Because alcohol is detoxified in the liver, t is not able to supply required glucose. This can cause a hypo, especially after going to bed. Eating something before bed limits the effect, which is different for different people. You just have to test it in a controlled way and establish how your blood glucose responds to alcohol consumption. I used to have issues with it when I was younger, but I don't think alcohol affects my blood glucose at all now.
If you have had alcohol and are concerned about going low after going to bed, a snack with no insulin should help prevent this. You need to figure what type of snack works best. Slow acting carbs, like fruit or chocolate give cover for a longer period. Eating something carby with fat, like biscuit and cheese has a similar effect.By eating before bed do you mean a meal with insulin? or a 15g carb snack?
If you have had alcohol and are concerned about going low after going to bed, a snack with no insulin should help prevent this. You need to figure what type of snack works best. Slow acting carbs, like fruit or chocolate give cover for a longer period. Eating something carby with fat, like biscuit and cheese has a similar effect.
Three issues with diabetes and alcoholic drinks
1) Carbohydrate in the drinks
2) effect of alcohol on your liver and hence its ability to intervene to protect your body from hypos.
3) It's easy to confuse the behaviour of someone suffering from a hypo with someone who is drunk.
In response to point 1)
I tend to drink dry wines rather than beer, which is just too carb heavy for me. But you could carb count for sweeter drinks.
In response to point 2)
A potential issue with hypos and alcohol is that if your liver is busy processing alcohol then it reduces its ability to secrete glucagon (sugar) when your blood sugar goes low, thus meaning that if you go low you may not get any help from your liver to pull you out of it. (Moral here, absolutely avoid night time hypos when drunk).
Point 3)
This can be a big issue if picked up by the police when you have been drinking, because they are liable to assume that your hypo symptoms can be "slept off" in a cell. (No personal experience of this, but I have heard stories.)
Some people just don't drink (well, it's certainly a healthier option), but others do, and in my opinion it's a question of being aware of the risks and deciding whether you want to take them.
Personally, I've been T1 for 50 years and drinking for 40 of them, but there are some things that I am careful of.
1) Always do a blood test before bed and make sure you're not going to go hypo at night.
2) If you get so drunk that you are unable to handle diabetic stuff (ie blood tests and injections and noticing hypos) then that is too drunk. (Personally, I've been T1 all my adult life so when I started drinking I was already T1 and injections etc were already ingrained into my system. And no one had ever bothered to warn me that alcohol might be an issue with hypos ....).
I would agree with @MarkMunday that you may want to try out drinking in a more controlled home environment before hitting the clubs. But on the other hand, if you are breastfeeding your daughter (assuming from the pink dress in the photo, and congratulations, BTW), you'll probably need to be careful with alcohol anyway....
For me something like fries, tortilla chips, crisps before bed work well to make sure to keep my bg's up hours later, when I'm fast asleep.I find carbs such as rice crackers and tortilla chips seem to last a long time in my system without a huge spike so I think I may experiment over the next couple of weeks.
Between yourself, your partner and your Dexcom you should be fine, hypo-wise. Should you start to drop the alarm will wake you or your partner.I will trial at home when my partner is around so I have someone to help me if it’s needed, I am also trialling a Dexcom g6 and love the alerts
You will have hypo's while being social with friends, it comes with the condition. But please don't feel your making a fool out of yourself when it happens, you're not. If it happens you'll just sit down, test, treat the hypo and mumble something about 'stupid diabetes, give me a moment' to your friends, nothing foolish about that!I really miss being social and having a drink with my friends but I worry about having a hypo and making a fool of myself by not fully understanding the effect of alcohol on my body now.
I find fruit to be a bit risky for my BG if I’m honest, I’m a big lover of fruit but stick to one portion a day now as I found even half an apple would send my BG skyrocketing with a heavy crash shortly after. I’ve experimented with other fruits and find them all to be difficult for my body to cope with. Chocolate on the other hand, once I start I can’t stop and before I know it I have a BG of 15.. I find carbs such as rice crackers and tortilla chips seem to last a long time in my system without a huge spike so I think I may experiment over the next couple of weeks.
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