Well done on taking action on your prediabetes!I've had prediabetes for a while but am now become more proactive in dealing with it. I joined low carb program nearly a month ago and am pleased with results so far.I've started using my glucose monitor more but results sometimes confuse me.
Please can anyone explain why blood sugar should rise from 5.7 (half hour after waking , no food but a small binge yesterday) to 7 after a coffee then an hour of exercise but still no food.I thought it would have dropped.
Thanks
Thanks Antje77 for your replyWell done on taking action on your prediabetes!
Many diabetics (of all types) experience dawn phenomenon and/or foot on the floor effect.
It's your friendly liver pumping some glucose in your bloodstream to give you an energy boost to get you sterted for the day.
Liver isn't the smartest so it doesn't realise you don't deal too well with glucose.
To be honest, that is like asking "how long is a piece of string".I think what I'm trying to say is 'how long does this phenomenon last?'
In the absence of food your body is using its stored glucose to fuel itself, the exercise is creating an even greater demand for energy. Your body is simply moving fuel from storage, where you can't see it, into your blood where you can see it, and more importantly use it.how long does this phenomenon last
Thank youIn addition to Dawn Phenomenon that @Antje77 mentioned, our "helpful" livers can also dump glucose to give us energy when it notices that we start exercising. Depending upon the type of exercise, our body can then become more efficient at using the insulin and our levels drop but something that stresses our body (e.g. lifting very heavy weights or cycling up a steep hill on a wet windy day) can cause our levels to rise and any stop start exercise (such as HIIT or weights) may not lsat for long enough to reach the insulin efficiency phase.
Regardless of the type of exercise, our body tends to use more glucose and longer term we can see reduced levels. With Type 1, I have to reduce my insulin for up to 48 hours after a hard work out.
Thank you MbakerThe above answers could be right for you. This is a very strange condition for some to the point of wanting to scream at times. For example I used to have fasting blood glucose in the low 5's, I was wondering how some were getting 4's. I kept trying different things such as removing oats completely (after reducing) and adding more meat / fish protein. I got my fbg down to low 4's or late 3's, but my A1c went up slightly, I searched for spikes via 6 different monitors and the Freestyle Libre (nothing past 6, apart from an apple experiment (6.4)).
I would suggest sticking with what you are doing with small educated intuitive tweaks. I tend to believe that insulin resistance is behind alot of the blood sugar staying elevated. I am not sure of your age, but a life time of building resistance will take months / years to reverse. I saw the benefits of beginning to reverse IR when despite having at the time a late 5 A1c my BP was 135 / circa 75, with consistency this is now circa 120 / 70.
Thank you catinahat.In the absence of food your body is using its stored glucose to fuel itself, the exercise is creating an even greater demand for energy. Your body is simply moving fuel from storage, where you can't see it, into your blood where you can see it, and more importantly use it.
It will continue to use its stored glucose until it has been used up, then it will start using its other energy source, stored fat.
optimum time to test blood sugar
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