Keto works well, but I'm concerned about the extreme fat intake. I did manage to lower my A1C from 9s to mid 5s using Keto as a T1D, but eventually settled into a high protein, moderate fat, low-ish carb diet and that has worked pretty well without being hyper-restrictive. Heavily inspired by the late Dr. Richard K. Bernstein.
every endocrinologist i've ever had says you need at least some carbohydrates. that said, they're usually not nutritionists, and there's historically been so little focus on food as medicine within western medicine that i think we "officially" know as much about that as we do about diabetes at all (which is a lot, but still surprisingly little).
there are plenty of good reasons we eat carbs (especially complex carbs, plus trying to avoid processed stuff); as a diabetic you just have to prepare ahead of time. it sucks, but honestly, as a 20+ year T1D, not eating cake sucks more than having to plan to eat cake :)
> not eating cake sucks more than having to plan to eat cake :)
But you have never felt the alternative. It's not just eating cake. You have to see the whole video that I linked to understand the differences (they might not all apply). Think a smoker who've never known what's it like without smoking.
dad of an 8 y/o T1D here, and tbh, "how about just ..." is about the worst thing you can say to anyone dealing with this, especially given the subject of this post. things are just never the same. maybe they will be later in adulthood? i feel like i'm in a position to beta test this with my kiddo and i don't like it at all.
I understand that T1D is special, but this is said for every disorder.
There are many levels to keto diet, and believe me, you can't do the epilepsy version even if you'd wanted, it takes time and hard effort, for children it's done inside a hospital.
So assuming you watch everything they eat, you can keep track of GCM, and try very slowly. Like going from 60-30-10 carb-protein-fat to 50-30-20 ratio, do they have better consistent blood sugar ?
There should be protocols to do this for T1D the safest way.
I do keto diet long term but for other reasons, often the epilepsy version where it's more strict and higher fat.