Daniel_Libre
Member
- Messages
- 16
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
Like it is said so often- maybe test and see if this works every time- like HSSS said maybe you were dehydrated or maybe it would have come down anyway. Maybe water does have some part to play but I'm not convinced without doing my own testing or hearing from others that have tested that it is a major contributor- happy to be convinced.
Most probably you are urinating the "sugar" out after the blood is filtered by the kidneys...Can the water really that fast go out in my bloodstream and make my blood less "thick" with sugar?
Does it go down quicker than it would have anyway?
Were you dehydrated to start with?
Most probably you are urinating the "sugar" out after the blood is filtered by the kidneys...
I think that @Brunneria has the answer to that in her post.But would that go so fast? If I drink 2 liters my sugar can go for a quick dive in just one hour.
Can my kidneys work that fast?
But would that go so fast? If I drink 2 liters my sugar can go for a quick dive in just one hour.
Can my kidneys work that fast?
Hi and welcome,
Most adults have around 5 litres of blood.
If you drink 2 litres within a v short time, your blood volume is going to increase significantly.
Impossible to do more than estimate, because we don't know how fast your body absorbs water through the intestinal wall, or how fast your kidneys will be filtering urine (and glucose) out of the bloodstream to your bladder. But assuming your blood volume temporarily increases by 1 litre, and you pee it out, and then another litre, which you again pee out, then you have diluted the glucose in your blood by 5+2 litres, instead of 5 litres.
So yes, that is going to drop your blood glucose test results significantly even if the same amount of glucose is still circulating.
In addition, when bg rises above approx 11mmol/l, it can trigger the kidneys to filter excess glucose out of the blood and into the urine. The higher the bg, the more glucose is filtered out. This is why T1s often have raging thirst and endless peeing before diagnosis. The body is prompting them to drink more to enable glucose dumping.
So the bg will drop for that reason too.
Healthcare professionals have advised people with high bg and high ketones to drink lots of water for decades.
So I am not seeing anything unusual about your observations.
However, it won't be lowering your HbA1c. It will be lowering your fingerprick tests on that particular day.
Thanks to @Brunneria for her input.
Hmm, am guessing that if your blood sugar is that high then a test on your urine would give a reading of "over 2%", but lets call it 2. (When I was a child there were no glucometers, just a chemistry kit to determine the level of sugar in your urine. Over 2% wasn't that rare.), So if you peed out 1L of water that could be 20g of sugar....
A blood sugar of 20mmol/L is 360 mg/dL, or 3.6g/L. So 5L of blood would contain 18g of sugar, while a body with a blood sugar of 10mmol/L would only contain 9g. So you've only got to get rid of 9g to get back to levels where you'd no longer excrete sugar. ( This math also suggests that if you drink and pass the water quickly then the urine will have a much lower % than 2 of sugar, maybe only 1%.)
So, start at 5L blood with 18g sugar. Drink 2L so end up with 7L and 18g of sugar, or 14mmol/L. You'll pee out the excess 2L fairly quickly, but the sugar in that urine will bring you back down to 10mmol/L. As the urine only contains sugar if you're higher than 10mmol/L I'm not sure why you'd go lower than 10 through water drinking, though. But 20 to 10 is pretty fast.... Of course, if your blood total is temporarily at 6L say (before second L goes out to bladder but after first litre has reduced levels to 10), then that could temporarily reduce your sugar level down to 8...
Bear in mind that very fast drinking of too much water can be medically dangerous though.
Our bodies are designed to absorb water fast, even some in the mouth before swallowing.
The system that tells your kidneys to filter out excess water in the bloodstream takes about 30 mins to activate.
But using water to reduce blood glucose is risky because you will be losing essential minerals too, and your blood pressure will be swinging up and down if you rapidly shift from dehydration to excess water.
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