Question on Hypoglycemia
I experience energy highs and lows every day that seem more severe than normal swings should be. I notice that I have a lot of nervous energy after eating, followed soon after by periods of exhaustion. My diet is well-rounded and healthy, although I am lactose intolerant. Sometimes the lows that I experience interfere with my ability to socialize because I feel so tired. What might be causing these daily peaks and valleys?
Answer
The first thing that comes to mind with daily energy swings associated with meals is a condition called reactive hypoglycemia. Reactive hypoglycemia causes wide fluctuations in blood sugar levels that can cause an initial increase of energy after eating, followed by an energy drop 1-3 hours later. Other symptoms can include irritability, headache, forgetfulness, shakiness, blurred vision, depression and mood swings. The cause of reactive hypoglycemia is an abnormal insulin response to refined carbohydrates in the diet resulting in wide swings in blood sugar levels. Eating simple carbohydrates (sugars) causes a rapid rise in blood sugar ( you feel more energetic) then the body secretes too much insulin to lower the blood sugar which causes a rapid decrease ( you feel less energetic). There is good evidence that oversecretion of insulin for many years can lead to insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, so it is important to diagnose and treat reactive hypoglycemia.
Reactive hypoglycemia can be diagnosed with a simple test called a glucose tolerance test (GTT) with a hypoglycemic index (a measure of the rate the blood glucose level falls). Many people with reactive hypoglycemia experience symptoms while undergoing the test, further confirmation of the condition. The test is simple, after a period of fasting, you drink a concentrated solution of glucose and blood samples are taken at 1/2 or hourly intervals for 3 or more hours. The pattern of blood sugar rise and fall diagnoses reactive hypoglycemia. Your health care provider can order and evaluate the results of the test, as well as determine if other testing is needed to rule out other causes of fatigue like hypothyroidism, anemia and depression.
The main treatment for reactive hypoglycemia is dietary. All refined carbohydrates including sugars, sweets, and fruit juices should be strictly avoided as they cause a rapid rise in blood sugar levels. Alcohol and caffeine also affect blood sugar and should be eliminated. The diet should include protein and high fiber foods to prevent rapid rises in blood sugar. Eating more frequently, six smaller meals instead of three large ones, is helpful to balance blood sugar. A good multiple vitamin and mineral supplement will assure that essential nutrients for carbohydrate metabolism are provided. The mineral chromium has been shown to help alleviate hypoglycemic symptoms in a dose of 200 mcg (micrograms) per day.
http://eclecticphysician.com/energy-highs-and-lows-after-eating/
Most of us are familiar with that sleepiness that falls upon us after eating a really big satisfying meal. The “food coma effect” is most prevalent after massive meals, like after Christmas dinner or the Thanksgiving meal.
What you’re suffering from is post-postprandial somnolence, or as we like to call them in my househould, the post-meal sleepies.
But why do we feel tired after eating? Here are 6 reasons why and what you can do about it.
1. First rule out relaxation
I know this sounds a bit funny but believe it or not, some people misinterpret feeling relaxed with feeling low in energy. I say this because digestion of food triggers our “rest and digest” nervous system response (also known as the parasympathetic nervous system response). As the name suggests, it is linked with resting and feeling relaxed.
Having said this, a lot of people really do feel fatigued after a meal, and that could be for one of several reasons given below.
2. It could be because your energy and blood are directed to your gut and not to your brain
After you eat a large meal of solid foods, blood flow is diverted to the gut to provide it with the resources it needs to digest your meal. This means that there is reduced blood flow elsewhere, like to your brain, which can make you feel drowsy.
In Chinese Medicine they refer to this phenomenon as Qi being diverted away from the brain, to the Stomach and Spleen (the Spleen being not our Western idea of a spleen, but a different organ which is considered as the main organ of digestion in Chinese Medicine).
Not only is blood diverted to the gut, but also energy is used up in the process of digestion.
Certain things make you prone to using up more energy to digest your food, thus making you more tired:
What can I do about this?
3. It may be because you have blood sugar imbalances
Eating meals high in simple carbohydrates (like white rice, sugar, white bread, white potatoes) can make you feel tired for 2 main reasons:
(a.) Quick sugar release is followed by a rapid energy dip:
Simple carbohydrates release sugars quickly to your body. All these sugars which are released at once are quickly mopped up into body cells to keep the sugar levels of the blood at healthy levels (homeostatic levels). Once mopped up, you feel tired again. This low-blood-sugar due to excessive mopping up is technically called “reactive hypoglycaemia”. What you want is a slowly-released sugar flow to sustain your energy levels for longer. You can do this by several ways delineated below.
