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Reactive Hypoglycemia
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<blockquote data-quote="Lamont D" data-source="post: 934661" data-attributes="member: 85785"><p>With RH, your spike is quicker t h an normal or diabetic people, but my endocrinologist doesn't know why! Our spikes go straight up to high but normal or diabetics have a slight blip that drops then continues up to a spike.</p><p>Fascinating!</p><p>I've had a fatty liver, till recently and I know that it is something akin to sclerosis!</p><p>The wife has non alcoholic fatty liver. There is a thread by the Southport GP about this and ho low carbing reverses it!</p><p>Depending on how quickly you digest, your blood glucose levels can be monitored at both one hour or two hours or even after half hour just to see what happens. Two hours is what happens for bloods to get a standard reading.</p><p>Make sure you keep a food diary, so that you can compare in the future.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lamont D, post: 934661, member: 85785"] With RH, your spike is quicker t h an normal or diabetic people, but my endocrinologist doesn't know why! Our spikes go straight up to high but normal or diabetics have a slight blip that drops then continues up to a spike. Fascinating! I've had a fatty liver, till recently and I know that it is something akin to sclerosis! The wife has non alcoholic fatty liver. There is a thread by the Southport GP about this and ho low carbing reverses it! Depending on how quickly you digest, your blood glucose levels can be monitored at both one hour or two hours or even after half hour just to see what happens. Two hours is what happens for bloods to get a standard reading. Make sure you keep a food diary, so that you can compare in the future. [/QUOTE]
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