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Red wine question

Emck

Well-Known Member
Messages
173
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
Hi there,

I have recently started using a Libre cgm and had a couple of red wines with dinner on Friday night. I have never really seen a jump in my sugars with red wine, but the Libre gave some interesting readings overnight.

I went to bed with sugars of about 5.8, within an hour of going to sleep they had risen to about 10 and continued to rise steeply until they got to about 15. When I woke the next morning my sugars were about 6.

From my pre-bed and waking readings, I could have assumed that I had maintained a steady sugar overnight, but how wrong I would have been!!

Maybe wine has been spiking me all of this time, without me knowing!!

Has anyone else seen similar results?

I have to say that I was probably an hour later than usual on taking my lantus at bedtime, this could also have contributed?
 
My understanding is that alcohol slightly lowers blood glucose but that the beverage itself may then raise it several hours later when the liver has finished processing the alcohol. That said, I think red wine has a reputation for not raising blood glucose too much at all? I’m teetotal, but when I did drink, I always found it to be ok. But then I never tested during the night!
 
I am not on any medication, but I do drink red wine before, during, and after my evening meal. Usually 2 glasses. I also use a Libre (part time). I do not see any rises once the expected rise from my meal has dropped. I go to bed and get up on virtually the same level, and in between I drop about 1mmol/l and stay fairly flat at that level all night.
 
You have made my day, or rather evening, as I have just opened a nice bottle of Primitivo and it was in danger of being spoiled by @Emck 's post.
 
I don't know if red wine reduces blood sugar in general but I know it reduces mine, because when I have red wine I don't have any beer!
 
What kind of food did you have? Are you on Lantus only or on mealtime insulin as well?

I had some thai food - a red curry and steamed rice. It could be a fluke! I don't drink too often, so it's my first time checking out the results of red wine! I'm on humalog and lantus - type 1.

From experience, I know that I can drink gin and slimline tonic and it's keeps a nice steady line (as does champagne, but I don't have the budget to have that as my Saturday night tipple)!

I love red wine and thought that I was good on it, hoping I can figure it out! The CGM is just showing me info that I would have never thought to check!
 
I suspect it was more likely to be the food that caused the rise rather than the wine - thing is you'll have to test the theory again............and repeat until you get the results you're expecting

Edit to add: A G+T (slimline) can cause me to go lower!
 
3 oz red wine with lunch didnt harm my sugars at all after 2 hours.T2,diet controlled.
 
Alcohol is an odd one for me. I don't tend to see the patterns my fellow type ones see but that is nothing new with my brittle diabetes. Red wine is not one I see a reaction in but you can only take notes and see how you go going forward.
 
I usually find when I have a glass of red wine in the evening which is occasional I go to a 5.3-5 reading in the morning, seems to work better for me than Metformin.
As I don’t drink that much i would be interested in knowing the total effect over a period of time by having a glass of wine every evening.
 

My nurse told me about the blood glucose lowering qualities of red wine when I was first diagnosed, over 5 years ago. She followed this with a warning that it must never be used as a medicine.
 
Hi,
I have also just started using Libre and it is very illuminating. I have begun using it to establish the effects on my BG of various different foods. Whilst researching this site, I was introduced to Dr Bernstein' s Diabetes solution. If the moderators allow this you can see a quote from it here below:
 
Very interesting as I've had similar issues. After your post, I realise that must get hold of a freestyle lite continuous blood glucose monitoring system. For me, there are too many variables to understand what is happening after drinking red wine with dinner, such as, the amount of protein in my meal (carbohydrates are always low <12g), the dryness of the red wine, how much red wine I've had, the exercise I've done over the past 36 hours, whether I was intermittent fasting or not etc, etc. That aside, I would like to know - like you, after drinking red wine, whether my sugar has gone up overnight before my waking appears normal. If my waking blood sugars aren't normal, I've never suspected the wine. Perhaps I should.
 
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Don't have a CGM, would like one, red wine does not seem to have any downside BG wise for me, it lowers my BG quickly and although it does climb back over time there does ot seem to be a spike for me.
 
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