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23 answers

There is a cure for hunger chills, It's called food.
What are you Anorexic? Everybody gets the shakes when they starve.

2007-09-24 10:47:33 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 9

Even if it is or is not diabetes, shakes when you are hungry is not common, and should obviously be looked into by a medical professional. Are you always hungry and then get the shakes? Or do you get the shakes and decide to eat something and it goes away? If so, this could be a reverse diabetes thing. Hyperglycemic (diabetics are hypoglycemic). This means your blood sugar drops (for whatever reason - too much insulin, not enough food, too much excercise). Think of it as a baloon filled with water and has a small hole. If you haven't eaten all day long, eventually, the water will run out. This where you start shaking. But if you eat regularly through out the day, you fill the baloon up with more water, and it's harder for it to go empty. I'm sure using a car and gasoline would have been a better analogy, but I'm not gonna retype that. Either way, start documenting the incidents by keeping a food journal for about 5 weeks. Be sure to list what time you woke up, what you ate, if you took a nap, when you ate lunch and dinner, and what time before or after eating your shakes occur. Try varying it up from day to day (like, don't eat breakfast on monday and see what happens, or skip lunch another day - but be sure to document!). Then set up an appointment with your doctor, and take your journal with you. He may have you start checking your sugar, but that's another question and answer session in and of itself. Good luck.

2007-09-24 10:56:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

Getting The Shakes

2016-12-29 09:30:14 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 1

Are you diabetic?

If you are a diabetic and you are recieving treatment via pills or insulin you need to tell your doctor about this happening so he can advise you on how to deal with it appropriately. A diabetic who is receiving treatment will get the shakes and be hungry when they have a condition called hypoglycaemia. Hypoglycaemia is not caused by the diabetes it is caused by the treatment for diabetes (eg insulin injections).

It can happen for a number of reasons. such as you have let too much time elapse between meals, or if you have type II diabetes and it happens frequently despite regular meals it could indicate that your treatment is too aggressive.

Diabetic medication is not intelligent like the body is, it reduces your blood sugar levels but it does not monitor them, you have to do that from the outside. Once the medication is in your body it will reduce your blood sugar levels consistently no matter how low they get, if they get too low the shakes is a sign for you that it has happened.

So if you are a diabetic receiving treatment and you are getting shaky and hungry often, tell your doctor. :)

Be well
xo

2007-09-24 16:16:18 · answer #4 · answered by Monita C 3 · 2 0

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2016-05-30 22:56:42 · answer #5 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Why do i get the shakes when i'm hungy and is it something i should be checking into..or what?

2015-08-06 07:15:01 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The shakes are indicative of low blood sugar. The body needs food to fuel it and when you don't eat your blood sugar goes down. You feel shaky and a little disoriented at first, and if you still don't eat, can lose consciousness.
You can check your blood sugar very easily with a hand held device called a blood glucose meter that you can often get for free from your pharmacist with the purchase of testing strips. (machine is about $30 otherwise)

2007-09-24 10:50:28 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I get the same way but like today I ate a bowl of raisin bran at about 1:30 p.m. (that's about when I get up I work night shift) and it is now 6:30 p.m. and I feel like I`m starving and have the shakes I normally eat some cookies and feel a lot better in about 20 min. or so






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2013-12-01 10:35:48 · answer #8 · answered by Jennifer 1 · 0 0

You may have hypoglycemia. It is a blood sugar level problem which you can control fairly easily. You can get it checked out at the doctors by getting your blood taken and have them check your blood sugar and insulin levels.

What I have done, is to eat 6 small meals throughout the day about 3 hours apart. Make sure you have more protein and stay away from too much sugar and caffiene.

Your best bet is to have your blood drawn for the doc's to check it out.

2007-09-24 10:52:56 · answer #9 · answered by Katie bb 2 · 1 0

With the newer types of insulin these days, diabetic diets aren't necessarily as restrictive as they used to be. Read here https://tr.im/jylFQ
As with any medicine or diet change, you should discuss it with your doctor. Fruits, both fresh and dried, have a natural sugar in them that will raise blood sugar levels, so be careful about eating too much. Not sure about the nuts. Moderation is always the key. I've been diabetic for 18 years and just recently changed insulin types. I love it because it gives me more freedom in when and what I eat.

2016-05-01 19:36:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This will happen to me if I eat sugar -- let's say like 3:00 (candy, etc.) and then by 5:00 -- my sugar level will drop really fast (I don't eat a lot of sugar as a rule) ---- then I get shakey and FEEL like I'm starving.....but the TRUTH is my sugar just skyrocketed downward and that is what made me feel that way. Could this be it and you aren't paying attention to the sugar consumption?

2007-09-24 10:47:44 · answer #11 · answered by butterfliesRfree 7 · 2 0

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