Blood sugar spikes, reactive hypoglycemia, and how to avoid them: an interview with Penny Figtree MD

A conversation with Penny Figtree, MD, about her personal experiences with blood sugar spikes and reactive hypoglycemia.
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- VIDEO DESCRIPTION -
In this video, I am talking to Dr. Penny Figtree, a primary care physician from Port Macquarie on the East Coast of Australia. Dr. Figtree leads a low-carb clinic to treat obesity, type 2 diabetes, fatty liver disease, and other metabolic disorders. She also has a long history of experiencing blood sugar spikes, often followed by reactive hypoglycemia, even though she does not have prediabetes or diabetes. We are discussing who is most at risk of blood sugar spikes and reactive hypoglycemia, the symptoms of reactive hypoglycemia, and how to avoid both the blood sugar spikes and the reactive hypoglycemia.
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- LINKS TO CONNECT WITH DR. PENNY FIGTREE ONLINE -
Low-Carb Port Macquarie. Dr. Figtree’s office: www.lowcarbpmq.com.au
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Twitter: / penelopefigtree
- TIMESTAMPS -
0:00 Introduction
0:58 Introduction Dr. Penny Figtree: a physician with unexpected blood sugar spikes and reactive hypoglycemia
6:44 Food that cause a blood sugar spike
10:30 How to prevent reactive hypoglycemia
14:34 How to avoid blood sugar spikes
22:18 Risks of continuous glucose meters
26:00 Eating carbs while on a low-carb diet
26:25 Pre-diabetes diagnosis as a result of blood sugar spikes to a single food eaten regularly
31:05 Summary
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- SIMILAR VIDEOS -
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Пікірлер: 470

  • @philipthompson117
    @philipthompson117 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for posting this video (and your other ones). I have been eating porridge for breakfast for the last 15 years. 13 years ago I was diagnosed with diabetes. I have been using a cgm now for 3 months. I stopped the porridge yesterday. Today was the first day with no insulin and no spikes.

  • @pennyfigtree5930

    @pennyfigtree5930

    Жыл бұрын

    I had a patient on 20 units of long acting insulin in the morning. He would have a hypo most afternoons! I stopped his porridge and his insulin and the next day he was terrific. His Hbaic is 5.2% off all insulin. So it sounds like you are similar!

  • @danguee1

    @danguee1

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm very interested: my girlfriend eats lots of 'Bircher' muesli. A very simple version of it: porridge oats soaked in cold milk with maybe just 7 or 8 raisins. I've always assumed that not cooking it might result in slow release of carbs and lowish blood sugar spikes. Might this not be the case? [Ah: 7:43 - Bircher's also potentially a problem...]

  • @h.4727

    @h.4727

    7 ай бұрын

    Oatmeal, which most people consider "healthy", has a macronutrient profile that's over 90% carbohydrates. Porridge is even higher.

  • @philipthompson117

    @philipthompson117

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you Penny. I have stayed off the porridge but I had to go back to the insulin. I tried stopping it again a month ago but blood glucose became unstable within a week. I have a cgm. Thankfully my readings are still improving with a Hba1c estimated at 7.1. I was about 5kg overweight and that is now dropping. Energy levels are improving and brain fog has lifted.

  • @lauraleilyn
    @lauraleilyn6 ай бұрын

    Finally received this diagnosis after years of symptoms. The hypoglycemic effect really knocks me out, and usually comes on very suddenly. I become so hazy and very cold, and fall asleep drooling for about an hour. Not cool when driving.... I've been on a very low carb diet for a couple of years now and it has helped tremendously. but I must say that it does occasionally still happen even with a protein rich meal. It seems like after an extra hard workout or maybe if my sleep is off, idk. Also, I learned that any amount of alcohol has the same effect. Cutting it out entirely has been beneficial in every way :)

  • @BeKind419

    @BeKind419

    10 күн бұрын

    I deal with reactive hypoglycemia post meals. Also exercise induced hypoglycemia. Even a walk I’ll crash into the 50’s. I also have it while sleeping. I have to treat and eat during the night several times. It is so hard on my body. Still trying to figure out what diet to follow. I always have a protein shake before a complex carb meal, which includes fats and fiber to help stabilize, which helps with the spikes. But I always have the crashes. All day long. Randomly. Very frustrating. Thinking of trying a very low carb diet, carnivore or keto.

  • @vidakyeremateng5165
    @vidakyeremateng516511 ай бұрын

    Oh my gosh! Finally I got to know I am not alone or crazy or exaggerating about how I feel. I had been experiencing exactly what the doctor is talking about and I have been explaining to doctors with the horrible feeling, the anxiousness frustrating etc. you name it! Have been hospitalized couple of times with symptoms that I thought only God will understands me. Because you talk to doctors and people and they tell you you are anxious for nothing. And the sad thing you want to hear is to find a way to manage your stress level. Like you are causing your own problem. I have been experiencing this almost a year now with admissions yet no solution or find the cause of my symptoms. At times my sugar levels will be 60s feeling like passing out. But I am not diabetic so no one is taking me serious. Hypoglycemia is indeed deadly than the hyperglycemia.

  • @nidhi7402

    @nidhi7402

    5 ай бұрын

    Something like this I was also experiencing from past one year and Finally I got someone to realise this because it's hypoglycemia 🔆

  • @Sparkling-Cyanide
    @Sparkling-Cyanide Жыл бұрын

    This was SO informative! She experiences what I’ve been dealing with for most of my life. A huge spike in blood sugar and then a big drop when I eat certain things - mostly grains, even whole intact grains. When I was diagnosed with reactive hypoglycemia some years ago I was told that it was a rare condition. I’ve discovered since then that a lot of people have it but most people don’t recognize it fir what it is. I tried an experiment based on info I got from your previous videos in that I ate a healthy serving of protein prior to eating oatmeal. It worked! My blood sugar only rose 30 points rather than 100! But I think that the best thing for me to do is to just stop eating those things that causes the high/low roller coaster. Those spikes really can’t be good.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I agree that these issues do seem more common than we used to think. Now, with many people who don't have diabetes wearing CGMs, we are getting much more data, anecdotally and also from scientific publications, suggesting that spiking followed by hypoglycemia is not all that rare even among people with normal fasting glucose and normal HbA1c. Thank you for sharing. Cheers Mario

  • @cannotbeshaken7889

    @cannotbeshaken7889

    11 ай бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience Do you think berberine would help with hypoglycemia? Or would it make it worse?

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    11 ай бұрын

    @@cannotbeshaken7889 Berberine may reduce the hyperglycemia that can be the trigger for the hypoglycemia. I don’t think it’ll make hypos worse, but don’t quote me on that as I am not aware of any study looking at that specifically. May be prudent to experiment with this carefully while monitoring blood sugar levels tightly.

  • @cannotbeshaken7889

    @cannotbeshaken7889

    11 ай бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience Ok, thank you, I appreciate your reply.

  • @vulcanorigan
    @vulcanorigan7 ай бұрын

    Well said ! I had the experience too. I work night shift, I used to have a cup of coffee with a piece of bread or a piece of baked sweet potatoes at 1 am, I felt hungry and shaking by 5 am . Now I have been on low carb diet for more than one year, my fatty liver reversed,my joints pain is gone, my cholesterol panel is in optimum range, most of all I feel energetic and happy!