(b.) Simple carbohydrates are known to increase serotonin levels, which is a precursor for melatonin, a sleep-inducing hormone.
What can I do about this?
4. Food intolerances
Feeling tired after eating could be a sign that you’re having particular trouble digesting a particular food because you have a sensitivity to it. Food intolerances can make you feel heavy, bloated and tired after eating. The most common food intolerances are to wheat and dairy, although they could be due to a vast array of foods.
What can I do about this?
Try noticing if you feel tired after meals containing a particular food. Try and find a correlation between what you eat and how you feel. You can experiment with cutting out a suspect food for a couple of weeks and see if it affects how you feel after a meal. It takes about 3-4 weeks to know for sure.
Food intolerances are usually linked to underlying problems like poor digestion and leaky gut and often go away once these are addressed. Once digestive health is restored completely, reintroducing the previously-offending food should no longer cause trouble.
5. Qi Stagnation according to Chinese Medicine
In Chinese Medicine, eating a large meal can cause “Stagnant Qi” in the Stomach. This means that the Qi energy which usually flows freely through the body giving us vibrancy, cannot flow, and as a result we feel heavy and lethargic.
What can I do about this?
Exercise is a good way to lift qi stagnation. Going for a walk in the fresh air after a meal is a good idea for people who are tired from post-meal qi stagnation.
If you feel even more tired after going for a post-meal walk, this means that stagnation isn’t your problem and you’re more likely to be suffering from a deficiency.
6. Are you taking any medications with your meal?
Some medications can make you sleepy as a side-effect. If you are taking medication, investigate whether this could be a contributing factor to feeling tired after meals.
- See more at: http://www.saywhydoi.com/why-do-i-feel-tiredness-after-eating/#sthash.0MAPTn3r.dpufMost of us are familiar with that sleepiness that falls upon us after eating a really big satisfying meal. The “food coma effect” is most prevalent after massive meals, like after Christmas dinner or the Thanksgiving meal.
What you’re suffering from is post-postprandial somnolence, or as we like to call them in my househould, the post-meal sleepies.
But why do we feel tired after eating? Here are 6 reasons why and what you can do about it.
1. First rule out relaxation
I know this sounds a bit funny but believe it or not, some people misinterpret feeling relaxed with feeling low in energy. I say this because digestion of food triggers our “rest and digest” nervous system response (also known as the parasympathetic nervous system response). As the name suggests, it is linked with resting and feeling relaxed.
Having said this, a lot of people really do feel fatigued after a meal, and that could be for one of several reasons given below.
2. It could be because your energy and blood are directed to your gut and not to your brain
After you eat a large meal of solid foods, blood flow is diverted to the gut to provide it with the resources it needs to digest your meal. This means that there is reduced blood flow elsewhere, like to your brain, which can make you feel drowsy.
In Chinese Medicine they refer to this phenomenon as Qi being diverted away from the brain, to the Stomach and Spleen (the Spleen being not our Western idea of a spleen, but a different organ which is considered as the main organ of digestion in Chinese Medicine).
Not only is blood diverted to the gut, but also energy is used up in the process of digestion.
Certain things make you prone to using up more energy to digest your food, thus making you more tired:
What can I do about this?
3. It may be because you have blood sugar imbalances
Eating meals high in simple carbohydrates (like white rice, sugar, white bread, white potatoes) can make you feel tired for 2 main reasons:
(a.) Quick sugar release is followed by a rapid energy dip:
Simple carbohydrates release sugars quickly to your body. All these sugars which are released at once are quickly mopped up into body cells to keep the sugar levels of the blood at healthy levels (homeostatic levels). Once mopped up, you feel tired again. This low-blood-sugar due to excessive mopping up is technically called “reactive hypoglycaemia”. What you want is a slowly-released sugar flow to sustain your energy levels for longer. You can do this by several ways delineated below.
(b.) Simple carbohydrates are known to increase serotonin levels, which is a precursor for melatonin, a sleep-inducing hormone.
What can I do about this?
4. Food intolerances
Feeling tired after eating could be a sign that you’re having particular trouble digesting a particular food because you have a sensitivity to it. Food intolerances can make you feel heavy, bloated and tired after eating. The most common food intolerances are to wheat and dairy, although they could be due to a vast array of foods.
What can I do about this?
