Bogie
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 133
- Location
- Barrie, Ontario, Canada
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Diabetes
I am exactly the same. If I eat around 10 pm I have lower Blood readings in the morningLooks like if I eat more late at night (11pm - 1am), and regardless of what I eat, my morning reading is lower than if I don't eat much at all.
I am a short sleeper (5-6 hrs maximum), so always awake late at night - quite often not going to sleep until around 2am, waking between 6 and 7 am checking BG level before 8am. No naps during the day as I work full-time from home.
Seems that the more carbs I have for late-night snacks then the lower my morning levels are.
I am sure there is an explanation for this ... right?
Well, first, when I sleep ... I am out for the count. No waking to do a testIt is most likely because the late meal, with carbs, creates a huge insulin spike in order to clear the glucose. High circulating insulin is just as bad for us as raised glucose levels. It causes more insulin resistance, weight gain, and fatty livers. It is best avoided. It is high insulin levels in a typical T2 that was one of the main causes for becoming T2.
As you are a short sleeper, do you test during the night to see what is happening?
I do like your possible reason before, though, and tomorrow I will be talking to the education person at the Diabetes Clinic I go to (LMS). I like having questions that are tough to answerI have no other answer for you. Maybe someone else can add something.
I definitely agree with that! There are so many differences with each person's makeup, what other medical conditions they have or have had, surgeries, hereditary factors, environment, smoker or non-smoker, lifestyle choices, etc., and of course, age. We are all different "combination locks" in what we are. Diabetes, T2D, has been a part of the history of each generation of my mother's family tree ... and my mother, myself, and two sisters are the recipients of that heritage. While we (all Diabetics) have many medical "tools" to help us in our battle with Diabetes, there is no "one size fits all" solution. Just a 30-minute drive from where I live is the birthplace home of Frederick Banting, co-inventor of insulin. Alliston, Ontario, Canada.Maybe some people are just different
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