a moderate pace increased insulin sensitivity for 48
hours among healthy volunteers.
Resistance training also helps increase
insulin sensitivity.
Many studies have found it increased insulin
sensitivity among men and women with or without diabetes.
For example, a study of overweight men with
and without diabetes found that when participants performed resistance training
over a three-month period, their insulin sensitivity increased, independent of
other factors like weight loss.
While both aerobic and resistance training
increase insulin sensitivity, combining both in your routine appears to be most
effective.
Stress affects your body’s ability to
regulate blood sugar.
It encourages the body to go into “fight-or-flight”
mode, which stimulates the production of stress hormones like cortisol and
glucagon.
These hormones break down glycogen, a form of
stored sugar, into glucose, which enters your bloodstream for your body to use
as a quick source of energy.
Unfortunately, ongoing stress keeps your
stress hormone levels high, stimulating nutrient breakdown and increasing blood
sugar.
Stress hormones also make the body more insulin
resistant. This prevents nutrients from being stored and makes them more
available in the bloodstream to be used for energy.
In fact, many studies have found that high
levels of stress hormones reduce insulin sensitivity.
This process may have been useful for our
ancestors, who needed extra energy to perform life-sustaining activities.
However, for people today who are under chronic stress, reduced insulin
sensitivity can be harmful.
Activities like meditation, exercise and
sleep are great ways to help increase insulin sensitivity by reducing stress.
Excess weight, especially in the belly area,
reduces insulin sensitivity and increases the risk of type 2 diabetes.
Belly fat can do this in many ways, such
as making hormones that promote insulin resistance in the muscles and liver.
Many studies support the link between higher
amounts of belly fat and lower insulin sensitivity.
Fortunately, losing weight is an effective
way to lose belly fat and increase insulin sensitivity. It may also reduce your
risk of type 2 diabetes if you have prediabetes.
For example, a study at Johns Hopkins
University found that people with prediabetes who lost 5–7% of their total
weight over six months reduced their risk of type 2 diabetes by 54% for the
next three years.
Luckily, there are many ways to lose
weight through diet, exercise and lifestyle changes.
Fiber can be divided into two broad
categories — soluble and insoluble.
Insoluble fiber mostly acts as a bulking
agent to help stool move through the bowels.
Meanwhile, soluble fiber is responsible for
many of fiber’s associated benefits, like lowering cholesterol and reducing
appetite.
Several studies have found a link between
high soluble fiber intake and increased insulin sensitivity.
For example, a study in 264 women found that
those who ate more soluble fiber had significantly lower levels of insulin
resistance.
Soluble fiber also helps feed the friendly
bacteria in your gut, which have been linked to increased insulin sensitivity.
Foods that are rich in soluble fiber include
legumes, oatmeal, flaxseeds, and vegetables like Brussels sprouts and fruits
like oranges.
6. Add More Colorful Fruit and Vegetables to
Your Diet
Not only are fruits and vegetables nutritious,
they also provide powerful health-boosting effects.
In particular, colorful fruits and vegetables
are rich in plant compounds that have antioxidant properties.
Antioxidants bind to and neutralize molecules
called free radicals, which can cause harmful inflammation throughout the body.
Many studies have found that eating a diet
rich in plant compounds is linked to higher insulin sensitivity.
When you’re including fruit in your diet,
stick to normal portion sizes and limit your intake to two pieces or less per
sitting and 2–5 servings per day.
Herbs and spices were used for their
medicinal properties long before they were introduced into cooking.
However, it wasn’t until the past few decades
that scientists began examining their health-promoting properties.
Herbs and spices including fenugreek, turmeric, ginger and garlic have
shown promising results for increasing insulin sensitivity.
- Fenugreek seeds: They’re high in soluble fiber, which helps make
insulin more effective. Eating them whole, as an extract or even baked
into bread may help increase blood sugar control and insulin sensitivity.
- Turmeric: Contains an active component called curcumin,
which has strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. It seems to
increase insulin sensitivity by reducing free fatty acids and sugar in the
blood.
- Ginger: This popular spice is linked to increased insulin
sensitivity. Studies have found that its active component gingerol makes
sugar receptors on muscle cells more available, increasing sugar uptake.
- Garlic: In animal studies, garlic has appeared to improve
insulin secretion and have antioxidant properties that increase insulin
sensitivity.
These findings for herbs and spices are
promising. However, most research in this area is recent and was conducted in
animals. Human studies are needed to investigate whether herbs and spices do
indeed increase insulin sensitivity.
Cinnamon is a tasty spice that’s packed
with plant compounds.
It’s also known for its ability to reduce
blood sugar and increase insulin sensitivity.
For example, one meta-analysis found
consuming 1/2–3 teaspoons (1–6 grams) of cinnamon daily significantly reduced
both short and long-term blood sugar levels.
Studies suggest that cinnamon increases
insulin sensitivity by helping receptors for glucose on muscle cells become
more available and efficient at transporting sugar into the cells.