  • @janiemiller825

    @janiemiller825

    6 ай бұрын

    Is very low carb like keto diet of only 20-50 carbs daily ok when you’re hypoglycemic? Or dangerous? Too low carb? 🤔

  • @simergill7510

    @simergill7510

    4 ай бұрын

    Can you send your diet ?

  • @Rockies896
    @Rockies8966 ай бұрын

    Thanks for another great video. After watching your videos, finally felt like I was listening to someone very reasonable. It feels like when it comes to diet, masses are always chasing different extreme diets, like Keto or complex carbs or whatever. In my view the best diet is called moderation, eat in moderation with a mix of different healthy foods, you have nothing to worry about. After watching your videos I was very much inspired to buy the CGM, so over the black Friday sale (over $200 for 2.... very expensive without prescription) got the Libre 3 for both me and wife. Both me and my wife's A1C hovers borderline pre-diabetic around 5.7 or so. We did not change a thing on our diet, we just wanted to see what our bodies does after every meal we eat. The results were truly eye opener for us. We rotate breakfast among different things we consider 'healthy', the one that barely budged the needle on sugar was eating two poached eggs, followed by an apple. I have been eating that most mornings for many years now. Even homemade fruit smoothie with just water and ice as a base was not that great, but what that means is, smoothies are usually bad, but not fruits eaten by themselves. Eating white rice with animal protein increased the sugar the least (around 140), but rice with vegetables and lentil soup caused spike as high as 160. I experimented with the idea you presented in a different video about freezing the carb after cooking. So started cooking rice good for few days and left them in the refrigerator. Interestingly, there was no change for us in the CGM reading between freshly cooked vs refrigerated. I guess different people react differently to same food. As a part of our experiment, we did confirm that even a gentle walk after every meal greatly reduces the chance of a huge sugar spike. The sweat spot seems to be walking 30 minutes after a meal. Last but not least, being a moderate scotch drinker, I was very excited to find out what CGM will show after I start drinking. Surprisingly, no matter how much carb I ate along with my scotch, my blood sugar dropped to 85 and it stayed there for 2 to 3 hours. Finally after 4 hours or so, the blood sugar started to spike as if I had just eaten an hour ago. Same behavior with beer even though beer has a lot of carb. Did a quick google, and read that after sensing alcohol, liver deprioritizes sugar processing and starts processing alcohol, so sugar level drops because processing sugar takes backstage for a bit. Is that a correct assessment? Again pretty amazing to see it firsthand!!!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. Loved reading that. The impact of alcoholic beverages on blood sugar is complex, and varies greatly depending on the type of beverage consumed, the timing relative to food intake, the composition of that food, and there are also big differences between people in this regard. I'll make a separate video about alcohol and blood sugar regulation soon, as it's been requested by several people. Best wishes to you and your wife. Cheers Mario

  • @mamafoodlivelaughlove9746
    @mamafoodlivelaughlove97469 ай бұрын

    Thanks to Dr. Mario and Dr. Penny for your sharing and trying hard to educate people ❤

  • @rosemarybdea
    @rosemarybdea Жыл бұрын

    Excellent information as always. Thanks to you both.

  • @scarsofthepastministry
    @scarsofthepastministry7 ай бұрын

    This is highly educational and extremely helpful. Thanks to you both.

  • @creativeby_nature
    @creativeby_nature Жыл бұрын

    So grateful for this info! Thank you!

  • @shurrrig
    @shurrrig Жыл бұрын

    the way i clicked IMMEDIATELY at the title because that experience of TOO much insulin and resulting hypoglycemia has almost caused me a car accident once and is the reason i eat no/low carb now and feeling much much better since my body is starting to become what i think is fat adapted.... i can't believe i'm learning about this randomly on youtube and all my life i've been dealing with it wrong, by eating MORE sugar when i felt i had low blood sugar. thank you.

  • @misterbaleize
    @misterbaleize Жыл бұрын

    What a delightful presentation and, having just completed the first 14 days of my first ever CGM - simply out of interest as I am not diabetic - I can confirm that my situation and, especially in so far as oats is concerned, precisely reflects the experience of the good doctor. Thank you for such an informative discussion!!

  • @yropez
    @yropez Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. Thank you for bringing awareness to this!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Yoshiko!

  • @sankarN84
    @sankarN848 ай бұрын

    What a wonderful talk, with loads of practical information ! thanks a lot to you both🙏

  • @trend0000
    @trend0000 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, thank you! I learned from this channel about diabetes more than all other channels on KZread together! All these particular data and information you couldn’t find on other channels are simply amazing! I come across this channel by accident and remain addicted to it! Everybody talked about these issues in general terms without real substance as you do! 👏👍

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your kind comment.

  • @shrameks
    @shrameks Жыл бұрын

    I found your talk to be excellent. As someone who wears a continuous glucose monitor, I've always been puzzled by why some days I can eat a small amount of carbohydrates without any issues, while other times even a small amount can cause a high spike in my blood sugar. Your presentation was very informative and helped me understand that the balance of hormones in my body plays a significant role in how different foods affect my blood sugar levels. Thank you for shedding light on this topic. I am a 78-year-old male thanks again

  • @ritamorelli3869

    @ritamorelli3869

    11 ай бұрын

    Naked carbs I have experienced spikes with oats as well

  • @BAdams138
    @BAdams1387 ай бұрын

    Very interesting points that the two of you brought out today! Thanks.

  • @johannaandrews
    @johannaandrews Жыл бұрын

    Thank you . Lots of helpful information and look forward to your upcoming videos , cheers

  • @Pawel-D
    @Pawel-D Жыл бұрын

    Very clearly explained. Thank you!

  • @markgiles3
    @markgiles3 Жыл бұрын

    I did enjoy this conversation. Thank you.

  • @daryltjl
    @daryltjl6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this! I've been having the same problem for years. I've been having horrible anxiety attacks and sometimes depression out of no where and recently found out it was my reactive hypoglycemia that caused it. I've found that I also get the same reaction to sugar free foods.

  • @RickinICT

    @RickinICT

    2 ай бұрын

    I wonder if the reaction to sugar-free foods is because when you taste the 'sweetness' of the food r beverage, your body dumps a first-phase insulin response in anticipation of the increase in blood sugar. Of course, since the 'sweetness' it detects isn't really sugar, there's no glucose spike. Instead, all that insulin just drives your regular glucose into your cells and out of your blood, causing hypoglycemia. I always had a similar reaction to drinking an artificially sweetened beverage on an empty stomach. I get a little dizzy and 'punchy' (almost like I've got a slight alcohol buzz). I never really thought about the blood sugar angle before. I quit drinking soda altogether many years ago now, so I hadn't thought of this reaction in years.

  • @lseh4720
    @lseh4720 Жыл бұрын

    When I was in college, my blood sugar dropped so low that my roommates had to manually feed me. I don’t recall why but it was certainly related to food. Now, 40 years later, when I eat a bowl of vermicelli, my blood sugar shoots through the roof if I eat a large bowl, vs. small. Thanks for this video.

