I Think I Have Hypoglycemia Posted: 02-16-07 13:45pm
I think I have hypoglycemia or maybe an
eating disorder. My symptoms are: when I
wake up the first thing I think about is
food. It's what gets me up I have been
this way for years. If I do not eat very
soon after I awake I feel like i'm going
to throw up and I feel nervous and shaky.
I work out at least four to five times a
week. Today for breakfast I had a protein
bar that contains 260 calories plus a
banana before going to the gym, almost
through my workout I felt like I was going
to throw up and I had to leave not
completing my work out. As soon as got
home I had to eat and I feel like I almost
overate. I did stop myself before I got
carried away but sometimes I will overeat
till I feel sick. During the eating I
feel a sort of high like i'm not thinking
I don't have control, i'll tell my self to
stop but I don't. So i'm not sure if I
have an eating disorder or am I
hypoglycemic. I just want to have more
control over my eating habits and i'm sick
of thinking about food and calories,
sometimes I feel like it runs my life.
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Stan
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Posted: 02-17-07 11:17am
The symptoms you describe are consistent
with hypoglycemia. However, do you have
any other symptoms other than those you
describe? The banana thing makes total
sense because, well, it's generally the
worst fruit on the planet and disastrous
for many hypoglycemics. If you have it,
that's what made you sick, not to mention
whatever is in those bars.
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ashley23
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Joined: 16 Feb 2007 Posts: 5 Location: miami
Other Symptoms Posted: 02-17-07 17:26pm
Other symptoms are I seem to want sweets
alot. Then I eat them and feel a watering
under my tongue, like throwing up
feelings. The urgises to eat the sweets
feel uncontrolable and I try to eat
healthy so the unhealthy eating makes me
feel deppresed.
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Stan
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Posted: 02-17-07 22:20pm
Have you tried working with your diet to
see how your body adjusts?
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ashley23
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 16 Feb 2007 Posts: 5 Location: miami
Posted: 02-18-07 08:09am
When I work with my diet that usually
means I am on a diet which is cutting out
all sugars basically anything bad for me.
That usually causes me to want sugar to an
even more extreme. Eventually I just fall
off the diet.
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Stan
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Posted: 02-18-07 11:21am
It's likely your problem then. Can you
handle carbohydrates (complex) fairly
well? If so, I recommend you adjust your
diet and replace simple sugars with
complex carbohydrates to get the best
results. Keep going off the diet and
eating like you do and you're just going
to keep getting worse. This is the only
way.
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Stan
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Posted: 02-19-07 11:44am
This is spam man, cut the crap out. Going
to have to delete them. Make a single
post instead of multiple replies because
it just looks like you want money.
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ashley23
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 16 Feb 2007 Posts: 5 Location: miami
Posted: 02-20-07 15:12pm
Why do people with hypoglycemia need to
avoid caffeine. How does it affect you. I
drink coffee every day, I do not use sugar
or any artificial sweetner. I do use no
dairy creamer is that bad also.
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Stan
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Posted: 02-20-07 19:13pm
Dairy creamers are bad, but not using them
is good! The reason caffeine is bad in
most cases, even small amounts, is that
the essential 'high' people experience
from it is not actually caffeine itself,
but the liver releasing glucogen stores
in response to it, which in turn
raises the blood sugar. This is why you
feel high after it, but for hypoglycemics
this makes the pancreas interpret the rise
as bad, and it promptly shuts it down but
it's even worse than food because there's
nothing in the body to even remotely
stabalize it. I learned this the hard way
one day before I knew for certain what I
had.
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ashley23
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 16 Feb 2007 Posts: 5 Location: miami
Posted: 02-21-07 10:25am
The caffeine info makes sense. I will now
be drinking decaf. Before getting this
info my normal routine was to drink two
cups of coffee every morning thats the
first thing I do. Today is the first day I
will start changing my diet. Stan I looked
over your diet and it seems pretty
intense. quick question can I have whole
grain bread, on the label it says there is
no sugar. Stan your diet says no carrots,
but I got an email from some guy the one
promoting his book, anyways he said you
can have carrots I read on the carrot
package carrots contain sugar. I've
decided I have to change my diet because I
have to get control of my life back. But
I'm definatly going to have a hard time
with alcohol, I normaly drink 1 to 2
glasses of wine with dinner around four
times a week, and living in Miami every
weekend I go out and drinking is involved.
I've decided to stop drinking wine at home
and cutting back on the drinking when I'm
out. At this stage in my life I can't cut
alcohol out altogether, but I'm definetly
going to cut back. Thank you so much Stan
for providing me with this info, your a
great person to help so many in need.
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ian cutler
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 21 Feb 2007 Posts: 1
I Think I Have It Too Posted: 02-21-07 12:41pm
Hi
I have had lots of attacks in the last 3
months weakness, limb heaviness and
slurred speech followed by tiredness. Only
lasts a little while. Doctor originally
thought TIA but due to the fact I have had
8 now since October and they all coincide
with not eating they now think hypo's. Am
very worried though as no-one seems to be
sure either way. I am a musician so eating
patterns are strange but they never happen
when I have eaten regularly and after a
mars I sart to feel better !! Does this
sound like the same thing ?
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Stan
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Posted: 02-21-07 17:47pm
Ashley, be very careful of decaf. As far
as I know not all of the caffeine
has been removed, only part, and any bit
will still have the same effect. It may
still be wise, however, so you don't quit
it cold turkey. My diet is mainly
tailored for the quickest results and is
very good for anyone who is dealing with
the dreaded saw-tooth curve type of
reactive hypoglycemia. It's not necessary
to follow it word for word. Whole grain
bread may be perfectly fine, as long as it
says 100% whole grain on the label, if it
doesn't stay away from it. I do still
recommend avoiding carrots and all root
vegetables. They are not very good for
one's health and some of the healthiest
people in the world are healthy because
they don't eat them. In fact, some health
practitioners theorize that Russians are
always so depressed and moody because
their diets are so high in them (beets and
potatoes are like meat over there for the
most part). If you want to eat some
carrots, I recommend no more than say, two
or three baby carrots, per salad or
however. Don't eat a lot of them. The
book you mention has a diet that's part of
a newer movement (started some time in the
70s I think), to redo the hypoglycemia
diet from what it was when it was
discovered. It used to be high protein
low carbohydrate. The reason people
started to think high, complex
carbohydrates were okay was that fears
started to rise over meat products that
are completely false but yet still persist
(cholestrol myths, myths about red meat,
etc.). Unfortunately, those high
carbohydrate diets do not work very well
for most hypoglycemics I've talked to as
suggested. Some can handle them, but
others can't. The problem is that those
that can usually don't see any significant
progress for over a year in most cases,
which no one has the time to wait for with
families, work and so forth. Plus,
research now is starting to show that the
high carbohydrate diet eaten by humans
over the past 8,000 years is actually one
of the main causes for all of our modern
health concerns. There are some very good
articles about it if you're interested.
Alcohol should, unfortunately for you, be
cut out almost completely. In fact, no,
it should be completely cut out. I'm sure
you can have fun without it, do you really
need to drink to have fun? You may
eventually be able to handle a glass of
wine here and there but it's very
difficult to say and very dangerous to
play with. Ian, it sounds like you
probably have a version of hypoglycemia
called functional, which means that you're
getting hypoglycemic symptoms simply
because you're not eating enough. Regular
meals should correct the problem, but you
likely won't have to make any restrictions
on what you eat.