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Reactive Hypoglycemia
Confused.. reactive hypoglycemia
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<blockquote data-quote="Lamont D" data-source="post: 2079237" data-attributes="member: 85785"><p>It doesn't sound like RH, because of the normal blood sugar levels before you eat called a fasting blood sugar level.</p><p>RH is a condition that is caused by what you eat and drink.</p><p>Until you eat, the normal levels remain.</p><p>It all depends on how much carbs you have and your intolerance to them causes the 'reactive' scenario. And of course how your endocrine health is at that time. If you have insulin resistance, your insulin response will be higher and the symptoms greater. The more severe reaction you will feel because your blood sugar will rise quickly and higher, then drop just as quickly.</p><p></p><p>And what [USER=401801]@JoKalsbeek[/USER] says!</p><p></p><p>Best wishes</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lamont D, post: 2079237, member: 85785"] It doesn't sound like RH, because of the normal blood sugar levels before you eat called a fasting blood sugar level. RH is a condition that is caused by what you eat and drink. Until you eat, the normal levels remain. It all depends on how much carbs you have and your intolerance to them causes the 'reactive' scenario. And of course how your endocrine health is at that time. If you have insulin resistance, your insulin response will be higher and the symptoms greater. The more severe reaction you will feel because your blood sugar will rise quickly and higher, then drop just as quickly. And what [USER=401801]@JoKalsbeek[/USER] says! Best wishes [/QUOTE]
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Reactive Hypoglycemia
Confused.. reactive hypoglycemia
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