  • @chqshaitan1
    @chqshaitan1 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video, and its really good to see real world cgm results, especially with the timings of the blood sugar spikes

  • @arnkbb4656
    @arnkbb4656 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing these mazing information

  • @kikito89x
    @kikito89x Жыл бұрын

    Very informative video, thank you

  • @sallyastles9148
    @sallyastles9148 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you both for the excellent video. I certainly recognised myself jn Penny s experiences. The CGM was an eye opener and explained so much about why i can feel so tired and low. Those low sugar episodes are horrid and i find now i can tell my sugar is high by the jittery dast heart beat feeling. Porridge was a shock when i saw the blood sugar spike as i love porridge! After lots of experiments, i found a spoonful of chopped nuts in a grain and seed porridge brought the spike down to normal and is delicious. Thank you so much for these great videos.

  • @CommonSintz

    @CommonSintz

    11 ай бұрын

    cinnamon helps too

  • @ishficici999
    @ishficici9996 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing! ❤

  • @monikakress3867
    @monikakress38673 ай бұрын

    thanks for these videos. I am recommending this channel to all of my friends and family.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Appreciate that! Cheers Mario

  • @richardreed2323
    @richardreed232310 ай бұрын

    Loved it and learned a lot.

  • @silkenissen7409
    @silkenissen7409 Жыл бұрын

    I have been suffering from severe migraine for many years and only recently it got dramatically better after I started to be more aware of my blood glucose changes and a radical change in my diet accordingly. Thank you so much for this high quality information, it helps me a lot to understand more and to follow my path to get rid of the debilitating migraine attacks!!

  • @littlevoice_11

    @littlevoice_11

    Жыл бұрын

    Metabolic Health Summit just did a video on this. Really interesting

  • @silkenissen7409

    @silkenissen7409

    Жыл бұрын

    @@littlevoice_11 Thanks for the info!

  • @nissaquill7229

    @nissaquill7229

    3 ай бұрын

    Same!

  • @Sheyz123
    @Sheyz1238 ай бұрын

    🎉Thank you for that wonderful information was very incitive

  • @colinpope2832
    @colinpope28322 ай бұрын

    This occurred to me 25 - 30 years ago. I ended up in A+E twice. I worked out some of the problem but never had an explanation . Thanks very much. 30 years later I have been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, so perhaps I got closer to the problem than I realised !

  • @marybusch6182
    @marybusch6182 Жыл бұрын

    I found that coffee vs tea also impacted the reactive hypoglycemia... but our hypoglycemia was around 3 hours after a meal.. I also noted that my lunch and dinner appetites were stronger if I skipped protein at breakfast. I really appreciated her comments about the chocolate cake... and also the comments about the children and overeating and the impact on their stress hormones....

  • @CommonSintz

    @CommonSintz

    11 ай бұрын

    yes go decaf

  • @gabrielcaleb9277
    @gabrielcaleb92776 ай бұрын

    ❤ Thank you ! VERY VERY informative . Among thé best I vé ever Heard. Greetings from France 🍀

  • @cbgbstew4072
    @cbgbstew407210 ай бұрын

    I recently got a pre-diabetes diagnosis and have been wearing a CGM for 9 days at this point. It’s absolutely fascinating. I had the same glucose spike experience with a seemingly-healthy, very low sugar and high fiber cereal, with 2% fat milk. It was surprising. Fantastic video and channel in general!

  • @nancyj621

    @nancyj621

    7 ай бұрын

    Any liquid milk seems to spike my blood glucose.

  • @h.4727

    @h.4727

    7 ай бұрын

    Milk is a carbohydrate, that happens to also have protein. Lactose... "ose" is a sugar. Any type of cereal is a carbohydrate. So you were just eating solid carbs soaked in liquid carbs.

  • @ronjanyberg8028
    @ronjanyberg8028 Жыл бұрын

    Hey! Really appreciate all your videos. Would be great to hear you talk about differences between monophasic and biphasic glucose curves after meals. Thanks!

  • 9 ай бұрын

    Chaîne très intéressante, bien informée. Merci beaucoup pour votre travail.

  • @lauragaimon7742
    @lauragaimon77426 ай бұрын

    Great video!! it helps to realize I am not crazy. This is how my doctor treated me when I went to the Dr with my glucose monitor, asking if I was feeling bad after a "healthy" breakfast (bread with jam) I was spiking and falling down (from 210 to 50) . And he told me it is normal to spike and you are healthy because your body recovers by itself. What an advice coming from a Dr.!!! I ignored it and started to do my own research, and after doing low carb and eating more consciously about what I eat, the order and the combination, I feel much better. THANKS!!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. Yes, bread with jam is an extremely glycemic meal, and really not to be recommended, not even for people with normal glucose tolerance. Based on my research, an increase in blood sugar to 180 mg/dL or higher is not physiologically normal, and reactive hypoglycemia is also not normal. Good for you for educating yourself. Just make sure to be clear that being on a lower carb diet may impair your first-phase insulin response, so while eating generally low-carb, we need to stay particularly clear of highly-glycemic naked carb meals. Cheers Mario

  • @claudiaoliveira-usa

    @claudiaoliveira-usa

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nourishedbysciencedoes that mean that even if you don’t eat sugary or starch foods for a long time and one day you eat some will you have hypoglycemia again?

  • @juliapace2845
    @juliapace28458 ай бұрын

    Very informative. Next, I'll be searching for your missive on muscle mass and insulin resistance - since I'm elderly, my muscles aren't what they used to be, and it seems to be a full-time job to keep up with it. Bless you, you're one of a kind. Something terribly amiss with medical education in this country. My docs are always clueless about nutrition. And they aren't too fond of me knowing something they don't - I have to stuff a sock in my mouth so I won't speak too much at the doctor's office.

  • @irenemuench7159
    @irenemuench71599 ай бұрын

    I believe I have suffered from reactive hypoglycemia since childhood sometimes resulting in fainting. When I was a young, normal weight ICU nurse my annual screening labs resulted in a “critical low” glucose report! I always had 4-5 meals daily. For the last year I have been eating clean keto to low carb. I continue to require two very low carb breakfast meals to help avoid symptoms. I plan on getting a cgm

  • @jackgoldman1
    @jackgoldman1 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks. Looking forward to the alcohol and fatty liver show. I have since given up alcohol and will lose some weight to keep the liver healthy. Great show.

  • @sridharankalyanasundaram7647
    @sridharankalyanasundaram7647 Жыл бұрын

    Very informative video.

  • @bepurushoth
    @bepurushoth11 ай бұрын

    I was diagnosed with reactive hypoglycaemia in December 2022 and was under the assumption that once the blood sugar goes low they are not coming back to normal range until i eat something. This was not completely true, my blood sugar did come back to normal range after the episode even without eating. With the help of CGM I discovered this and now I am aware how high carb and refined sugar behave on me. My anxiousness to eat every few hours is now reduced and this is because of CGM. I always want to try the CGM but this video pushed me further to buy one. Thanks for the video and the interview.

