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2006-11-30 19:05:28 · 23 answers · asked by underboss1018 2 in Health Diseases & Conditions Diabetes

23 answers

Risk of Low Blood Sugar
If you have diabetes and take insulin shots or oral diabetes pills, you risk low blood sugar when you drink alcohol. To protect yourself, never drink on an empty stomach. Plan to have your drink with a meal or after eating a snack.
How does alcohol add to your chances of having low blood sugar? It has to do with your liver.
Normally, when your blood sugar level starts to drop, your liver steps in. It goes to work changing stored carbohydrate into glucose. Then it sends the glucose out into the blood, which helps you avoid or slow down a low blood sugar reaction.
However, when alcohol enters your system, this changes. Alcohol is a toxin. Your body reacts to alcohol like a poison. The liver wants to clear it from the blood quickly. In fact, the liver won't put out glucose again until it has taken care of the alcohol. If your blood glucose level is falling, you can quickly wind up with very low blood sugar.
This is why drinking as little as 2 ounces of alcohol (about 2 drinks) on an empty stomach can lead to very low blood sugar.
When you mix alcohol and exercise, you increase the risk of going low. This can happen because exercise helps lower your blood sugar levels. Let's say you just played a couple of hard sets of tennis. You have a beer after the match. But in the hours after the game, your body is still working. It is replacing the energy your muscles used up. To do this, it clears glucose from the blood and adds it to the muscles' store. This is why exercise can cause your blood sugar level to go down.
If you take insulin or diabetes pills, they too are working to clear glucose from your blood. Unless you eat or your liver adds glucose to your blood, you could be heading for a low blood sugar level. If you drink a beer, the alcohol will stop your liver from sending out any glucose. Your chances of going low are even greater.
Check with your health care provider to see if it's OK to combine alcohol with your diabetes medications.
Low blood sugar when drinking is less of a risk for those with type 2 diabetes who control their diabetes with meal planning and exercise alone.

2006-12-01 01:58:11 · answer #1 · answered by Dizzy 2 · 2 1

1

2016-05-20 02:08:07 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Alcohol And Blood Sugar

2016-09-29 02:01:13 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

2

2016-09-17 14:40:31 · answer #4 · answered by Sanford 3 · 0 0

I am writing to tell you what an incredible impact these methods had on my life! I have had type 2 diabetes for 27 years. For me, the worst part of this horrible disease is the severe pain I constantly get in my feet. The pain is so bad that I avoid standing and walking as much as possible. I've got to tell you that within the first month, my feet stopped hurting altogether and I can now walk totally pain free.

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2016-05-14 16:06:13 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Alcohol stops the liver from releasing glucagon and when the reserves are gone, you go into a coma due to a low blood sugar.
This happens to people who do or don't have diabetes. It's called alcohol poisoning.

Make sure you use alcohol with food and do add the carbos from any added fruit juices and such.
Alcohol lowers your blood sugar.

2006-12-02 05:19:16 · answer #6 · answered by Cammie 7 · 2 2

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i lived with a guy once that had diabetes..while he tried to always drink light beer,,he still would have high blood sugar! yes alcohol does affect your blood sugar, & it's a long answer how,,the ingredients of the type of alcohol you are using may differ,but they come from something that had to ferment or go to sugar of some form...

2016-04-21 05:47:49 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Drinking alcohol raises your blood sugar.

2006-11-30 19:14:01 · answer #8 · answered by Jap 2 · 1 5

Alcohol drastically raises you blood sugar. It's a depressant and slows your metabolism down and allows the sugar in the alcohol to do even more damage than it normally would.

2006-11-30 23:21:53 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 4

Alcohol will typically elevate the blood glucose (sugar) level although part of this elevation is due to the items mixed with the alcohol such as Coca Cola and sugar on the rim. Diabetics are typically advised to avoid alcohol completely although small amounts are not going to have a major impact on glucose levels. We suggest that they avoid it completely as 1 drink leads to 2 and before you know it you are drinking too much.

2006-12-01 01:02:14 · answer #10 · answered by john e russo md facm faafp 7 · 0 4

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