Bipolar, depression, mania, anxiety, fatigue, headaches, psychotic-like episodes, brain-fog, temper outbursts, panic attacks, excessive mood swings.
All of these symptoms are difficult to live with and even harder to diagnose. People struggling with these symptoms are often told it’s all in their head. Their test results come back normal, there’s “nothing” wrong with them, they may even be labeled a hypochondriac – but the truth is these symptoms can be extremely disabling.
All of these symptoms can also be experienced when a person has low blood sugar and the body releases “rescue” hormones. A cycle of blood sugar highs and the resulting crash has come to be known as reactive hypoglycemia; a phenomenon discovered in 1924 by Dr. Seale Harris, a professor at the University of Alabama. He also found that patients with low blood-sugar symptoms had been treated incorrectly for all sorts of conditions like hysteria, epilepsy, mental disorders, allergies and alcoholism. It can be extremely difficult to diagnose because if the blood sugars do get too low, the body “reacts” to make sure a person doesn’t experience seizures or coma.
At first glance, it might seem that the answer would be to eat more sugar and refined carbs to keep blood sugar elevated, but that only makes the problem worse. The real answer lies in giving up sugar, candy, soft drinks and refined carbs because the problem is not caused by a lack of sugar in the diet, but rather it is caused by failure of the body’s sugar regulating mechanisms.
To combat hypoglycemia try these tips:
Start with implementing just a few of these lifestyle tips. Small, simple baby steps are the key in creating sustainable change. Soon, enough you will start to see a positive shift in your sugar regulating mechanism, eliminating the “crazy-making” symptoms as well, making you neither a hypochondriac nor hypoglycemic!
Ashley Lucas has a doctorate in sports nutrition and chronic disease. She is also a registered dietitian nutritionist. She is the founder and owner of PHD Weight Loss and Nutrition, offering weight management and wellness services in the Four Corners. She can be reached at 764-4133.