  • @susankaroly-smith2073

    @susankaroly-smith2073

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes, I had the same experience! Once I was on a walk and the CGM gave me a warning as my glucose was falling too low too quickly (due to the excercise, I expect) - I felt a bit shaky, but I recovered quickly without eating anything. When I got home, I could see that my levels never actually reached the hypoglycemic range - stopped falling at exactly 3.9 mmol/L (70 mg/dl) and recovered without any intervention. Now I don't freak out if I feel an episode developing because I know it can reverse itself - still it's better to avoid them if possible as they can be scary!

  • @MissMoonshineDance

    @MissMoonshineDance

    11 ай бұрын

    There are many factors at play. Anything that triggers epinephrine or cortisol release like fear or pain can also affect blood sugar- irrespective of food

  • @claudiaoliveira-usa

    @claudiaoliveira-usa

    6 ай бұрын

    @@MissMoonshineDancewow, I didn’t know that!

  • @galaxywanderer5945
    @galaxywanderer5945 Жыл бұрын

    Hallelujah!!!!! Finally I have someone who share the same graph as I am! Thank Dr Mario for such a brilliant example! This is what I have been saying all along! doctors SHOULD bring real life person instead of relying on studies!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    My opinion is that we should look at research studies AND real life examples. Lots to learn from either ... Cheers Mario

  • @ronaldruiz3333
    @ronaldruiz3333 Жыл бұрын

    Doc Mario Thank you for the info. Hope to hear more videos in this matter about insulin Spikes and how to prevent w/o wearing CGM monitor. God bless including Doc Penny Figtree.

  • @claudiocapelli7507
    @claudiocapelli7507 Жыл бұрын

    That's was very informative, thanks so much Since blood sugar spikes occur after meals, prior to buy a CGM, I thought to do it the cheapest way, by using a simple glucometer with which I took for few days FG and BGs after one hour and two hours post each of the main 3 meals. Enough to get an idea of glucose behavior, actually shocked by the 190 reading one hour after dinner on which I had crab hamburger, green salad (oil & vinegar), 75gr of homemade bread and 1 free alcohol beer (330ml), instead of 130 (heavy breakfast with cereals, oats, milk, fruits, nuts), 150 (100gr pasta lunch, glass of wine, strawberries and 15gr of dark chocolate). FG averaging around 90, no hypo glucose effects, I realized, watching the table kindly provided by you, that beer has a very high glycemic index, but never thought it could be so devastating?

  • @melaniem8040
    @melaniem80406 ай бұрын

    I get the spike and downfall below 70 as well with sprouted oats and steel cut oats in a short time. I appreciate you bringing light to this.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. I am actually learning from all of your feedback as well; this does seem to be a pretty common issue. Cheers Mario

  • @alexm7310
    @alexm7310 Жыл бұрын

    Makes me think of the rate of gastric emptying... doesn't CCK detect fat & delay gastric emptying... but if none (and no protein), quick absorption + sugar spikes. So interesting. Never heard of reactive hypoglycemia. Thank you! 😊

  • @magdalenaczudzak4319
    @magdalenaczudzak431910 ай бұрын

    I started to read about these things only two months ago so I know very little. There are several questions that maybe already have an answer, and some of the commenting people would help me find them: 1. What about fructose - can we measure its level in blood? does it concern? 2. Perhaps the important thing is SPEED of sugar level change rather than the amplitude? 3. For how long have we collected measurements with CGM device on larger public scale? 4. Are muscles able to take glucose from blood without use of insuline? Thank you for your conversation! ❤

  • @JaniceT-Poet
    @JaniceT-Poet18 күн бұрын

    I have what I believe to be Familial Reactive Hypoglycemia. I felt very healthy on Keto, but a vegan relative encouraged me to stop my Keto regime ... and a year or so layer I suffered 3 heart attacks. This informative video is very helpful for me. Thank you!

  • @beverleybrangman2191
    @beverleybrangman21919 ай бұрын

    Great video, thank you, has been very helpful. I am on a low carb diet, and it keeps me under 95pounds, with a BMI of 18.1. I am using healthy fats, nuts and seeds more. I use a CGM also, been helpful

  • @robertthompson3814
    @robertthompson38142 ай бұрын

    Great video. Mild exercise also can moderate blood sugars spikes pretty quickly.

  • @littlevoice_11
    @littlevoice_11 Жыл бұрын

    It's also worth noting that ones blood sugar response to particular foods can also be determined by the gut microbiome and also intolerances/impaired intestinal permeability

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, for sure, and at least one study also suggests that the gut microbiota explains differences between people in how their blood sugar responds to any given food. I'll talk about that at some point. Cheers Mario

  • @lethalwoman
    @lethalwoman8 ай бұрын

    Gastric bypass patient. Severe reactive hypoglycemia. Driving episodes etc. CGM saves my life!!

  • @user-ut8gk7or2q

    @user-ut8gk7or2q

    3 ай бұрын

    Im in same boat right now insurance won't approve so I'm gonna buy one cash out pocket and hopefully get to know my trigger it's SOOOOO SCARY!!!!

  • @Mojo_DK
    @Mojo_DK11 ай бұрын

    I would really like to see an interview with Dr. Guess

  • @olgabaeva2087
    @olgabaeva2087 Жыл бұрын

    Another great video, thank you! Interesting to learn if there any connection with microbiome and I saw an advertisement from Pendulum probiotics where they promise that it can help you with blood sugar issues (I also have blood sugar spikes, A1C good, fasting glucose good, BMI 18, 35 yo, normal physical activity etc. But have had numerous courses of antibiotics)

  • @Sparkling-Cyanide
    @Sparkling-Cyanide Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for your generous support. Really appreciate it. Cheers Mario

  • @Gabriel-fi3kn
    @Gabriel-fi3kn Жыл бұрын

    Awesome information, thank you for this video. Totally in sync with Jessie Inchauspe's "Glucose Revolution" which I think is a very well written book. I highly recommend it, if you liked this video.

  • @zainab2845
    @zainab28454 ай бұрын

    😢😢😢 4 years of been told u have anxiety and depression when i was actually experiencing real hypo that destroyed my life in all ways. Just now someone lisned and did a mixed meal test. Can wait to hear findings and how i can go back to life

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    4 ай бұрын

    To figure out if your struggles are related to hypoglycemia, I think wearing a CGM for 2-4 weeks can be very helpful. One mixed meal test can be hit or miss. If you just eat your regular meals and can see the ups and downs in your blood glucose, that can provide much more insight. Best wishes, Mario

  • @zainab2845

    @zainab2845

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks🙏. Luckily i did catch a low of 3.4 in the mixed meal test and and elevated c peptide levels, despite normal fasting insulin. I am definitely considering a cgm because i do spike and dip from what i can see on a home machine

  • @krystlepoulin6382
    @krystlepoulin6382 Жыл бұрын

    My personal experience confirms Dr. Figtree's hypothesis. My husband was a type 2 diabetic and I suffered from reactive hypoglycemia. We started a low carb diet, which cured his diabetes, but the diet also cured my reactive hypoglycemia. It's interesting that adding fat can prevent the massive spike and subsequent drop. I miss oatmeal, so maybe I'll try it as a side dish to a high fat meal on occasion and see what happens.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing. Cheers Mario

  • @jensschreiner5351
    @jensschreiner53516 ай бұрын

    This is very interesting. I've been into bodybuilding all my life and so these patterns of insulin responses are key to understanding how to trigger yourself to maximize gains. Not only in specific times (ex. Post workout) but in general also during diets. I really enjoy this kind of content and if wish there was more research and detail on the actual intake patterns of food The salmon and chocolate cake example is a really interesting example and exploring all other potential combinations would really prove valuable. This could help us as a population diminish the effects of certain foods that are just too comfortable to avoid all together. The combination and that matched with the total calorie intake over a period of time would really make a big difference.

