This has just started happening and my gp doesn't seem to believe me even though I've shown her my meter readings and diary notes. In the last couple of months I've had three hypos within 30 -45 minutes after eating a meal. I'm not eating anything unusual just meat and veg. No puddings. I get the usual symptoms sweats shakes and and tiredness. They have gone down as low as 2.9 . I usually have something sweet (glucose tabs) to bring it back up but it takes a long time to feel better. I have been told that as I suffer anxiety this can cause bg to drop by my gp . But surely after you've eaten your sugars should rise and not drop. Anyone else suffer this?
Hi, First of all, anxiety does not cause hypos! It may alter a few tenths but should not be directly the cause.
As @AndBreathe has said the effects of glicizide would bring on a hypo or the symptoms.
I'm not certain that you have RH, but I never had hypos that early or knew I was having hypos, if your awareness is not good, you wouldn't know if you were going low after the two hour testing. I would increase your tests to pre eating, then one hour to find your spike, then two hours, then longer, to see what happens. Of course not eating or drinking while doing this.
This will give you and your GP more of an idea, what is happening.
Saying that, if you have a problem with low bloods, he will have very little understanding of blood glucose disorders or insulin disorders like myself.
They are not been trained or have the knowledge to diagnose these conditions.
Hope this helps.
Let us know how you get on.
There is the RH forum, if you want more information on my condition.
You might recognise one or two things!
Yes I have. I once flopped from an 8.4 mmol/l to 2.1 within 1 hour of eating a substantial meal. Turns out the meal was particularly low carb, and I had taken my full dose of 1000 mg Metformin, and 2x Gliclazide tabs just before the meal. I had also taken a herbal supplement. This was a surprise to me, but I have reduced my Gliclazide dose, and although I get low readings still, they are mangeable. I am certain for me it was a combination of VLC meal with no carbs to speak of, and an 'overdose' of a hypoglycemic drug. Meat and veg can be quite low carb. and may not raise sugars much. The protein in the meal can trigger an insulin response, which can drop your bgl before the protein can be digested into glucoseThis has just started happening and my gp doesn't seem to believe me even though I've shown her my meter readings and diary notes. In the last couple of months I've had three hypos within 30 -45 minutes after eating a meal. I'm not eating anything unusual just meat and veg. No puddings. I get the usual symptoms sweats shakes and and tiredness. They have gone down as low as 2.9 . I usually have something sweet (glucose tabs) to bring it back up but it takes a long time to feel better. I have been told that as I suffer anxiety this can cause bg to drop by my gp . But surely after you've eaten your sugars should rise and not drop. Anyone else suffer this?
Nosher - I need to clarify a couple of things on your post.
Firstly, I would say that Gliclazide could cause a hypo, or hypo symptoms. I don't think we can be too definite at this stage, without knowing quite a bit more about Daffy.
We don't know how often daffy is testing at the moment, but it sounds, from her OP that she keeps records via her "meter readings and diary notes". I would agree, however, that structured testing would seem to make sense, in order to build up quite an intense data set.
Until it's a bit clearer what's going on for Daffy, it seems a bit premature to suggest her GP won't have much understanding of how to deal with it, and actually, we have no idea.
@daffy1 - A really comprehensive diary of your tests, food you have eaten and where you were on your anxiety scale at the time, might be helpful. Obviously having a hypo is liable to make you feel anxious, but I'm thinking of the time leading up to it. You might also want to add any exercise you do into those records, because some people find their bloods drop either during exercise, or sometimes a while after, when it appears their energy reserves have been used up.
One final thing I hadn't thought of before; have the hypos you talk about occurred at the same time in your cycle?
Daffy, I'd say you are probably in for a bit of detective work for yourself here as fast rising and falling blood scored can take a bit of understanding, as there are so many factor in play.
Keep posting and keep asking questions.
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