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You could always chuck it into the bath with you next time you have one.Weekly?!
That's what I must be doing wrong!
You could always chuck it into the bath with you next time you have one.Weekly?!
That's what I must be doing wrong!
I don't know about smell, but I occasionally get quite a distinctive ( and not unpleasant) taste in my mouth. I can't comment on whether it's like acetone as I've never actually consumed any nail polish remover, and my sense of smell often leaves much to be desired! I've also seen it referred to as being like pear drops, but I've never eaten them either....If your body goes into a state of ketosis and starts to burn body fat then this can result in an acetone smell (like nail polish remover) in your breath, sweat and urine.
lol so no-one following LCHF will ever hold down a job or have a long-term relationship?
PS Just a thought: Perhaps diabetic alert dogs should now also be trained to sniff out this new type of pongy ketone flavoured bedding too?
LOL a very unusual title and the information is unusual too, could you elaborate on this fascinating subject...........please.
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3. If there's some truth in this article, I see a new way to train alert dogs, which is to catch ketosis and alert before actual Low. Which my dog is already doing, but I'm trying to find out whether she is alerting based on ketosis.
I have a bath once a year, whether I need it or not!You could always chuck it into the bath with you next time you have one.
I haven't had a bath for about 10 years... hate the things..I have a bath once a year, whether I need it or not!
(I usually have showers).
I used to like having a long soak in the bath, but now I sort of begrudge the time it takes. I usually only have before I go on a long flight on holiday to relax myself.I haven't had a bath for about 10 years... hate the things..
Thank you @tinyfilosofer for further clarification.I'm equally shocked and fascinated to read the article. A few angles I'm coming from
1. My doc says my lantus is too high and I must be having hypo all the time at night. I couldn't be sure of that
2. I realized my blanket or comforter or duvet smells differently after I started being a type 1. It doesn't smell bad. Just different. Kind of sweet actually so I'm not sure if I'm leaking excess sugar or what, which prompted my research in the first place.
3. If there's some truth in this article, I see a new way to train alert dogs, which is to catch ketosis and alert before actual Low. Which my dog is already doing, but I'm trying to find out whether she is alerting based on ketosis.
The best people I thought to verify this info are the lchfers because ketosis is part of the desired effect of the program? Hence the question. Admittedly it was typed in haste as I stumbled upon the article at a bus stop and wanted to send it out before I forgot about it when the bus arrived. Not intended to offend.
I'm equally shocked and fascinated to read the article. A few angles I'm coming from
1. My doc says my lantus is too high and I must be having hypo all the time at night. I couldn't be sure of that
2. I realized my blanket or comforter or duvet smells differently after I started being a type 1. It doesn't smell bad. Just different. Kind of sweet actually so I'm not sure if I'm leaking excess sugar or what, which prompted my research in the first place.
3. If there's some truth in this article, I see a new way to train alert dogs, which is to catch ketosis and alert before actual Low. Which my dog is already doing, but I'm trying to find out whether she is alerting based on ketosis.
The best people I thought to verify this info are the lchfers because ketosis is part of the desired effect of the program? Hence the question. Admittedly it was typed in haste as I stumbled upon the article at a bus stop and wanted to send it out before I forgot about it when the bus arrived. Not intended to offend.
Back on topic .. are you taking any other medication .. as a friend of mine was complaining of almost the same thing a while back and it was one of the tablets he was taking causing the unpleasant oder on his bedclothes .. sadly I cannot remember the name of the tablets .. but he is T2
This may be going off topic slightly or even a lot lol - there is something in the change of body odour - dogs trained to spot seizures and similar are trained by the subtle changes in body odour,
My son not diabetic in any shape or form but has autism- when he was little and used to have massive meltdowns would omit a smell of sweet almonds - it was one of the ways I could detect wether it was a real me,tdown or just a temper tantrum because he couldn't have his own way.