  • @hyperjenz8913
    @hyperjenz891311 ай бұрын

    Thank you guys! I just had this scenario. I did IF for 5 years but suddenly i got this shaking dizzy after i ate or break my fasting.

  • @soumyendughosh5999
    @soumyendughosh59992 ай бұрын

    THANKS

  • @Julia_USMidwest
    @Julia_USMidwest Жыл бұрын

    I had scary hypoglycemic drop-offs right after high-carb meals or snacks. I pretty quickly found that eliminating sugar and juices helped. Finally I learned that low-carb was even better. Really appreciate the observations here.

  • @janiemiller825

    @janiemiller825

    6 ай бұрын

    Is very low carb keto ok when hypothermic? Like only 20-50 carbs daily?? 🤔

  • @dthornew
    @dthornew7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. What particularly piqued my interest was the section on protein smoothies. My wife had been using one loaded with sugars - it is now in the trash.

  • @ITSREALLYNOTYOURFAULT
    @ITSREALLYNOTYOURFAULT2 ай бұрын

    Wow, great to see videos like this! I got so bad i would find myself back in bed, fully clothed. If i ever forced myself to stay awake i would feel like i was having a complete breakdown. I also had what my doctor described as rapid gastric expulsion, which is what led to the diagnosis of low blood sugar episodes.

  • @SAMBLACKHAM
    @SAMBLACKHAM9 ай бұрын

    Again your videos spark much interest and some frustration on my part. I exhibit both blood sugar spikes and reactive hypoglycemia. After years of being told there was not a diabetic drug that fit my situation (CPSS) I came across the subject of Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, i.e, Acarbose. I tried it for a few months but the GI problems were too much. Acarbose raises both primary and secondary BA's. I already have too many of these. Acarbose also changes the composition of the microbiome and in my case causes dysbiosis. It did however lower my BS spikes by about 20% and alleviated my reactive hypoglycemia to a certain degree. Acarbose works in the enterocytes where it inhibits the enzyme which converts disaccharides to Monosaccharides (glucose). I then started to look for a natural element that would do the same. I wear a CGM and I noticed that my sugars didn't spike and I didn't have postprandial somnolence on "Taco Tuesdays". I looked into this and there it was. Capsaicin is a natural Alpha-glucosidase inhibitor (among other things of value to the hyperglycemia issue). It ranges between 20-80% (depending on plant variety )as efficient as acarbose but so far it doesn't have the BA and dysbiosis issues. One thing to note is that AGI's by their nature only work on glucose derived from the gut (diet) and not glucose the liver uses from storage and Gluconeogenesis which in my case is a sizable amount because of my BA/FXR situation. www.orientjchem.org/pdf/vol34no5/OJC_Vol34_No5_p_2211-2228.pdf www.jocpr.com/articles/comparative-study-of-jalapeno-extract-with-acarbose-on-alpha-glucosidase-inhibition-8911.html www.mdpi.com/2218-1989/11/10/649 I have more studies on AGI's and BA's if you are interested Thanks for all you do! Steve

  • @willamgordon3081
    @willamgordon30814 ай бұрын

    I am reactive hypoglycemic also. I have the same reaction to oats as Doctor Figtree. As I have aged, my A1C has moved into the pre-diabetic range. I purchased a CGM about 2 weeks ago so that I could get a closer look at my blood sugar. The CGM data revealed to me that my blood sugar levels were all over the place. My lows were around 55mg/dl and my highs were at 180mg/dl. As I started watching my carb intake, I was able to remove the highs and the lows from my blood sugar range. Now I am between 88 and 135. Within a week I notice a drop in my weight, and I was feeling better overall. For me, the CGM is a window into how food effects my blood sugar so I can make the corrections now before it is too late. Thanks for the video; conformation for me!

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    4 ай бұрын

    Very good. Thank you for sharing. Cheers Mario

  • @gaWalt
    @gaWalt Жыл бұрын

    Hello Mario, I just recently found your channel and have watched a couple of your videos. Thank you for your videos and expertise. I had an annual physical this past March and was diagnosed with Prediabetes. My hbA1C was 5.7 and my fasting was 99mg. Previous to this discovery, I had been working on losing weight, by reducing my caloric intake, to reduce my blood pressure and dependence on BP meds. My physical , in March, was at the time that I had dropped from 213 lbs down to 180 lbs for a total weight loss of 33 lbs. I was taken off of my BP med at that time. I purchased a glucose monitor and started checking my glucose levels 4X /day. Once for fasting and then after 3 meals/day. Before I lost weight, I thought I was eating healthy meals. For breakfast I would eat Minute Oatmeal/daily loaded with fresh fruit. One cup of blueberries, 2 slices of Cantaloupe, a handful of Walnuts, 2 slices of Pineapple, 3 to 4 Strawberries and 1 banana! I must've have been consuming 140 + grams of carbs! Also, all that fruit turned into sugar quickly. I constantly ate bananas and other fresh fruit at each meal. I'd wager to say that that's what triggered my hbA1C to rise and or triggered insulin resistance. I'm 76 years old. My father and an older brother were diagnosed with Diabetes/Prediabetes respectively. My father didn't develop Diabetes until he was in his late 80s. Currently, I'm not eating any sweets, bananas(less fruit) nor any white breads, also I only eat about 6 berries like raspberries, black berries or blue berries and a half of 1 strawberry. My fasting glucose now ranges from 86mg - 92mg. One hour after eating, my glucose registers usually less than 140 and sometimes 145 but most of the time it's in the 120s. After 2 hours my glucose registers around 102 except when I'm at 145mg it sometimes doesn't drop much or drops down to 125mg. Is the most accurate reading 2 hours after you eat or 1 hour? Also, I have continued to lose weight and have stabled out at 172 lbs. I'm trying to gain some weight back to 180 lbs but am have a difficult time gaining while not consuming too many carbs. I've added almond butter, cheeses, butter on toast. Typically breakfast is 2 eggs with 2 Ezekiel pieces of bread, a handful of Walnuts and sometimes a small container of Chobani zero sugar Yogurt. I alternate breakfast with steel cut Oats, with Walnuts, some almond butter , Yogurt or 1 egg. No matter how much fat I add I'm still not gaining. Should I go see an Endocrinologist to rule out Pancreatic Cancer? How can I gain back some weight? Sorry for the lengthy comment. My wife and I also walk almost daily so I end up burning up some of my caloric intake walking. Thank you , in advance, for your response. Gary

