Jakeinhd1995
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 77
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Fair enough! I've just done one now.. it says my blood sugar is 7.3 cause I had two strawberry clotted creams (small) and my machine says 6.1As you are not on any medication I would say you should have no worries with the lows and from my experience with the Libre if you did a finger prick test it would probably show in the 5 s .
I think it may be 5 - 10 minutes behind. But other than that is it normal for everyone to spike after meals?Fair enough! I've just done one now.. it says my blood sugar is 7.3 cause I had two strawberry clotted creams (small) and my machine says 6.1
It's how we work , the food we eat gets digested and it's glucose hits our blood, our pancreas reacts to the higher blood sugar levels by releasing insulin, the insulin allows our cells to use the glucose, blood sugar levels drop , pancreas reduces the amount of insulin.But other than that is it normal for everyone to spike after meals?
I have noticed while having the sensor on I get the spike at 1 hour and then it comes down so at my 2 hour I'm at baseline.It's how we work , the food we eat gets digested and it's glucose hits our blood, our pancreas reacts to the higher blood sugar levels by releasing insulin, the insulin allows our cells to use the glucose, blood sugar levels drop , pancreas reduces the amount of insulin.
So the levels have to rise to prompt the pancreas to up production, my beautiful streak and salad on the other hand, no carbs, no noticeable rise in blood sugar, pancreas can take a break.
So yes everyone's blood sugar will rise after a meal depending of course on what they ate.
The only difference for people with diabetes is that our blood sugar levels remain high because we either don't produce enough insulin, or our insulin is not as effective as it should be.
There are so many factors that can affect when the glucose gets into our blood, highly processed refined carbs can spike almost immediately, other things take longer to digest so take longer to show up in the blood.I get the spike at 1 hour and then it comes down so at my 2 hour I'm at baseline.
Are you referring to the fat that CGMs measure interstitial fluid which is 5 to 10 minutes behind blood sugars?I think it may be 5 - 10 minutes behind.
Interesting I'm thinking given my numbers...and I'm in "remission" that's its highly likely I may not actually be diabetic..when I was diagnosed my hba1c was 53. But now it's 33. I no longer drink fizzy drinks ect and no longer eat high refined carbs. And I am too scared to go back to eating them to even tempt fate!There are so many factors that can affect when the glucose gets into our blood, highly processed refined carbs can spike almost immediately, other things take longer to digest so take longer to show up in the blood.
45 min to 1hour seems to be roughly when the glucose usually reaches its peak, and generally speaking most non diabetic people will be back to baseline within 2hrs.
That's why we use the 2hr mark for our testing, if you are not close to baseline within 2hrs then your meal had too many carbs for you.
True I an just getting to grips with it all after 6 months!Given that some people can experience Diabetes symptoms and complications when only just into the (UK) pre-diabetes BG range, I don't contemplate 'not actually being diabetic'.
I don't consider eating in a way that keeps me healthy to mean I'm scared - I continue to eat that way because I'm sensible!
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