#11
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I was told when diabetics drink our blood sugar goes really his then really low
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#12
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Quote:
Daily alcohol to "flush system" means about 4centiliters tops. To have a doctor who drinks with you to that level should say, hey, my doctor might have a problem and I may get another one. Last edited by splix; 09-05-2011 at 05:01 PM. |
#13
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Lows & highs with alcohol
In my experience, I go high if I don't shoot-up for beer carbs - it's rare I drink so many beers I crash.
But wine, and liquor, if it isn't mixed with syrups, lowers by BG - sometimes dramatically, and usually after I've gone to bed. Fortunately, I wake up in a sweaty panic, eat a teaspoon of honey with a glass of water, change my clothes and go back to sleep. This was actually my exact reaction after my first beer, on insulin! But it seems I've "acclimated" somehow? Now I under-shoot a bit if I am eating with my alcohol, like festive parties, or dinners; I go to bed preferably somewhere over 140mg/dl, and wake up in range. I usually need to eat breakfast pretty immediately after waking up, but no more sweaty panic nights unless I really wasn't paying attention and over doing it. And I've come to treat beer like food, 'cause that's how it seems to work in my system Most people who don't think diabetics should drink are thinking all diabetics have sever kidney/liver damage. True - it may happen eventually, but as long as your liver and kidneys are still in good shape, alcohol isn't doing you any more harm than anyone else My only fear is the fact that low-blood-sugar and being drunk have such similar symptoms - I'd hate for my blood-sugar to go low at a time when I couldn't figure out that's what was happening and neglect to input carbs. Probably better to err on the side of eating too many pretzels, though sometimes I wake up high from a hand on automatic pilot at the pretzel bowl! Cheers! |
#14
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I didn't read all the comments But what happens is that alcohol containing sugar, with Will higher your bs. But when the lever then breaking down the alcohol (which is à poison) the lever can't give you any glucose during the night as i normally does. That's why the bs may drop during the night. My bs is often up to 20-25 when i drink, and even if i don't ever take any insulin then, My bs goes down to 2 or 3 during the night st least 1 time
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alcohol |
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