I tested upon waking and usually before eating - ie when i started feeling hungry after the last meal. I don't usually feel hungry/hypo upon waking, although the glucose level averages about 5.5.
Waiting until symptoms or hunger is how i've been testing. Low results coincide with symptoms. Last friday after a counselling session i got home feeling a little woozy and the reading was less than 5. Later I had a meal with a 100g portion of roasted buckwheat (i had been told was low carb and gluten free) and felt the symptoms, reading was under 4 and a half.
I have not tested every 30 mins, i can try it if they give me some more strips.
I am currently trying to cut out wheat and grains, as the majority of carbs i eat come from wholeweat sandwiches for lunch/snack before bed (around 8-9pm), crispbread sandiwches for breakfast/late afternoon, and wholeweat noodles or brown rice with my dinner.
Interestingly although i cooked noodles last night for dinner, i put them on a separate plate to avoid eating unless i felt necessary. I didn't eat them, and i think i felt (hard to be objective - especially as i'd crashed earlier in the day and my system may hav ebeen compensating somehow) less hungry until bedtime snack.
Also, someone on a reddit discussion forum for keto mentioned 'early' hypoglycemia. I have never heard of this and assumed they meant reactive. Does anyone know what early hypo is, if anything?
I tested upon waking and usually before eating - ie when i started feeling hungry after the last meal. I don't usually feel hungry/hypo upon waking, although the glucose level averages about 5.5.
Waiting until symptoms or hunger is how i've been testing. Low results coincide with symptoms. Last friday after a counselling session i got home feeling a little woozy and the reading was less than 5. Later I had a meal with a 100g portion of roasted buckwheat (i had been told was low carb and gluten free) and felt the symptoms, reading was under 4 and a half.
I have not tested every 30 mins, i can try it if they give me some more strips.
I am currently trying to cut out wheat and grains, as the majority of carbs i eat come from wholeweat sandwiches for lunch/snack before bed (around 8-9pm), crispbread sandiwches for breakfast/late afternoon, and wholeweat noodles or brown rice with my dinner.
Interestingly although i cooked noodles last night for dinner, i put them on a separate plate to avoid eating unless i felt necessary. I didn't eat them, and i think i felt (hard to be objective - especially as i'd crashed earlier in the day and my system may hav ebeen compensating somehow) less hungry until bedtime snack.
Also, someone on a reddit discussion forum for keto mentioned 'early' hypoglycemia. I have never heard of this and assumed they meant reactive. Does anyone know what early hypo is, if anything?
Again, apologies if this has all been mentioned, but can I ask your age (roughly)? Is there any link to your hormones?
Have you had any symptoms while at the doctors/hospital/similar and had them do a test?
it just sounds like reactive hypoglycemia. I'm sure some people with it react faster/slower.I believe that 'early' is when you rise incredibly fast, and then crash equally quickly. Within an hour or so. But it isn't something that happens to me - I usually get hypos around 2.5-3.5 hours after meals, although I can slow that down a bit more and reduce both the spike and the crash by eating fat and fibre and protein in the meal. And if I don't eat the carbs, I don't get the spike, so I don't get the crash, at all.
I did a quick google and found this. But I don't know if it will give any info that you find useful.
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/crim/2013/273957/
@Lamont D may be able to help. He has done a bit of reading on 'early' RH, I think.
Less than 5 and 4.5 aren't hypo readings. They're perfectly normal readings
You say you wake at around 5.5 but don't feel hypo - well, again that's normal because your 5.5 is a normal reading, so that's reassuring too.
Apart from the rogue 3.3, it sounds like your daytime readings are normal too. I have two glucose meters and they can often read around 1mmol different, so your 3.3 may well have been higher. Non-diabetic friends who I've tested have had readings in the 3s at certain times.
Perhaps when the doctor said you had a 'reactive metabolism', he/she just meant you were more sensitive to normal,fluctuations in blood sugar?
Hi, Brun,I believe that 'early' is when you rise incredibly fast, and then crash equally quickly. Within an hour or so. But it isn't something that happens to me - I usually get hypos around 2.5-3.5 hours after meals, although I can slow that down a bit more and reduce both the spike and the crash by eating fat and fibre and protein in the meal. And if I don't eat the carbs, I don't get the spike, so I don't get the crash, at all.
I did a quick google and found this. But I don't know if it will give any info that you find useful.
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/crim/2013/273957/
@Lamont D may be able to help. He has done a bit of reading on 'early' RH, I think.
I am 43/male. I've been dealing with this for i'd say at least 15 years. the doctor record sme being tested about ten years ago. I am not aware of anything hormone-related, but I don't know if they checked this. They've repeatedly ruled out diabetes, i've mentioned doing the glucose test which yielded nothing, and my thyroid was tested two years ago so if there was a problem it would have appeared. What the insulin blood test will reveal I don't know since they've yet to actually get on and do it for some reason, despite having the sample for 3 weeks. I don't know how likely an insulinoma is.
I've never had the symptoms while at the hospital/doctors. She took a reading when i went a few weeks back, and that was around 8-30am before i'd even eaten (didn't have time after ringing for an appointment and didn't feel hungry). The reading was 5.6 iirc.
The whole thing is just tiring and wierd. It's so inconsistent. I feel fine fasting (ie before breakfast), but if i eat something like porridge, and i don't anymore, then i'm hungry half an hour later. Carbs? Who knows, but i recall the endocrinologist i saw back them at the hospital recommending porridge because it's supposed to be slow acting. Same with buckwheat last week. I wanted to try it because it's supposed ot be wheat free. Just no good at all.
I don't know what to say, i have to assume the glucose test they did was chosen deliberately and analysed appropriately. If it wasn't, i don't know what to say. I mentioned today that perhaps the test should be longer, as some people go for hours in these tests, but she said that two hours was the norm. Until i see an endocrinologist, god knows when that will be, there isn't much else I can do. I'm also tempted to see what a dietician would tell me about keto before fully committing to it. I still find it very scary to go for (sorry!). On the other hand, if i eliminate bread and wheat i'm more or less going to be nearing ketogenic level carb intake so i don't really know what to think!
What diet changes could i safely try in the meantime. It's going to be a long wait for an appointment.
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