- Messages
- 33
- Type of diabetes
- Prediabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
It usually is the carbs and the starchy veg.Hi, thank you so much for this explanation, it certainly makes the science a lot clearer. I do have a BG tester now and I’m finding out what is making my BG spike. It seems to be the obvious-pasta, bread, rice etc. I’m reducing/ eliminating much of this so I know that’s helping. Thanks for replying. Take care.
When we eat carbs BG will rise as the carbs are digested and pass into the bloodstream. This isn't a "spike" - it's to be expected. The real question is how quickly our systems can clear excess glucose - either used as fuel immediately, stored as fat, or stored as glycogen in muscles, liver and kidneys.
The attached graph is a example of a CGM from a non-diabetic person and you'll see plenty of ups and downs in BG, probably in response to eating and to the liver responding to perceived fuel needs. And have a read of this - a study of what happens to the BG of non-diabetic people after eating:
Continuous Glucose Monitoring Profiles in Healthy Nondiabetic Participants: A Multicenter Prospective Study - PMC
Use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is increasing for insulin-requiring patients with diabetes. Although data on glycemic profiles of healthy, nondiabetic individuals exist for older sensors, assessment of glycemic metrics with new-generation ...pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Thank you for your information and link, of which the latter was a fascinating read! I had to read it a few times and look up a few terms to understand it. I did get the ‘gist’ of it in the end. This was what my original question was really so thanks for that too. Kind regards.
Yes, I can raise my own BG to well over nine just by having a small latte. 5.2 to 9.6 after 40 minutes, back to 5.2 by 60 minutes. The point is I think that rises and falls in blood glucose are perfectly normal - it's like a car needing and using more fuel to go uphill. Blood glucose levels aren't the result of food alone - our livers will adjust how much glucose is in the blood according to what it thinks we need.The graph you included was also interesting to see. I worry about what my blood glucose is doing on an hourly/daily basis between blood glucose testing results, but trying my best to keep calm about it. Interestingly the graph you posted shows the blood glucose raising to 9!!?
I agree. Do you happen to know of any research looking at (or theorising on) the effects of integrals/areas under curves of BG levels and whether the feeling that short spikes are less bad than long raised plateaus (for a given area under the curve) has a scientific basis?The issue for me (as a type 2) is that I don't want rises in BG that go on for a much longer time. Personally, I'd be less worried about a short-term rise to 10 that fell back to 5.5 within an hour than a rise to 8 that lasted six hours. The second case shows that excess glucose is hanging round in the blood, and that's what can do physical damage to nerves and capillaries.
I was thinking specifically about any research into glycation rate (and whatever other damage mechanisms there are) vs glucose concentration - I'm not sure whether or not it's a linear relationship (I assume not is probably the safest bet!) I'll do some Googling and report back. Just idle curiosity!It follows, I think, that all other things being equal, the longer cells in nerves and capillaries are exposed to high glucose concentrations the greater chance there is of glycation and therefore damage.
I don't know of any directly on that - it's a few months since I last did a pubmed crawl.I was thinking specifically about any research into glycation rate (and whatever other damage mechanisms there are) vs glucose concentration - I'm not sure whether or not it's a linear relationship (I assume not is probably the safest bet!) I'll do some Googling and report back. Just idle curiosity!
You can also check out Dr Unwins sugar infographics which give an indication of how many teaspoon equivalents of sugar there are in various foods. Just google "Dr Unwin Sugar Infographics"Hi, thank you so much for this explanation, it certainly makes the science a lot clearer. I do have a BG tester now and I’m finding out what is making my BG spike. It seems to be the obvious-pasta, bread, rice etc. I’m reducing/ eliminating much of this so I know that’s helping. Thanks for replying. Take care.
When I was misdiagnosed in about fifteen years ago.Can I throw in my trusty Ben Bikman infographic?
View attachment 70548
The interesting bit is in the original question - what does "non-diabetic" mean -
Well, it can be defined a number of ways, but to some extent - it has to mean (for T2, or prediabetic) - someone to the left of this graph, where insulin is working as expected, by effectively clearing glucose from the blood.
So - there is a real case for saying - you know, the glucose spike and area under the curve are all interesting in their own right, but really, the CGM is telling you something about your insulin response, and the long, slow glucose response may mean a lower concentration of blood glucose at any given time (which on it's own is good), but it maybe should be interpreted to say - that means it's taking insulin longer to clear out the glucose, so it means that you have a higher level of insulin, for a longer period of time (which is not good).
I'm not saying that one way is right and the other wrong, but I think it's better to be aware of both, and think about reducing total body glucose and insulin.
Aah!Hi @Lamont D ...
I don't think there is anything in conflict here.. that Ben Bikman graph shows how insulin resistance progresses over time.. Insulin is a hormone. Diabetes is hormone imbalance, T1 too little, T2 too much and every other variety some form of issue with hormone imbalance. Check.
Nobody 'has' that graph at any point..it shows the response to blood glucose in a normally functioning person over time, measured in decades. so the only part of it which is completely non-diabetic is the part at the far left.. where blood glucose triggers a small amount of insulin which clears out the blood glucose.
This is not a graph of a sugar spike measured in minutes.
The shape of the insulin line then shows that over time, you need more and more insulin to do the same job..
The most importand point being that there is a long long time for most people where blood glucose looks normal, but there is an elevated level of insulin.
We are kind of saying the same thing.. I'm saying we tend to focus on the "how much sugar is bad" per the original question.. I'm saying ... you also need to be aware of the hormone response.
When I was misdiagnosed in about fifteen years ago.
My graph, was nowhere near the one you showed.
And the doctors never questioned it.
Just after true diagnosis, thanks to my endocrinologist, I was confirmed as non diabetic.
But I still had high spikes and if I did eat carbs for a few days even my fasting levels would be diabetic.
Mainly because of my first phase, which is weak.
But it's not only the insulin. I have been saying for a while as a hormonal response.
Cos, the first phase imbalance in these and other hormones, does effect everything to do with BG levels.
Then take in the usual insulin resistance, insulin overshoot, intolerance and other aspects of the constant higher glucose derived from high carbs.
Non diabetic related to being below the hba1c levels. But it should include a term of non diabetic fasting levels as well. As in remission.
Susceptible to the imbalance, but in real control that improves health.
And keeps the progressive nature of the condition under good control.
With RH, through my experience, being in continuous normal or just above BG levels, has a dramatic effect on keeping my health in a good place. Less overall insulin etc, in your blood.
Insulin is good, but bad if too much.
High circulation of useless insulin, is because of insulin resistance, is what should be checked along with hba1c by doctors before issuing meds or even insulin etc.
Non diabetic is a label that says, your metabolism is working.
And you are aware of the pitfalls.
Avoid the high spikes, is the best advice for someone that has a propensity for metabolic and diabetic levels.
It refers to my condition.Thank you for this explanation. May I ask what ‘RH’ means? You mention it half way down?