• Guest - w'd love to know what you think about the forum! Take the 2026 Survey »

Ravenous mouth hunger after meals?

thesmileyone

Member
Messages
19
Having something odd go on that google and reddit etc claim is a sign of diabetes...

When I eat meals I get hungry both towards the end of a big meal, or right after a small meal. Doesn't seem to matter if the meal is protein, fat or carbs or a mix of all of them. Seems to happen less if it's just carbs (like crisps). I thought it was hypoglycemia so I went out and bought another blood testing kit (accuchek fastclix is so much easier than traditional lances!) and my blood sugar 2 hours after eating is 6.5..

My fasted overnight blood glucose is around 6.0.

Oddly I fast 16 hours a day and I'm not hungry at all until the tail end of that fast and it's more the usual sign of hunger; gut hunger. The hunger I'm experiencing post prandial is more mouth hunger, literally salivating.

Quite confused. 300lb so overweight (though 6'8 so handle it well), only lose weight during caloric deficit, eating healthy, making all my meals etc. Had hb1ac 6 months ago and docs never phoned me about it which apparently means on the NHS that there's nothing to worry about. I seem to absorb minerals just fine so it's not leaky gut or anything.

Only other side effect is if I drink say 250ml of water I will pee it out half an hour later. But I've always required far less water than NHS guidelines. Pee colour is fine. Have ordered urine sticks to check for protein.

Any ideas? Thanks

Edit: I guess it's Hyperinsulinemia with normal blood glucose?
 
Last edited:
If I've understood what you've said, you're not diabetic but concerned you might be?

Google and Reddit are not the best or most reliable sources. There is good information to be found, but it's usually buried in noise.

Your BG measures after food need to be set alongside a reading before you ate, and include what you ate, to be more meaningful. I would also strongly recommend finding out what your HbA1c actually was. My practice did not tell me over a period of nine years that my BG was out of normal range until it tripped the "automatic T2 diagnosis" level. That's best avoided, particularly if you're already having symptoms. So not being told means you can assume nothing.

When you say "eating healthy" what do you mean by that? Many of us (me included) ate the recommended high-carb low-fat diet, and became diabetic. Switching to a high fat and next to no carb diet sorted my BGs out in four months. Weight loss (~90lb) followed.
 
Back
Top