Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Hypoglycemia Symptoms?


jcgirl

Recommended Posts

jcgirl Apprentice

I have been gluten-free for four months. For the past few weeks I have been experiancing tingling in fingers and toes, foggy headed feeling almost like being intoxicated or on major drugs, tired and headaches. Usually feel this way in the moring and before meals. I purchased a glucose meter and my levels have been low. Sometimes I feel as though I am going to pass out. Is low blood sugar a common thing with the gluten free diet? Both my parents haare diabetic as well. I am going to my family doctor today. Has anyone else experienced low blood sugar symptpoms after going gluten-free?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



jenvan Collaborator

Open Original Shared Link

Check out the thread above where there was discussion between some members with hypoglycemia. Maybe it will help you out...

Link to comment
Share on other sites
skbird Contributor

Here's more on hypoglycemia. I have been aware of my having it for 3 years now but am fairly convinced it's been a lot longer (pretty sure my whole life).

Open Original Shared Link

I think it's fairly common if you are gluten-intolerant.

Stephanie

Link to comment
Share on other sites
tarnalberry Community Regular

Many of the gluten-free replacement items use flours that have a high glycemic index, so they spike your blood sugar, causing a large insulin rush, which then leads to low blood sugar after it's all swept up into your cells. (Note that *technically* hypoglycemia merely refers to the state of having low blood sugar. It could be caused by a diabetic taking too much insulin, but it can also be caused by either increased sensitivity of your cells to insulin or an overproduction of insulin by your pancreas. The two situations there don't get treated quite the same way, because they aren't restrained in the same way.)

You may want to look at your diet, and see how your meals are split, nutritionally, between carbs/fat/protein. They should be fairly balanced, but *exactly* what balanced is depends on your own body. For me, I'm looking at something that's at least 20% fat, 20% protein, 60% carbs, on average, for a meal. If I'm doing good, I can play with that a bit, and let a high fiber food with less protein or fat fill in sometimes, but by the end of the day, I'm aiming for at least 25/25/50. (You can use online tools like Open Original Shared Link to help track these things.)

Going to your doctor to investiage this is also a good idea. For those with serious hypoglycemia, it can affect other parts of your body as well. (I think my PT who had it had issues with her heart - not serioius, but not fun.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
jcgirl Apprentice

Thanks for the info. I had blood test done this morning and I almost passed out. Never had that problem before when blood being drawn. Now I have to wait for the results. As for my diet being balanced, it's a tuff one. I have been eating mainly meats, vegi's, yogurt and fruit. Not sure if that is a balanced diet or not. This is so hard, for the first 2 months I felt awesome on the gluten-free diet and now new issues come up It is so frustrating and I feel like I am just complaining all the time about something.

On the bright side however, I have been successful in getting an appointment with Strong Childrens Hospital GI department for my son. I hear they have an excellant reputation with celiac resurch, etc.. I hope he doesn't go through life the way I did.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
skbird Contributor

Was it a fasting test? That can affect you. I was having the worst lightheadedness when getting a blood test done (had to fast from the night before) and when I got my results I was stunned my blood glucose level was 101. I thought it had to be in the 60's or lower. It made me embarassed that I'd been so cranky with having to wait (yep, love being cranky...). But then I learned that when you feel symptoms you are often on the rebound as your adrenaline has already kicked in and started raising your blood sugar so it's likely that's why I was feeling so bad that day.

Anyway, fasting blood tests can be tough if you are not stabilized by diet with hypoglycemia. And that's just something that takes time.

Stephanie

Link to comment
Share on other sites
jcgirl Apprentice

Stephanie,

Yes it was a fasting blood test. I ate small snacks throughout the day yesterday and felt a little better with the loopy-ness. However, I was so stuffed from eating, not used to that because of the stomach aches, etc of my former gluten life. As soon as I get the results of blood work and I am going to see a nutritionist. I am to the point of being totally clueless as to what I can and can not eat, when, and how much. Today I had a baked potatoe for lunch, guess that put me on some type of sugar high, felt good, most energy in awhile, but the crash was horrid. It seems to be a vicious circle. :unsure:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



skbird Contributor

There are things you can do to make even potatoes ok for you. Anything that is high-glycemic (like a potato - some claim they have the same effect on your body as if you dug out all the potato and filled the skin with white sugar) can be made lower glycemic by adding protein, fat and/or fiber. So if you use cheese and/or sour cream (whole milk, not skim) you are improving it. Add some broccoli, even better.

One of my favorite things to do is to add seeds or nuts to my food. I have lately been eating plain yogurt (whole milk) for breakfast and sweetening with real maple syrup. I also add a small handful of sliced almonds (protein/fat/fiber) and a tbsp of flax meal (protein/fat/fiber). Then I add a dollop of flax oil for good measure. The result is really tasty, sweet, full of protein, fiber, and very filling. If I had just the yogurt and the syrup I'd be flying high in no time.

I don't eat potatoes anymore but I'd add cheese and flax meal to it - that would make a difference. Flax meal adds a nutty flavor and gives you omega 3 oils - really good for anyone.

