[Diabetes-talk] High sugars in the wake of skipping a snack?

Michael Park pageforpage at gmail.com
Mon Nov 22 18:27:11 UTC 2010


I would figure that if that is the case, this must contribute 
significantly to the damage that is done. Furthermore, the aftermath 
necessarily entails that sugars become unstable and that as a factor, 
speaking generally, also does additional damage. Many diabetics talk 
about high and low sugars having the potential for damage, but they 
don't realise that unstable sugars, and here I am talking fluctuations 
of in the 70's for general purposes, also have a huge potential for 
organ damage.

Michael Park
"I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God Than dwell in the tents of wickedness." (psalm 84:10 NKJV).

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On 2010/11/22 16:39, cheryl echevarria wrote:
> not only that you liver and kidneys go into over drive to compensate.
>
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> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Michael Park"<pageforpage at gmail.com>
> To: "Diabetes Talk for the Blind"<diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2010 10:43 PM
> Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] High sugars in the wake of skipping a snack?
>
>
>> Hi there.
>>
>> The explanation given to me by my diabetes counsellor regarding the
>> higher sugars in the wake of skipping a meal or a snack is this: the
>> body is expecting the food to arrive, and sugar is released in order to
>> help facilitate the digestive process. Because the food does not arrive,
>> that sugar remains in the blood stream, elevating blood sugar levels.
>>
>> Michael Park
>> "I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God Than dwell in the
>> tents of wickedness." (psalm 84:10 NKJV).
>>
>> We support NVDA, a free screenreading program for the blind, giving high
>> quality computer access to many commercial applications, as well as
>> portability.
>>
>>    NVDA 2010.2 has been released.
>>
>>
>> On 2010/11/21 15:59, Dorothea Martin wrote:
>>> Hello, Michael and list,
>>> I noticed a similar experience a couple of days ago. I had been trying
>>> to bring my sugar level down a bit so ate an early supper and nothing
>>> at bedtime. What? The level was higher next morning. Last night I
>>> again had an early supper but gave in and had a sandwich with a
>>> neighbor. The level was lower this morning. I don't try to make sense
>>> of this, just pass it along.
>>> Dotty Martin
>>>
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