Having see recent posts about waking Blood Sugar levels affected by Dawn Phenomenon, especially concerns from some about high readings, I have posted my waking readings since I started testing following diagnosis on 22 Jan this year:
WC 4/4 - 5.6, 6.0, 5.5, 6.3, 6.7, 5.9, 5.8
WC 28/3 - 6.5, 6.2, 6.0, 6.0, 6.8, 6.4, 5.6
WC 21/3 - 6.4, 6.1, 5.7, 5.7, 6.6, 5.7, 6.5
WC 14/3 - 7.1, 5.6, 6.2, 6.8, 6.3, 6.8, 6.5
WC 7/3 - 5.6, 5.5, 6.1, 7.1, 6.6, 6.1, 6.3
WC 29/2 - 7.2, 6.1, 5.7, 6.6, 6.2, 5.8, 6.5
WC 22/2 - 6.7, 5.7, 7.5, 7.5, 6.0, 5.6, 6.2
WC 15/2 - 6.4, 6.4, 7.3, 5.7, 6.3, 6.6, 5.9
WC 8/2 - 6.9, 5.4, 6,7, 7.7, 6.1, 6.0, 6.4
The week previous and my first ever reading was 5.5 a figure only eve seen twice after!
I can find no pattern in these figures apart from the readings greater than 7 are less frequent. My readings do not seem to be impacted on whether I have a high or low post evening meal figure the night before nor if I have had a late evening snack. Neither is there any link to the time I get up.
The way I see these figures, following discussions on this thread after I started it and consideration of the site guide on this matter, is that waking Blood Sugar levels are merely snap shots of a very complicated process so I am not that bothered if I get the occasional +7.
Are you able to post your bedtime readings for the same period please? I appreciate that you've said that they don't seem to impact the morning readings, but think that it would be really helpful if you could.
I think you are close with this theory, The metabolism of protein takes place during fasting, and its primary purpose is to make amino acids, and to repair damaged cells in the body. This step seems to occur while the body is resting at night, so although i cannot find anything to confirm the timing as being 8 hours, it does seem to be a process that starts around 3 in the morning.I am thinking the dawn phenomenon is a myth and is more to do with what we are eating. Or rather the liver dump is the myth. For example liquids take 20-30 mins for the digestive process to work and increase blood sugars, fruit/veg/grains carbohydrates take 20mins-3hrs-8hrs roughly depending on what they are, meat proteins/fats can take any where from 8 - 48 hrs. Given the body is "resting" between night feed and morning feed, it make sense its not processing the liquid and carbohydrates but concentrating on the proteins and fats. The body likes to process the energy from the quickest to the slowest sources. So liquids stop the solids digesting and proteins are the last to b digested. This is why fasting works. There is nothing for the digestion to process except the slowest foods. Given the dawn phenomenon kicks in about 10hrs after the last meal of the night, this falls in line with the 8hrs digestion process it takes for meat to digest hence the surge in blood sugars. At least thats what I think I have no other evidence to say Im right or wrong.
A late meal with low carb, but containing high protein foods, and also fat is asking for trouble. The protein will be metabolised into glucose just like carbs and the fat will delay the 'protein bump' till morning.Help! What are we doing wrong? My partner's blood sugar was high after Christmas so, a couple of months ago, we did the 5:2 diet combined with low carbohydrates. We cut out potatoes and other root veg, bread and anything else made from flour, pasta and rice. In the beginning it worked well. He lost some weight and his bloods were around 6 ...... sometimes lower, sometimes a little higher. For the last week though they have been around the 10 mark, and 11 one day. We are not doing the 5:2 any more, but have cut back calories, mainly because we are still not having carbohydrates. We tend to have eggs for breakfast, though have porridge made with water some days. Dinner is meat/fish with veg or salad. Snacks are small pieces of cheese, a tin of sardines, olives, nuts, some strawberries or raspberries. For 2 days now we have had filled chicken with salad in the evening with a few nuts and strawberries in the evening, at about 10pm. We sleep late as my partner is a bad sleeper, so he does his blood at about 11am when he gets up. It's been over 10 for the last 2 days. I don't know what we are doing wrong. Is he leaving it too late to do his blood, should he eat more before bed.......what??? Any ideas?
Help! What are we doing wrong? My partner's blood sugar was high after Christmas so, a couple of months ago, we did the 5:2 diet combined with low carbohydrates. We cut out potatoes and other root veg, bread and anything else made from flour, pasta and rice. In the beginning it worked well. He lost some weight and his bloods were around 6 ...... sometimes lower, sometimes a little higher. For the last week though they have been around the 10 mark, and 11 one day. We are not doing the 5:2 any more, but have cut back calories, mainly because we are still not having carbohydrates. We tend to have eggs for breakfast, though have porridge made with water some days. Dinner is meat/fish with veg or salad. Snacks are small pieces of cheese, a tin of sardines, olives, nuts, some strawberries or raspberries. For 2 days now we have had filled chicken with salad in the evening with a few nuts and strawberries in the evening, at about 10pm. We sleep late as my partner is a bad sleeper, so he does his blood at about 11am when he gets up. It's been over 10 for the last 2 days. I don't know what we are doing wrong. Is he leaving it too late to do his blood, should he eat more before bed.......what??? Any ideas?