Do a search on Google for "glycemic index" and do some reading. It really will help you learn more about good foods. There are lots of good sites out there - many are based in Australia.

Take care

Stephanie

Link to comment
Share on other sites
skbird Contributor

PS yes it is a vicious cycle! There's a web site I read once that compared it to a checking account. You can eat sugary things for a while before it starts to affect you but at some point, you overdraw. Then you eat a sugary thing to boost yourself back up and you go down even farther, think of overdrawing AND getting that insufficient funds fee. It keeps going lower until you stop going for the easy fixes of sugary foods and start building yourself back up with proteins and fats.

One of the best times I went through while trying to recover from having so many blood sugar crashes was when I had a half shot glass of extra virgin olive oil every morning. Seriously - I lost 5 pounds and I felt better, didn't have as many crashes. It was a big help. I get the same results with flax oil.

Stephanie

Link to comment
Share on other sites
tarnalberry Community Regular

definitely a vicious cycle! but absolutely - combining a starch with fat and/or protein will lower the glycemic load of the meal, and help keep from having those things happen. for potatoes, I usually have them in a soup or stew, or have a bit of olive oil with them. also, different potatoes have different glycemic loads, regular russets being the highest.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
jcgirl Apprentice

I feel like I need to go back to college just to learn to eat these days. The last couple days have been o.k. with the sugar levels that is. I have been eating meats and vegis. However, when on a school field trip to Medieval Times, had a good time but got glutanized. There were some small noodles in the soup, didn't see them and knew I should not have eaten the soup in the first place. So now I am dealing with gluten reaction. Have had a few accidents lately. It just stinks having to watch every little thing I put into my mouth. It has only been four months of gluten-free and a week of realizing how low my blood sugar levels have been. Time and patience, :( and alot of research I guess. Thank you all for your help.

Laurie

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,034
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Toslebury
    Newest Member
    Toslebury
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Katiec123
      @RMJ it makes sense as it’s something I’ve experienced more than once. Currently 24 weeks and baby is doing well! Will be seeking more medical advice today 
    • Manaan2
      Thank you! This is great information and perfect timing because we have our first appointment for a second opinion tomorrow.  
    • trents
      Bright blood in the stool would indicate bleeding down at the lower end in the colorectal area as opposed to the small bowel below the stomach where celiac manifests damage to the villous lining. Are these blood stools persistent? It's not unusual for this to happen once in a while to most anyone when a small surface vessel breaks, kind of like a nose bleed. As Scott Adams said, you must continue to consume regular amounts of gluten if the specialist will be doing additional testing for celiac disease, which could include an endoscopy with biopsy of the small bowel lining.
    • Bev in Milw
      Checkouts gluten-free recipes at twww.redstaryeast.com We tried a bread machine years ago and weren’t happy with results. Bread machines have pre-set rise & bake times.  Unfortunately, the program doesn’t adjust to slight differences when measuring, relative humidity or temperature of ingredients & in kitchens.  Lots of efforts for ONE odd- sized loaf that hard to cut into useable slices.  College-aged son found best use for bread machine was as heavy duty mixer that ‘kept dust in the box.’  He would pre-measure ingredients for 2-3 loaves & use machine mix up individual batches.      Since gluten-free bread needs  to rise only once, each recipe of dough went into a loaf pan. Pans sat counter to rise—time dependent of temp in kitchen. Then, baked in oven until he, not machine, decided it was done.     Took ~10 min extra up front to measure & mix additions but adds nothing to rise & bake times.     Loaves are great for slicing (Slice extra before freezing!). One mess to clean up, saves time & energy since you need to bake  as is half as often (If  you plan to bake lots more than bread, opt for KitchenAid/ heavy duty mixer instead.  Cover with dish towel to capture dust!)     Personally, I’m sure I had as a kid since I’ve never been a fan  of bread. .  Have been wrapping corn tortillas around things for 40+ years.  Can still get a dozen 12-pks of tortillas for same or less than price as 1 load of gluten-free bread. PLUS. the tortillas have more nutrients!         
    • CelestialScribe
      Welcome to the forum. You are lucky because in Korean food, many classic meals such as bibimbap without sauce, barbecue meats and some kinds of soups generally do not have gluten. But it is a good idea to confirm with the restaurant workers for safety reasons. Regarding certain locations, I enjoy going to places such as Plant in Seoul and Sprout in Busan. Moreover, using applications like HappyCow or TripAdvisor can assist you to discover additional choices in the regions you plan to visit. One big tip: it is good to know some important Korean sentences, for example 'I cannot eat gluten' (geulluteuneul meogeul su eopseoyo)  or 'Does this have gluten?' (igeoe neun geulluteuni deureo innayo?) because they can be very helpful. If you are considering getting a local guide, I'd suggest this one https://gowithguide.com/korea They were very helpful when I needed to find places with gluten-free food options because they provide tours tailored to your preferences. Good luck with your travels! 🍻
×
×
  • Create New...