Sentences with phrase «of reactive hypoglycemia»

Symptoms of reactive hypoglycemia, such as feeling dizzy, anxious and shaky between meals, sugar cravings, weight gain around the abdomen, difficulty losing weight, and low morning appetite, night - time carbohydrate cravings, and binge eating can all be related to insulin resistance and poor blood sugar control.
If this occurs with other fruits then it can be a sign of reactive hypoglycemia and very poor liver glycogen stores.
The doctors in my area admittedly haven't ever heard of reactive hypoglycemia so I haven't ever had this question answered.

Not exact matches

I recently found out I have a degree of insulin resistance, for me at least it causes my reactive hypoglycemia.
One of the biggest symptoms that you are experiencing a blood sugar imbalance is something called reactive hypoglycemia.
Long term, the best way to avoid reactive hypoglycemia is to permanently reduce the amount of carbohydrate that you eat on a daily basis.
Reactive hypoglycemia is more of an acute reaction to a very high carb meal.
You may have to reduce your carbohydrate consumption slowly over a longer period of time to minimize these reactions, but eventually, by continuing to consume a diet lower in high carb foods, you should be able to avoid reactive hypoglycemia completely.
• Sugar feeds cancer cells and has been connected with the development of cancer of the breast, ovaries, prostate, rectum, pancreas, lung, gallbladder and stomach.2 - 6 • Sugar can increase fasting levels of glucose and can cause reactive hypoglycemia.7 • Sugar can cause many problems with the gastrointestinal tract, including an acidic digestive tract, indigestion, malabsorption in patients with functional bowel disease, increased risk of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.8 - 12 • Sugar can interfere with your absorption of protein.13 • Sugar can cause food allergies.14 • Sugar contributes to obesity.15
«There is an overlap between the two conditions, but functional reactive hypoglycemia is generally a lower than ideal blood glucose physiological state with spikes of deficient glucose, whereas insulin resistance is generally a higher than ideal glucose physiological state with spikes of excessive glucose.»
They include fatigue, an inability to fall asleep, waking up in the middle of the night, difficulty getting up in the morning, easily gaining weight and difficulty losing it, low libido, reactive hypoglycemia, food sensitivities, drug sensitivities, PMS, fertility issues, anxiety, heart palpitations, mild depression, and frequent colds and flus.
Blood sugar instability comes in the form of insulin resistance and diabetes as well as reactive hypoglycemia.
In individuals who had stomach surgery, food can pass quickly into the small intestine, which can result in quick glucose absorption, great increase of blood glucose levels followed by quick insulin release and the fall of glucose under normal levels (reactive hypoglycemia).
Some of the most common hormonal dysfunctions I see in my practice are insulin resistance and reactive hypoglycemia: blood sugar imbalance.
Fat helps sustain your blood sugar and it's going to prevent the ups and downs of what's called reactive hypoglycemia.
Tony, I would love to see an article about Reactive Hypoglycemia (not of the Type II Diabetes correlation) and what exercises / eat choices can best benefit someone on their road to fat lose.
All juices of any type (they dump sugar and cause reactive Hypoglycemia.
I suffered reactive hypoglycemia when I ate high carb 15 years ago — never now of course.
The difference is that I'm lean and instead of insulin resistance I «only» have reactive hypoglycemia that is also a problem with insulin.
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