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Gary, Thank you for sharing. To your questions: - I cannot answer your question whether 1 or 2 hours after a meal is more accurate. Both together matter, and also the level around 30 min after the meal. If you are up for it, you could measure 30 min, 60 min, and 120 min for a few meals only, to see your typical pattern to your typical meals and then measure only at those time point(s) that are most informative to you. - You mention that you think that your high consumption of fresh fruit and berries may be a cause of your elevated HbA1c and potentially insulin resistance. You know your body best, but from a scientific point of view, there are no data to suggest that eating fresh, whole fruit or berries has negative long-term effects on blood sugar regulation. And even the acute glucose response tends to be modest with fruit and particularly berries. - You also seem to be wondering why you continue to lose weight. That's something I cannot comment on, because that would cross the line to providing personal medical advice. I therefore suggest you discuss this with a physician or dietitian. Best wishes to you, Mario

  • @gaWalt

    @gaWalt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience Thanks Mario for your info. Gary

  • @thaihangnguyen2677

    @thaihangnguyen2677

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Dr. Kratz and Gary. I have the exact same conditions as Gary mentioned in his comment. I am only 58 however, and very lean. I exercise for more than 1 hour every day and eat almost a non-carb diet every meal (with the only carbs in beans and nuts). With an HBA1C of 6.0, a fasting glucose level of 96-106, I am concerned that there is something else that is not picked up in my blood glucose tests. I do not have a CGM but intend to get one so that I get better data throughout the day. Not only I am concerned with my pre-diabetic condition, I am also concerned about cancer risks. I have lost about 5kg (11 lbs) over the last five years and now weight a meager 110 lbs. I wonder if this weight loss (and inability to regain any weight) is due to the lean diet (with plenty of protein and fat but no carbs) or due to the regular exercise (more than 1 hour per day with both cardio and weight training) or due to something else. Any comments would be greatly appreciated.

  • @ganh222

    @ganh222

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@thaihangnguyen2677 Why dont you test fasting insulin? Pl read about it

  • @charlenewilliams219

    @charlenewilliams219

    9 ай бұрын

    @@thaihangnguyen2677I am not an expert just a senior lady. Could it be that You may not be eating enough &/or exercising too much. Try taking a couple of days off of exercise. If you exercise to the point where you’re raising your cortisol levels, you’re also raising your insulin levels not always the healthiest thing.

  • @pamstaub5403
    @pamstaub54039 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. I have had reactive hypoglycemia for decades. I Found long ago moderating naked carbs is effective. I am now pre-diabetic and get spikes depending upon my food intake, high GI or large meals. But my concern more than the spikes is the increase in my running glucose average of 110 to 120. I literally run most of the day at the level. I eat low carb, low GI, lift weights, walk after eating but I can’t get the average down. My body will moderate down from a spike quite quickly just like this healthy doctor. But how can we moderate down the running average. I’m not certain spikes are all that surprising. It seems to me at a cellular level my body no longer uptakes the carbs. I appreciate your content!!

  • @nicejoy9998
    @nicejoy99987 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the video. When I eat carb rich foods like 2 slice of bread my sugar goes up from 100 to 200 in 30 minutes and come down to 100 in an hour. But the story is different if I exercise after this meal. If I exercise my sugar goes down to high 50s and recover after 5 minutes and go back to 100 s which is my baseline. Luckily I was not symptomatic . CGM helped me to identify this problem. If I exercise on empty stomach then my sugar doesn’t drop and stay very steady. Very interesting findings about myself. I am going to to cut down my carbs and add more fat and protein to reduce the spike and resulting excess insulin production.

  • @jackiefox7326
    @jackiefox7326 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Very interesting. Oh no I had a smoothie this afternoon 😮

  • @user-hv1eb3ld5u
    @user-hv1eb3ld5u Жыл бұрын

    Thank you #DrDanjuma for being such a caring doctor during my time of need. You really helped me during a hard time with my infections,your personality made me feel at ease on our first discussion🌷🌷🌷

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Wrong video?

  • @RickinICT

    @RickinICT

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience No, it's a spam bot advertising another channel by pretending to be grateful to them for some assistance.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    2 ай бұрын

    @@RickinICT Yeah, I am afraid you are correct. I have now seen similar comments elsewhere. Thanks!

  • @user-nk2ub1hd2p
    @user-nk2ub1hd2p11 ай бұрын

    Also thank you Mario for your non black and white thinking like hers. When she said fiber is rubbish I’m glad you said not necessarily as it depends on the person, we are all different. For her it does not help. For you it helps a bit. For me it almost completely blunts massive increase

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes, research clearly suggests that for the average person, adding fiber to a meal lowers the blood sugar response. Cheers Mario

  • @tinybarabo

    @tinybarabo

    9 ай бұрын

    I was just thinking the same. Also I am always a bit worried if anyone is telling me to cut down drastically certain food groups. Probably it didn’t help, that I really love my oats with plenty of Greek yogurt, with nuts and a bit of fruit.

  • @tamarasemple7628
    @tamarasemple7628 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video ! Thank you so much for this ! What does your typical daily diet look like? And what do you eat to bring your sugar up?

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Tamara. I may make a separate video at some point about my typical diet. It tends to change a lot as I am experimenting on myself quite a bit, but the one constant is that most of my food always consists of whole foods, prepared at home from scratch, and very little, if any, ultra-processed foods or liquid calories (soda, fruit juices, alcoholic beverages). As to what I use to indice a blood sugar spike in myself, check out my previous video on the topic: kzread.info/dash/bejne/q5tku5Wefranfso.html Cheers Mario

  • @tamarasemple7628

    @tamarasemple7628

    Жыл бұрын

    Love your channel! I’ve been following you for a few months now and have been learning so much as how to control my reactive hypoglycaemia. Thanks so much ! Cheers T

  • @jksinorbit
    @jksinorbit Жыл бұрын

    It is amazing to me that cgms aren’t extremely common!?

  • @susanfennimore3152

    @susanfennimore3152

    11 ай бұрын

    The CGM can be extremely expensive in USA ,I sacrifice because it’s so worth

  • @runfridr
    @runfridr9 ай бұрын

    Think you! Thin is so interesting! People always reccomend me to eat oatmeal but i drops so fast from it in the morning so I avoid it. However i don get this problem in the evening, like ut works when i have a good base of food from out the day.

  • @donnagrant950
    @donnagrant950 Жыл бұрын

    I have four years had issues with reactive hypoglycemia and have managed it on my own with a low-carb diet. One thing that makes it concerning is that depending on what activity you are doing when you have that low blood sugar,such as driving or doing something where cognitive accuracy matters greatly, the impact can be very important. I get something like brain fog and feel weak an unable to concentrate when this happens. Not good.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you figured out what was going on and were able to address it. Cheers Mario

  • @dedegriffith2782
    @dedegriffith27826 ай бұрын

    I have the same thing and believe I have always had it. But, at one point being 358 pounds, I had RouxNY gastric bypass 20 years ago, it probably exaggerated the postprandial reactive process. The CGM recently helped me identify the problem.