Try noticing if you feel tired after meals containing a particular food. Try and find a correlation between what you eat and how you feel. You can experiment with cutting out a suspect food for a couple of weeks and see if it affects how you feel after a meal. It takes about 3-4 weeks to know for sure.
Food intolerances are usually linked to underlying problems like poor digestion and leaky gut and often go away once these are addressed. Once digestive health is restored completely, reintroducing the previously-offending food should no longer cause trouble.
5. Qi Stagnation according to Chinese Medicine
In Chinese Medicine, eating a large meal can cause “Stagnant Qi” in the Stomach. This means that the Qi energy which usually flows freely through the body giving us vibrancy, cannot flow, and as a result we feel heavy and lethargic.
What can I do about this?
Exercise is a good way to lift qi stagnation. Going for a walk in the fresh air after a meal is a good idea for people who are tired from post-meal qi stagnation.
If you feel even more tired after going for a post-meal walk, this means that stagnation isn’t your problem and you’re more likely to be suffering from a deficiency.
6. Are you taking any medications with your meal?
Some medications can make you sleepy as a side-effect. If you are taking medication, investigate whether this could be a contributing factor to feeling tired after meals.
- See more at: http://www.saywhydoi.com/why-do-i-feel-tiredness-after-eating/#sthash.0MAPTn3r.dpufMost of us are familiar with that sleepiness that falls upon us after eating a really big satisfying meal. The “food coma effect” is most prevalent after massive meals, like after Christmas dinner or the Thanksgiving meal.
What you’re suffering from is post-postprandial somnolence, or as we like to call them in my househould, the post-meal sleepies.
But why do we feel tired after eating? Here are 6 reasons why and what you can do about it.
1. First rule out relaxation
I know this sounds a bit funny but believe it or not, some people misinterpret feeling relaxed with feeling low in energy. I say this because digestion of food triggers our “rest and digest” nervous system response (also known as the parasympathetic nervous system response). As the name suggests, it is linked with resting and feeling relaxed.
Having said this, a lot of people really do feel fatigued after a meal, and that could be for one of several reasons given below.
2. It could be because your energy and blood are directed to your gut and not to your brain
After you eat a large meal of solid foods, blood flow is diverted to the gut to provide it with the resources it needs to digest your meal. This means that there is reduced blood flow elsewhere, like to your brain, which can make you feel drowsy.
In Chinese Medicine they refer to this phenomenon as Qi being diverted away from the brain, to the Stomach and Spleen (the Spleen being not our Western idea of a spleen, but a different organ which is considered as the main organ of digestion in Chinese Medicine).
Not only is blood diverted to the gut, but also energy is used up in the process of digestion.
Certain things make you prone to using up more energy to digest your food, thus making you more tired:
What can I do about this?
3. It may be because you have blood sugar imbalances
Eating meals high in simple carbohydrates (like white rice, sugar, white bread, white potatoes) can make you feel tired for 2 main reasons:
(a.) Quick sugar release is followed by a rapid energy dip:
Simple carbohydrates release sugars quickly to your body. All these sugars which are released at once are quickly mopped up into body cells to keep the sugar levels of the blood at healthy levels (homeostatic levels). Once mopped up, you feel tired again. This low-blood-sugar due to excessive mopping up is technically called “reactive hypoglycaemia”. What you want is a slowly-released sugar flow to sustain your energy levels for longer. You can do this by several ways delineated below.
(b.) Simple carbohydrates are known to increase serotonin levels, which is a precursor for melatonin, a sleep-inducing hormone.
What can I do about this?
4. Food intolerances
Feeling tired after eating could be a sign that you’re having particular trouble digesting a particular food because you have a sensitivity to it. Food intolerances can make you feel heavy, bloated and tired after eating. The most common food intolerances are to wheat and dairy, although they could be due to a vast array of foods.
What can I do about this?
Try noticing if you feel tired after meals containing a particular food. Try and find a correlation between what you eat and how you feel. You can experiment with cutting out a suspect food for a couple of weeks and see if it affects how you feel after a meal. It takes about 3-4 weeks to know for sure.
Food intolerances are usually linked to underlying problems like poor digestion and leaky gut and often go away once these are addressed. Once digestive health is restored completely, reintroducing the previously-offending food should no longer cause trouble.
5. Qi Stagnation according to Chinese Medicine
In Chinese Medicine, eating a large meal can cause “Stagnant Qi” in the Stomach. This means that the Qi energy which usually flows freely through the body giving us vibrancy, cannot flow, and as a result we feel heavy and lethargic.