Interestingly, some studies have found that
cinnamon contains compounds that can mimic insulin and act directly on cells
9. Drink More Green Tea
Green tea is an excellent beverage for
your health.
It’s also a great choice for people with type
2 diabetes or those who are at risk of it. Several studies have found that
drinking green tea can increase insulin sensitivity and reduce blood sugar.
For example, an analysis of 17 studies
investigated the effects of green tea on blood sugar and insulin sensitivity.
It found that drinking green tea
significantly reduced fasting blood sugar and increased insulin sensitivity.
These beneficial effects of green tea could
be due to its powerful antioxidant epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), which many
studies have found to increase insulin sensitivity.
Vinegar is a versatile liquid. You can clean
with it or use it as an ingredient in foods, in addition to many other uses.
It’s also a key ingredient in apple
cider vinegar, an extremely popular beverage in the natural health community.
Vinegar could help increase insulin
sensitivity by reducing blood sugar and improving the effectiveness
of insulin.
It also appears to delay the stomach from
releasing food into the intestines, giving the body more time to absorb sugar
into the bloodstream.
One study found that consuming apple cider
vinegar increased insulin sensitivity by 34% during a high-carb meal in people
who were insulin resistant and by 19% in people with type 2 diabetes.
Carbs are the main stimulus that causes insulin
blood levels to rise.
When the body digests carbs into sugar and
releases it into the blood, the pancreas releases insulin to transport the
sugar from the blood into the cells.
Reducing your carb intake could
help increase insulin sensitivity. That’s because high-carb diets tend to lead
to spikes in blood sugar, which put more pressure on the pancreas to remove
sugar from the blood.
Spreading your carb intake evenly throughout
the day is another way to increase insulin sensitivity.
Eating smaller portions of carbs regularly
throughout the day provides the body with less sugar at each meal, making
insulin’s job easier. This is also supported with research showing that eating
regularly benefits insulin sensitivity.
The type of carbs you choose is
also important.
Low-glycemic index (GI) carbs are best, since
they slow the release of sugar into the blood, giving insulin more time to work
efficiently.
Carb sources that are low-GI include sweet
potatoes, brown rice, quinoa and some varieties of oatmeal.
If there’s anything worth removing from your diet
completely, it’s artificial trans fats.
Unlike other fats, they provide no health
benefits and increase the risk of many diseases.
Evidence on the effects of high trans fat
intake on insulin resistance appears to be mixed. Some human studies have found
it harmful, while others haven’t.
However, animal studies have provided strong
evidence linking high trans fat intake to poor blood sugar control and insulin
resistance.
Because the findings are mixed for human
studies, scientists can’t clearly say that eating artificial trans fats
increases insulin resistance. However, they are a risk factor for many other
diseases, including diabetes, so they are worth avoiding.
Foods that typically contain artificial trans
fats include pies, doughnuts and fried fast foods. Artificial trans fats are
typically found in more processed foods.
Fortunately, in 2015 the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) declared Tran’s fats unsafe to eat. It gave food
manufacturers three years to either gradually remove Tran’s fats from their
food products or apply for special approval.
13. Reduce Your Intake of Added Sugars
There’s a big difference between added sugars
and natural sugars.
Natural sugars are found in sources like
plants and vegetables, both of which provide lots of other nutrients.
Conversely, added sugars are found
in more highly processed foods. The two main types of sugar added during the
production process are high-fructose corn syrup and table sugar, also known as
sucrose.
Both contain approximately 50% fructose.
Many studies have found that higher intakes
of fructose can increase insulin resistance among people with diabetes.
The effects of fructose on insulin resistance
also appear to affect people who don’t have diabetes, as reported in an
analysis of 29 studies including a total of 1,005 normal and overweight or
obese participants.
The findings showed that consuming a lot of
fructose over less than 60 days increased liver insulin resistance, independent
of total calorie intake.
Foods that contain lots of added sugar are
also high in fructose. This includes candy, sugar-sweetened beverages, cakes,
cookies and pastries.
The idea of taking natural supplements to
increase your insulin sensitivity is fairly new.
Many different supplements may increase
insulin sensitivity, but chromium, bebeerine, magnesium and resveratrol are
backed by the most consistent evidence.
- Chromium: A mineral involved in carb and fat metabolism.
Studies have found that taking chromium picolinate supplements in doses of
200–1,000 mcg could improve the ability of insulin receptors to reduce
blood sugar.
- Magnesium: A mineral that works with insulin receptors to
store blood sugar. Studies have found that low blood magnesium is linked
to insulin resistance. Taking magnesium may help increase insulin sensitivity.
- Bebeerine: A plant molecule extracted from a variety of
herbs including the plant Berberis. Its effects on insulin are
not exactly known, but some studies have found it increases insulin
sensitivity and lowers blood sugar.
- Resveratrol: A polyphenol found in the skin of red grapes and
other berries. It may increase insulin sensitivity, especially in those
with type 2 diabetes, but its function is poorly understood.

2 Comments
Helpful blog.
ReplyDeleteOh !
ReplyDelete