  • @kikito89x
    @kikito89x Жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Really appreciate your support! Best, Mario

  • @lindapelle8738
    @lindapelle87387 ай бұрын

    I figured out the same thing many years ago in my 20s back when no one was talking about low carb diets. I realized if I ate cereal, or toast I would feel like crap. But I was a stubborn vegan at the time. Eventually I replaced it with eggs and avocados and felt so much better. No need for testing or devices, Your body will tell you exactly what you need.Of course if you can’t afford the new gadgets it’s good to have them just to prove it to yourself. Or if you’re on the fence and wondering.

  • @kristinebarbaree2697
    @kristinebarbaree2697 Жыл бұрын

    I have been suffering from this my whole life I described it to my thyroid diet (endocrinologist ) and he told me 20 yrs ago . He said we don’t need to test you , that’s what you have . I will have a full blown melt down one hour after I eat a donut . I feel like I am going to pass out , start shaking , become confused , and sometimes start crying and sweating for no known reason . My sister , dad, and niece have had similar symptoms their whole lives. I am now 58 yrs old and just had my first A1C test , coincidently my accident , because the lab ran it when the test wasn’t ordered (they were just ordered to run TSH thyroid test . The results came back and the nurse said casually that “you know your A1C is 5.8 so you are prediabetic. “. Gee , my endocrinologist isn’t concerned and didn’t notice . An endocrinologist is a diabetes doctor !!! BTW, I am not overweight and work out regularly

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Kristine, thank you for sharing. May I suggest that you take a look at the other related videos in this series (links are in the comment box below the video)? The information may be helpful to you, as a first step (more to come on glucose tolerance). Cheers Mario

  • @MrLuba6a
    @MrLuba6a Жыл бұрын

    Great video, Mario...It is wonderful there are people like you to open the eyes of people with metabolic problems. I wish I'd known those things 20 years ago, but at that time, the only advice I got was to change my diet!!! And I was eating serials with milk and aspartame in the morning and thought I was doing things right. On top of it the endocrinologist I used to visit told me one day: take your Amaryl and no need to visit me before a year...those were the days...I wonder how Penny didn't know what carbs are for the sugar spike. But my endocrinologist didn't know it either...Anyway-blessings and thanks for the wonderful video 🙏

  • @evgenysergeev8186
    @evgenysergeev8186 Жыл бұрын

    I am healthy. And I eat only slow carbs (lentils, mung beans) and I do running. Usually, I don't need any nutrition for a half marathon (21K) and I can run evenly fast all the distance. Two days ago I decided to take energy gels (liquid sugar) every 5K while running a full marathon (42K). I started losing performance from 16K at a slower pace than in a half marathon. Eventually, I was totally crushed, struggling till the finish line. Blurry vision, plugged years, vomiting, cramps. I want to have a CGM to measure my glucose to see when to take carbs. And gels will not be an option.

  • @judythomas1050
    @judythomas10507 ай бұрын

    This was so interesting…. I had to learn all the same things myself… with no help… unable to get an insulin resistance test from my doctor Trying to manage Diabeties myself… found out about porridge years ago .., stopped eating it … protein only breakfast

  • @trueblonde89
    @trueblonde892 ай бұрын

    I’m healthy, I teach group fitness, but I suffer from this as well. I suddenly developed Hashimotos. Some of the protocols helped me with my symptoms as I switched to AIP/ paleo diet. When I started adding in Gluten free items, I started to feel Horrible. I wore a cgm and found that my blood sugar would go up a little, then crash. I managed to regulate during the day, but night then was hard, especially on very active days 😢

  • @dannyweiss9701
    @dannyweiss9701 Жыл бұрын

    great interview, great info, to add to your channel overall....What is your take on the smoothie incident?? do you think its the garbage ingredient Ensure, being in there, with its processed sugar, etc?? or are fruit smoothies and even veggie juices inherently problematic to blood sugar spikes, because of the quick delivery of the carbs?? maybe best to have them again, after some eggs and avocado...aka protein and fat...your thoughts?? thx in advance

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Danny. I am in general not the biggest fan of liquids that contain any sugar. There is quite a bit of research suggesting pretty strongly that sugar in liquid form is worse than sugar in solid form, and not just because of the high glucose content and it's impact on blood glucose levels, but also because of the fructose content which then accumulates in the liver and is converted to fat. Having some protein first should help, but I personally would still not make a habit out of drinking smoothies in large quantities regularly. Cheers Mario

  • @ryans1623
    @ryans16238 ай бұрын

    One major thing i will add to this is, it could be the mix of high fibre or high protein with sugar that will cause high spikes then hypo, it happens to me because these digest more slowly and the insulin over responds. I have liquid sugar it doesnt go near as high and goes back to base line. I think the slower digestion is causing the spikes and low blood sugar after.

  • @susanmahr6068
    @susanmahr6068 Жыл бұрын

    I have the same diagnosis as Dr. Figtree. I took the 6 hrs glucose tolerance test and at the 3rd hour my BS spiked up to 200 and dropped to 32. It was horrible. Took me years to be able to regulate my BS. I cannot eat too much in one sitting. So I nibble all day. Salads do help me a lot. And yes, constantly hungry in the 3-4 hours.

  • @Sparkling-Cyanide

    @Sparkling-Cyanide

    Жыл бұрын

    I had the same results as you on my 6-hour glucose test. A high of 210 and a low of 35. It was terrifying. I felt like my whole body was imploding. Anything with grains or sugar (or a combination of both) really hit me hard. I try eating them once in awhile, but nothing has changed. I just need to stop trying and eliminate them for good.

  • @susanmahr6068

    @susanmahr6068

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sparkling-Cyanide Thanks for sharing. I was diagnosed back in 1979. So I've been putting up with this darn sugar since then. The doctor scared me. He said better follow the diet because I could fall into coma. And also said that very likely I will be a diabetic in my old age. I'll be 70 and did not happen yet. :-)

  • @Sparkling-Cyanide

    @Sparkling-Cyanide

    Жыл бұрын

    @@susanmahr6068 LOL! I was told the same thing - that I could die in my sleep and I’d be diabetic before I was 40. I’m 74 and I’m not diabetic. Still alive too, obviously!! Still, those lows are really scary. I always carry raisins with me in case it happens when I’m out and about.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you both for sharing this. You have unusual issues of very late spikes and very late hypoglycemic episodes. Has anyone ever looked into what is causing this?

  • @Sparkling-Cyanide

    @Sparkling-Cyanide

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience Yes, my primary doctor referred me to two endocrinologists and neither could figure out what was causing the RH. It’s very strange. All the doctors were certain the condition would lead to diabetes but it hasn’t. All grains and grain products cause my RH along with concentrated sugars. Dried fruit by itself, like the raisins I carry for extreme lows, will affect me the same as grains. Raisins work great to raise a bad drop but I need to get to a good protein source within an hour to prevent a rebound. Yet I can put two cubes of table sugar in my morning coffee and my blood sugar remains stable. I guess everyone has different triggers and maybe that’s why a physiological cause is so hard to find.

