I posted a couple of days ago, newly diagnosed.
I got a monitor yesterday so did my glucose before eating my evening meal. Then 2hrs after. I then did it this morning before breakfast and 2 hrs after. This is what I ate and what my readings were:
Glucose Readings
1st Feb - Before food 6.4
2hr After food 4.9
Meal - roast chicken, sprouts, sugar snap peas, broccoli, gravy.
2nd Feb - morning Before food 6.6 2hr After food 4.8
Meal - 2 x bacon rashers 2 x poached eggs, mushrooms
So minimal carbs, I know sugar snap peas and gravy will have more carbs and perhaps I should avoid in future.
can anyone explain why my readings are lower after eating?
I’ve read up about reactive hypoglycaemia but that seems to be after a carb heavy me which these haven’t been.
thanks
I have just started both the regular testing and food diary, as I was diagnosed just a week ago. Hba1c was 50 so not massively high. I’ve got to have it done again next week.Hi,
I don't believe it is reactive hypoglycaemia, are you on any other meds?
With my RH, it is not a carbs heavy meal, it is even low GI carbs as well.
You do need to do regular testing. Perhaps start a food diary.
What was your last Hba1c?
If you test just before breakfast, what are your blood sugar levels?
Take care
Salt is a no no as I also have high bp.That is not bad, just above normal levels on your fasting.
Think the reason you were diagnosed was the Hba1c levels, if you continue to low carb, your Hba1c will naturally come down. Drink plenty of water and add a little salt to your food, whilst low carbing.
Stay safe.
Salt is a no no as I also have high bp.
My levels have been going up steadily for a while with no real lifestyle reason, hence my concern.
thanks for replying
Oh yes!So you never know until you test your food.
Salt is a no no as I also have high bp.
Hi sorry only just replying I didn't realise you'd responded!Keep testing, you may find something that is causing this. One of the worst food for me was potato, I recorded a high spike of 18.2 from normal levels. Porridge a so called super food, has me spiking around mid teens and then I crash quickly.
So you never know until you test your food.
The reason I suggested salt is because, before you started low carb, the amount of salt in your diet, because of the processed foods and other meals with too many additives and such. With low carbing, you are eating a lot more fresh food without salt.
My BP was fairly high before diagnosis, and it came down to good levels ever since.
Especially for my age.
Keep safe.
Hi, sorry for delay in replying. I don't know, although a few years ago I had low blood pressure and the doctor advised to add a little extra salt which helped. When I say salt is a no no, what I mean is, I check my salt intake and am happy with it, adding more I feel wouldn't be a healthy thing to do. But I hadn't considered the fact you lose more due to the loss of water you get with a low carb diet as someone else has posted so I will worry less about the salt!Just a quick question ....... extra salt is important if you cut your carbs and processed foods. We need it to survive. Not everyone is "salt sensitive" as far as blood pressure is concerned. I'm not. Do you konw if your BP would rise if you added salt?
Regarding Blood Pressure Dr David Unwin keeps saying 'Don't blame salt for what sugar did'.
I don't know if you are overweight , I don't think Dr Unwin was - though his patients certainly were. But anyway once on a Low Carb way of eating, both he and many of his patients had to reduce their BP medication or come off it completely.
Low carb causes less water to be retained in the body - the extra water excretion also removes sodium too - so whichever way you look at it, the amount of salt in your body will be lower on Low Carb even if consuming the same amount (and most people are eating more whole foods and so are actually consuming less.
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