Reactive hypoglycemia

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jtunderdog

MuscleChemistry Registered Member
Gold Member
I have read up some on this and that caffeine is one of the main culprits. My blood work was good but I forgot my blood sugar was 54. Now this was after eating 35 minutes earlier. I did cardio that morning. Drank a shake and carbs after, then ate 2 chicken breasts and some potato for lunch. I was hungry after I got my blood drawn and went to taco bell because I knew my blood sugar was low. I am starting to take in more protein and carbs before I get on the treadmill in my am session. Anyone else deal with this?
 
Yes, I have the reactive form of hypoglycemia. Not fun. It became an issue for me about 3.5 years ago and has progressively become worse over time. My blood sugar will drop with any large meal whether it be carbs or protein, and when I get as low as the 50's, I become very shaky and have to use those glucose tablets or drinks to get it back up quickly.

A couple of things I've been doing to combat it: HGH is a known antagonist to insulin (which is why you don't take the two together), and HGH will increase your blood sugar. I found that with even at least 2 iu per day of HGH, it keeps my blood sugar from going extremely low. I found I would still lose some, but it would stay mainly in the 80's or upper 70's. Another thing I've tried is to use insulin at least once per day. The exogenous insulin keeps my body from producing too much on its own in the same way test stops your test production. This also keeps my blood sugar from dropping too low. These methods are obviously not mainstream, BUT I did speak to a doctor about it, and he agreed that though unconventional, theoretically it should work. That helped me get an HGH script, I might add.
 
Yes, I have the reactive form of hypoglycemia. Not fun. It became an issue for me about 3.5 years ago and has progressively become worse over time. My blood sugar will drop with any large meal whether it be carbs or protein, and when I get as low as the 50's, I become very shaky and have to use those glucose tablets or drinks to get it back up quickly.

A couple of things I've been doing to combat it: HGH is a known antagonist to insulin (which is why you don't take the two together), and HGH will increase your blood sugar. I found that with even at least 2 iu per day of HGH, it keeps my blood sugar from going extremely low. I found I would still lose some, but it would stay mainly in the 80's or upper 70's. Another thing I've tried is to use insulin at least once per day. The exogenous insulin keeps my body from producing too much on its own in the same way test stops your test production. This also keeps my blood sugar from dropping too low. These methods are obviously not mainstream, BUT I did speak to a doctor about it, and he agreed that though unconventional, theoretically it should work. That helped me get an HGH script, I might add.

Thats awesome,however im sure a script for that has to be pretty costly, insurance isnt going to cover any of that right? after my injury my sport med doc would have gotten it for me but said if I can get it myself it would be much cheaper, so I obliged
 
Sadly, no insurance won't cover it, even if it was for a normal medical reason because it's an injectable (I hate my insurance plan--need better coverage)--and yeah, it is expensive, almost $9,000 through normal channels. But even with that, I'm told by my doc that if I have a script, I can get it from other sources on my own. I'm not required to go through a regular pharmacy in the grocery store. International sources, a 90-day supply can be legally imported, domestic sources, doesn't matter. It helps to have the script so you can legally say you have the right to be in possession of it.
 
Thats what I was thinking was that it made it legal to have it no matter where you got it from. Ill consider it. If this continues Im looking for some answer for sure.
 
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