  • @martinstech5514
    @martinstech5514 Жыл бұрын

    Although not as convenient, you can also use a standard blood glucose monitor (ie the kind that requires you to prick your finger to get a drop of blood), to see if you suffer blood sugar spikes. If you test (say) 30 minutes after you eat, you can see if your glucose spikes. The advantage of a standard glucose monitor is that it is cheaper than a CGM.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, agree. Probably best though to test several times within the first hour, such as at 15, 30, 45, and 60 min (at least a couple times), so as not to miss any spike. Cheers Mario

  • @MikeFroom

    @MikeFroom

    Жыл бұрын

    CGM sometimes give you wrong readings. I have tested FreeStyle Libre 3

  • @martinstech5514

    @martinstech5514

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nourishedbyscience agreed, in principle you need to do this, but pricking your finger for blood is mildly unpleasant, and I wouldn't want to do it 4 times after I eat. A compromise is to eat something that you know spikes your blood, and then test at 15, 30, 45 and 60 minutes to establish the approximate time of the spike, and then use that time for subsequent tests.

  • @successandlifestyle
    @successandlifestyle5 ай бұрын

    I ate green smoothies for breakfast most of my life. All good. I stopped eating this way about 5 years ago... now, if I have a smoothie, I need a nap within an hour. Also, I will get a hypoglycemia reaction if I fast for 36 hrs. I'm in my 50s now, but when in my early 30s, I had a surgery where they said I couldn't eat from the night before. I got a hypoglycemia reaction by 10 am, and they had to give intervenes to make it to surgery time. My reaction is watering mouth, pukey feeling, and slight dizziness.

  • @RhondaO
    @RhondaO10 ай бұрын

    Meat and Dairy cause insulin spikes which worsen Reactive hypoglycemia. High protein does this as well as Carbohydrates creating spiked Glucose. It's been debilitating for Me. Hospitalized a few times in the last month. Also ALWAYS do a confirmatory Finger Stick as CGM are Highly inaccurate. I've had differences of 40 points.

  • @joyhampton6886
    @joyhampton6886 Жыл бұрын

    Good information, thank you for sharing. I struggle with blood sugar and recently have been reading/ listening to what order you eat your food matters. If a person being a sugar addict and eats broccoli 15 minutes before a candy bar, would this keep blood sugar from spiking? I am a sugarholic with fatty liver and probably insulin resistant. I have triggers for the sugar cravings and wondering if above would help spikes.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    The most effective things to do to minimize blood sugar spikes to highly glycemic carbs is to eat a good serving of protein first, and/or to have a salad or vegetables with a vinaigrette (vinegar). Not sure how practical that would be if what you are really craving is some treat ... Probably obvious to you, trying to not eat the sugary treat would be even better. It may be worth figuring out whether having a protein-rich foods (such as hard-boiled eggs, which store well in the fridge for a few days) can even help reduce these cravings so that the amount/frequency of the sugary treats can be gradually reduced. I know a few people for whom this has worked really well. Cheers Mario

  • @MoonLightOnWater1
    @MoonLightOnWater110 ай бұрын

    My CGM has changed my life as well. After gaining 30lbs during covid, I searched for a plan that would help me lose weight and after wearing a CGM, I see that I have hypoglycemia….which explains why I so quickly gained weight during covid (i abandoned my low carb lifestyle). I eliminated all high carb foods and I now have lost almost 35lbs since last October (2022). I now feel so empowered to avoid foods that spike my blood sugar and I’m so much more happy.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing! All the best, Mario

  • @rohithpoolamanna6296
    @rohithpoolamanna62964 ай бұрын

    Great insights. ❤ Can we also infer that having naked carb after or with a complex meal (which includes good amounts of fats and proteins and complex carbs) will reduce the intensity of the spike when compared to having it alone?

  • @BrianAllenbyAUS
    @BrianAllenbyAUS Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Mario for sharing this video. It gives us yet another insight into blood sugar. My takeaway is: 1. It is interesting that a "healthy" person's blood sugar would spike to diabetic levels which gives me a little bit of peace of mind that blood sugar spikes could be normal for some people. However, 2. It also raises a question as to how would Dr Figtree (or anyone for that matter) pass the OGTT test which I would think is more "vicious" than the oatmeal? Is that because of the low-carb diet that she is adopting? I understand from your previous video and from the health guideline here in Australia that one must consume 150gr of carbs a day preceding the OGTT. Could this lead to misdiagnosis? 3. For a physician who treats diabetic patients saying fibre is rubbish makes me a little bit uncomfortable but hey she could be referring to the context of her topic which was the meal in the cafe. Thanks again. Would love to hear more about glucose tolerance and ways to reverse it. I hope you have plans for that topic.

  • @nourishedbyscience

    @nourishedbyscience

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Brian, I don't think blood sugar spikes are normal or should just be ignored. Watch some of my previous videos where I address this. 2. In an OGTT, the patient drinks 75g of glucose in water, and blood sugar is measured at 0 min and at exactly 120 min, not in between. Look at her pattern; she will almost certainly be back to below 140 mg/dL at the 120 min time point, which would then mean that she has normal glucose tolerance by that definition. 3. Her viewpoint is that of a low-carb doctor who sees a lot of benefit in her patients when they cut out all carbs, and her own experience where - admittedly - the fiber in her oatmeal and her musli didn't help much, right? I understand where she is coming from, but also felt compelled to express my opinion that fiber does help lower blood sugar responses for many people. There is plenty of research on that, so this is really not up for debate. Cheers Mario

  • @chrisvandenbergh2028
    @chrisvandenbergh2028 Жыл бұрын

    I get glucose spike and severe hunger after having oatmeal. My blood glucose used to drop so low I got the shakes and dizzy spells. I have found a lot of medical practitioners who advise me to drink a glass of orange juice or eat a slice of bread to bring my blood glucose up to a normal level. I consider such advice as wrong. Yesterday I got up with a fasting glucose of 3.5 mmol/l, had a cup of coffee, took the dogs for a 60 minute walk after which I visited 4 stores for grocery shopping, all of it I classify as very mild exercise after which my glucose tested at 4.3 mmol/l. My observation is that in the event of very low blood glucose a short brief exercise will allow my body to react to the possibility of hard work and automatically correct my glucose level. In the past I have even peddled my exercise bike very hard for two minutes with the same result so definitely no orange juice or bread for me.

  • @user-ip6yw4zz9v
    @user-ip6yw4zz9v5 ай бұрын

    I don’t have issues w/eating oatmeal (I’m T-1) as long as I follow it w/exercise, but yes I do have spikes of 210 mg/dL if not, but normally my meal bolus brings BG down to normal range with in an hr!😊

  • @eagleeye9549
    @eagleeye954911 ай бұрын

    I used to have those symptoms when I eat carbs. So, I fixed it by not eating them. These days, I feel great! If I do eat carbs, I eat green veggies once in a while. Mainly I eat meat these days and no longer have those spikes and drops. Cheers.

  • @markdouglas7029
    @markdouglas7029 Жыл бұрын

    Hi, I'm somewhere between type one and type two diabetic and using low rates of insulin, but spiking seriously with overnight soaked muesli, then going into hypoglycemea too Following advice about mixing with fruit and eggs, and resistant carbs, I've realised maybe that frozen and defrosted overnight muesli is a different beast too, when mixed with fruit. anyway, that;s my two bobs worth, thanks for your channel, cheers.