Thanks for that. I'll check it out.Hi Magisham, you are doing a lot of things right! Ours is not simply a diet it is a different way of eating - fueling the body with fat rather than carbs. Have another look at daisy 1's post for newly diagnosed as this summarizes the basics and contains plenty of useful links?
After sight of this I would suggest you join the Low Carb Program if you have not done already via our site's home page. I completed it a week or so ago and it has given me a good grounding in eating LCHF and understanding all the places carbs are hidden. For example, I have stopped eating porridge for breakfast and switched to full fat Greek yogurt, a pure nut and spice toasted granola(ish) and a small amount of blueberries and/ or a couple of strawberries. Initially I used a small amount of 'off the shelf' nut granola but I found all brands contained a lot of sugar and other carbs. So I found a good recipe with the only carbs in the nuts. Instead of a high blood sugar spike that remained high till lunch and hungry by mid morning I get through to lunch with no hunger pangs. I hated porridge but years ago I did as I was told to control high blood pressure!
With regard to your meter readings I would focus on your pre and post meal readings to identify food and portion sizes that work for the both of you and not get too hung up about your waking figure as this will come down again. I try to ensure that no meal increases my blood glucose by more than 2 and no reading is more than 8. If high beforehand I cut out the meal or cut the carbs completely. Don't forget about the information and guides on our homepage - they are an excellent resource. I found the Blood Glucose Testing and related pages invaluable and posted my own threads when I was unsure. This was one of the reasons behind me posting this thread. Any concerns I would post your own thread or even consider re-post yours above in Newly Diagnosed as there is a lot of help and support available.
Thanks. We really should try to eat earlier I know. Other half is a poor sleeper and we are both night owls so tend to sleep late. Consequently we are having breakfast at lunch time, then evening dinner at about 7ish. I do try to limit proteins, but he does tend to munch on the nuts. Have done a veg curry with cauliflower rice tonight so we'll see how we get on in the morning.A late meal with low carb, but containing high protein foods, and also fat is asking for trouble. The protein will be metabolised into glucose just like carbs and the fat will delay the 'protein bump' till morning.
I suggest eating earlier in the night, and possibly reducing portion size of the protein foods. Try it and see if it makes any difference.
Also look back at your routine to see what else may have changed. Timing of some meds can affect readings too. A change in test strips can change meter results too.
what type of nuts did he consume? I had a smallish pak of cashews the other day, and spiked higher than expected. I checked the label on the pak, and it had 35g / 100g of carbs, of which 25g was sugars. Mind you they were cheapo roasted nuts. The nuts are highish protein, which will eventually convert into blood sugars just like carbs, but this takes a while (8 hours or so). The strawbs are fruit, so are mainly fructose sugar, which our bodies have diffficulty in digesting. Again will convert to glucose later than normal sugar.After the veg curry and cauliflower rice the reading was 10 yesterday morning. We had dinner at about 7.30pm (he was out all day), pork chop, French beans and cabbage. He did his blood 2 hours later, 5.4. He then, against my advice had some unsalted nuts and 4 large strawberries. Blood was 11 this morning. Do you think I should give him a slow releasing carb before he goes to bed, like a small bowl of porridge? His bloods seem to go high when he hasn't eaten for a while. Before I read all the stuff about the liver needing a rest between meals I was making sure he had food every couple of hours. Don't know what to do for the best.
The liver does play a part. Check wikipedia for what the liver does.I am thinking the dawn phenomenon is a myth and is more to do with what we are eating. Or rather the liver dump is the myth. For example liquids take 20-30 mins for the digestive process to work and increase blood sugars, fruit/veg/grains carbohydrates take 20mins-3hrs-8hrs roughly depending on what they are, meat proteins/fats can take any where from 8 - 48 hrs. Given the body is "resting" between night feed and morning feed, it make sense its not processing the liquid and carbohydrates but concentrating on the proteins and fats. The body likes to process the energy from the quickest to the slowest sources. So liquids stop the solids digesting and proteins are the last to b digested. This is why fasting works. There is nothing for the digestion to process except the slowest foods. Given the dawn phenomenon kicks in about 10hrs after the last meal of the night, this falls in line with the 8hrs digestion process it takes for meat to digest hence the surge in blood sugars. At least thats what I think I have no other evidence to say Im right or wrong.
I have liver dumps every morning...normally its about 8.5mmols on waking and it creeps up. I have a black coffe then i do the 'best seated excercise for diabetics' by Glucosezone on utube. Its a 30 min seated excercise program specifically to reduce the stored gylogen in the body. After doing this my levels drop to 4.5mmols and remains steadily below 6mmols the whole day on lchf eating.
So it really helps me to lower/deplete sugar stores quickly and helps tone as well. Check it out....i'm really interested to see if it works for anyone else
Im not saying the liver does not process higher blood sugars during the night. What I am saying is its from food being digested during the night. Its not some mystical body function just processing sugar from nothing.The liver does play a part. Check wikipedia for what the liver does.
Diabetics don't need it's intervention (liver dump) so techniques can be used to fool the liver. Metformin is one of them.
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