Is Hypoglycemia and Bad Acne connected? how do i control those raging hormones?
February 16, 2010 by Diabetes and Blood Glucose Tips
Filed under Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia
I’ve had really bad acne for almost ten years now. i’ve also been suffering from hypoglycemia for alittle while. I think I have some sort of chemical imbalance, or hormonal imbalance.
Medications For Type 2 Diabetes
How much does the average hypoglycemia test cost in the US?
February 15, 2010 by Diabetes and Blood Glucose Tips
Filed under Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia
I feel I may have hypoglycemia and have no health insurance. I almost fainted this morning due to low blood sugar. I ate chocolate and had a coke then was fine. This has happened before and I am tired of it, as it isn’t safe.
Treatment For Type 1 Diabetes
The Latest and Greatest Diabetes-related Content…
February 15, 2010 by Diabetes and Blood Glucose Tips
Filed under Diabetes Updates
It’s a new week, and we’ve got some great new Diabetes tips and tricks in store for you at Diabetes-Advice.com.
Now, on with today’s content…
Check Out This Week’s Diabetes Articles:
I would really appreciate your feedback on any of the above content. I would especially like to know what Diabetes-related questions you would like answered. So, if you have any Diabetes questions, please ask your question in the comments, and I’ll get right on it.
Thanks for looking!
Robin Davies, Editor Diabetes-Advice.com
Hypoglycemia - Why Sugar is a Danger to You
February 14, 2010 by Diabetes and Blood Glucose Tips
Filed under Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia
Pastas, white flour and bread, most breakfast cereals, polished rice, are all refined carbohydrates and have a similar effect on your low blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia) as does sugar itself.
White sugar is ‘pure’ as the advertisements have described it, but it is so pure that it contains no enzymes, minerals and vitamins. It is nearly 100% sucrose which is void of any health giving food.
It has to rob the missing enzymes, minerals and vitamins from reserves in your body or from other food you eat. The colour of molasses shows how much goodness has been extracted. It tells us which minerals and vitamins are missing in sugar itself. So these elements need to be robbed to allow metabolism of sugar.
To stop eating sugar is not as simple as cutting sugar out of tea or coffee because a look at labels in the supermarket show that it is in a surprising number of products. When shopping check for the following on the packaging: sugar, sugar syrup, glucose, corn syrup, invert sugar, cane syrup, natural sweetener, dextrose and sucrose.
There is no nourishment in sugar and, especially with the vast quantities in modern diets, should be avoided by hypoglycemics. In normal food there are natural starches and sugars, along with proteins, fats, minerals and enzymes.
These slowly release sugar into the blood as fuel when the body and brain requires it. Sugar not only leaches the body of essential vitamins and minerals but also sets off the up and down cycles of blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia).
The constant imbalance, over time, causes hypoglycemia. This must be seen as a warning before diabetes, heart and kidney diseases take hold.
The other big areas where sugar is found in the western diet is in actual candy, chocolates and cold drinks. Today Americans consume 150 lbs of sugar per person per year; up from 125 lbs in 1980.
So, if you thought obesity had become more noticeable in the recent past, it is because it has. A quarter of Americans now eat a ½ lb of sugar per day. They are mainly unaware of this as it is in the vast quantities of processed foods they consume.
Excess sugar and refined products lead to the well known hypoglycemic symptoms of lack of concentration, irritablility and unprovoked anxieties, which if ignored, lead to insomnia and exhaustion.
But it needn’t develop like this. With a little research we can investigate our own symptoms. There is now a lot of research published on Hypoglycemia (low blood sugar levels). Since no-one else is going to help you, it is your responsibility to seek out this information especially as it is now readily available.
Thanks to Noel Glass for contributing this article to our Diabetes blog:
Sugar is a thief, robbing you of precious minerals, vitamins and enzymes. Visit http://www.hypoglycemia-dieting.com to find out exactly what this robbing is doing to your body, lifestyle and outlook while knocking your blood sugar levels.
How often should a diabetic on insulin expect to have a hypoglycemic episode?
February 14, 2010 by Diabetes and Blood Glucose Tips
Filed under Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia
I have Type 2 and I take metformin (Glucophage) and glimepiride (Amaryl), in addition to 30 IU of 24-hour insulin (Lantus) and about 100 IU of rapid acting insulin (Humalog 2-3 hr) each day.
My blood glucose is not controlled really well. It skates along in the 150-200 mg/dL range.
If I am to get my blood glucose under control, how often can I expect to have a hypoglycemic episode?
Implantable Insulin Pump




