For which there is no current treatment.
Anybody in the same boat and get a different story from their healthcare provider or endo?
Well, the cure is possibly worse than the disease, but have you considered setting your alarm for 2am and having a snack....?
Edited to add - have you looked at the reactive hypoglycaemia forum to see how they cope? It seems like you may have a similar issue....
Hi and welcome to the forum.
I have Reactive Hypoglycaemia.
What the symogi effect does is the other extreme to RH.
With RH you have an overshoot of insulin after digestion due to a hyper level of blood sugar. The pancreas produces too much insulin and you hypo. This mainly happens because of carbs during day time in the norm, but it can happen at night.
I believe the symogi effect is because your liver overshoots glucose during the night due to low or quick dropping blood sugar levels or too much insulin circulating.
My treatment to avoid my condition is avoiding the foods that trigger the hyper, if I don't hyper then I don't go hypo.
My advice is to find out by testing and experimentation what foods, drinks and lifestyle that causes the liver to produce too much glucose.
I get a rebound effect if I don't eat very low carb, because I have to deal with yo-yo fluctuations in blood glucose levels. It's like a rollercoaster ride, up and down.
Just one question, what is causing the hypos during the night, but not through the day?
Some type twos have to eat regularly even though the night to try and offset the dawn phenomenon..
As I found out, you have to find a way to stop the triggers.
No trigger, no hypo, no hyper. It's not easy, but well worth avoiding the foods that do cause these types of conditions.
Best wishes