Hello to all. I was diagnosed with
hypoglycemia some time ago. I never had
anxiety attacks until recently. I always
eat right, and I try to exercise. What
could be causing these attacks? Any
suggestions on how to handle it? Thanks
for your input.
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Stan
Moderator
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Posted: 05-01-06 14:31pm
Likely you're not eating things you should
be eating or are eating too many
carbohydrates. Give me a detailed list
of what you eat and i'll tell you.
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tygrbabi
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 May 2006 Posts: 126
Posted: 05-01-06 14:55pm
I only eat whole grains and I rarely eat
bread, potatoes, corn. But a typical day
for me is oatmeal in the morning. Apple
sauce (natural - no sugar or additives) as
a snack. Herbal teas. Lunch - fish,
chicken, rarely meat and rice or
vegetables. Dinner - the same as lunch.
My weaknesses: nuts, peanut butter, and
avocados. (sometimes on special
occasions i'll have ice cream). Could it
be possible that foods I eat that contain
splenda or nutrasweet (something I rarely
did but do now because it's widely
available) could be the cause?
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Stan
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Posted: 05-01-06 16:36pm
Splenda is bad, yes, it could be a cause.
You cannot eat potatoes, corn, ice crean
or such foods, even if it is "rarely."
rarely is all it takes with this
condition. You must stay on your diet
for a long time, and then experiment.
Peanut butter isn't a good idea. Nuts
are usually okay, except that they should
only be raw and you should avoid peanuts
and cashews at first. Be careful of
roasted nuts, they're usually roasted with
this starchy stuff on them and it can
cause a quick crash. Apple sauce
shouldn't be eating on an empty stomach.
What whole grains are you eating and what
is your typical, total carbohydrate intake
for the day. Add it up, you might be
surprised. Most hypoglycemics have to
keep it at 100g per day at first.
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tygrbabi
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 May 2006 Posts: 126
Posted: 05-01-06 16:52pm
Thanks for your reply, stan.
I was diagnosed when I was 17 and have
always maintained a healthy, all natural
diet. But now that I think of it.
Since my brother was diagnosed with
diabetes (and yes he displayed many
hypoglycemic symptoms before being
diagnosed), i've been eating many "sugar
free" snacks, which is something I never
did before. I'm going back to my strict
diet and see if that helps.
Btw, stan, I read in another post you've
experienced derealization. Me, too, and
it's been joyous :|
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Stan
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Posted: 05-01-06 17:05pm
Hhahah, yeah it's a trip. It's been
awhile since I had it happen since my body
is pretty damn healed now. Still a bit
to go though. Yeah, try that, skip out
on all artificial sweeteners, they're all
bad for you.
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DianaJJ
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 02 Mar 2006 Posts: 100 Location: California
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Posted: 05-01-06 19:54pm
Hi,
i can't tolerate artificial sweetners at
all....They cause all kinds of problems
for me! It's amazing how after a while
you can taste the natural sweetness of
foods and don't really need them.
I get panic attacks too but I think it's
due to the adrenaline when my blood sugar
gets too low. I get a rapid heartbeat,
palpitations, dizziness,
nervousness...Really bad. I make sure I
eat a bit of protein and it subsides in
10-15 minutes. It's a terrible feeling
and I try to avoid by eating the right
foods and eating often but sometimes it
happens anyway.
Dj
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stumars
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 06 Jan 2006 Posts: 69
Posted: 05-02-06 03:37am
No potatoes?
caca I didnt realise this I eat them all
the time. Should I stop?
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tygrbabi
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 May 2006 Posts: 126
Posted: 05-02-06 08:56am
Thanks to all. I really should know
better than to eat products with
artificial sweetners. I just read it
depletes the body of its natural chromium.
And I know it'll be a rough road, since
i've been eating them for a while. I had
a bad episode last night and i'm still
"off" today. Oh, joys of detoxing :)
stan, I also looked at your diet version 4
and was surprised to see amaranth and
quinoa on your list. I don't eat them
often just adding variety. I'll go back
to brown rice.
I'm so glad I found this board. I
thought I was going crazy.
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Stan
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Posted: 05-02-06 10:26am
Yeah, like I said some of the things on
that list are surprising. Amaranth and
quinoa have a sick amount of
carbohydrates. Amaranth has something
like seriously 22g per tablespoon! I
think quinoa is around 30. Thus, if
you're going by a diet that says have 1-2
cups of whole grain a day, you would be
getting around 30g for a cup of buckwheat
and almost 130g for a cup of amaranth!
That's too big of a difference and too
much of a guessing game for your body.
Throws your levels everywhere, that's why
you should avoid those grains at first.
Buckwheat is good though, and brown rice.
Potatoes should be avoided at first
unless you seem okay with them because
they are very starchy. Most root-type
vegetables like potatoes, carrots, beets
and such will spike your sugar very
quickly. They may only have like 15g per
a fair amount, but when you eat it that
amount goes into your blood quicker than
something like brown rice. Quick spikes
in sugar, regardless of how high they go,
can also excite the pancreas, so that's
why you should add potatoes and similar
vegetables back into the diet slowly, with
very small amounts at first. If you seem
okay with them though, go ahead.
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tygrbabi
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 May 2006 Posts: 126
Posted: 05-02-06 10:50am
I've decided to go back to square 1 and
not eat anything on the list. I may have
been ok with it before but I am sure I put
my system out of whack with the artificial
sweetners/packaged products.
So my trial run last night was:
1 piece of cod fish
1 cup of apple sauce
(it wasn't the best choice but it wasn't
horrible).
What I noticed is that I was, incredibly
hungry all night. In between napping (i
certainly wasn't sleeping) and the
derealization upon waking, I was eating
sunflower and pumpkin seeds.
Today I am serious about the diet.
Breakfast was 2 egg on organic whole wheat
bread.
Snack 1/2 cup of fruit.
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DianaJJ
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 02 Mar 2006 Posts: 100 Location: California
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Posted: 05-02-06 11:49am
Hi,
it would be better if you ate your snack
of fruit with some protein. Maybe some
nuts or something else with fiber to make
sure the sugar in the fruit doesn't raise
your blood sugar too quickly only to drop
later on. I would recommend more
vegetables with dinner also...The lower gi
type, and some fat (olive oil etc) to keep
you from getting hungry. I always eat a
snack before bed and I sleep much better,
something like a boiled egg.
Give it a try.
Dj
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tygrbabi
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 May 2006 Posts: 126
Posted: 05-02-06 12:12pm
Diana, you're right. I'm still trying to
adjust. I need to make a trip to the
health food store and get some staples.
Thanks for your support.
You know this experience has made me
wonder ... Why are so many of these
products approved by the american diabetes
association?