What can I do about this?
Exercise is a good way to lift qi stagnation. Going for a walk in the fresh air after a meal is a good idea for people who are tired from post-meal qi stagnation.
If you feel even more tired after going for a post-meal walk, this means that stagnation isn’t your problem and you’re more likely to be suffering from a deficiency.
6. Are you taking any medications with your meal?
Some medications can make you sleepy as a side-effect. If you are taking medication, investigate whether this could be a contributing factor to feeling tired after meals.
- See more at: http://www.saywhydoi.com/why-do-i-feel-tiredness-after-eating/#sthash.0MAPTn3r.dpufMost of us are familiar with that sleepiness that falls upon us after eating a really big satisfying meal. The “food coma effect” is most prevalent after massive meals, like after Christmas dinner or the Thanksgiving meal.
What you’re suffering from is post-postprandial somnolence, or as we like to call them in my househould, the post-meal sleepies.
But why do we feel tired after eating? Here are 6 reasons why and what you can do about it.
1. First rule out relaxation
I know this sounds a bit funny but believe it or not, some people misinterpret feeling relaxed with feeling low in energy. I say this because digestion of food triggers our “rest and digest” nervous system response (also known as the parasympathetic nervous system response). As the name suggests, it is linked with resting and feeling relaxed.
Having said this, a lot of people really do feel fatigued after a meal, and that could be for one of several reasons given below.
2. It could be because your energy and blood are directed to your gut and not to your brain
After you eat a large meal of solid foods, blood flow is diverted to the gut to provide it with the resources it needs to digest your meal. This means that there is reduced blood flow elsewhere, like to your brain, which can make you feel drowsy.
In Chinese Medicine they refer to this phenomenon as Qi being diverted away from the brain, to the Stomach and Spleen (the Spleen being not our Western idea of a spleen, but a different organ which is considered as the main organ of digestion in Chinese Medicine).
Not only is blood diverted to the gut, but also energy is used up in the process of digestion.
Certain things make you prone to using up more energy to digest your food, thus making you more tired:
What can I do about this?
3. It may be because you have blood sugar imbalances
Eating meals high in simple carbohydrates (like white rice, sugar, white bread, white potatoes) can make you feel tired for 2 main reasons:
(a.) Quick sugar release is followed by a rapid energy dip:
Simple carbohydrates release sugars quickly to your body. All these sugars which are released at once are quickly mopped up into body cells to keep the sugar levels of the blood at healthy levels (homeostatic levels). Once mopped up, you feel tired again. This low-blood-sugar due to excessive mopping up is technically called “reactive hypoglycaemia”. What you want is a slowly-released sugar flow to sustain your energy levels for longer. You can do this by several ways delineated below.
(b.) Simple carbohydrates are known to increase serotonin levels, which is a precursor for melatonin, a sleep-inducing hormone.
What can I do about this?
4. Food intolerances
Feeling tired after eating could be a sign that you’re having particular trouble digesting a particular food because you have a sensitivity to it. Food intolerances can make you feel heavy, bloated and tired after eating. The most common food intolerances are to wheat and dairy, although they could be due to a vast array of foods.
What can I do about this?
Try noticing if you feel tired after meals containing a particular food. Try and find a correlation between what you eat and how you feel. You can experiment with cutting out a suspect food for a couple of weeks and see if it affects how you feel after a meal. It takes about 3-4 weeks to know for sure.
Food intolerances are usually linked to underlying problems like poor digestion and leaky gut and often go away once these are addressed. Once digestive health is restored completely, reintroducing the previously-offending food should no longer cause trouble.
5. Qi Stagnation according to Chinese Medicine
In Chinese Medicine, eating a large meal can cause “Stagnant Qi” in the Stomach. This means that the Qi energy which usually flows freely through the body giving us vibrancy, cannot flow, and as a result we feel heavy and lethargic.
What can I do about this?
Exercise is a good way to lift qi stagnation. Going for a walk in the fresh air after a meal is a good idea for people who are tired from post-meal qi stagnation.
If you feel even more tired after going for a post-meal walk, this means that stagnation isn’t your problem and you’re more likely to be suffering from a deficiency.
6. Are you taking any medications with your meal?
Some medications can make you sleepy as a side-effect. If you are taking medication, investigate whether this could be a contributing factor to feeling tired after meals.
- See more at: http://www.saywhydoi.com/why-do-i-feel-tiredness-after-eating/#sthash.0MAPTn3r.dpuf