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I’m not fond of these family gatherings. đŸ˜”â€đŸ’«

by IBD Medical on April 11, 2025

 


Night-time hypos can be especially frustrating and disruptive for people managing diabetes. They often sneak up hours after your last insulin dose or workout, leaving you waking up drenched in sweat, confused, or with a pounding headache. While you might catch them occasionally, many go unnoticed—especially without a CGM or frequent overnight checks.

 If you’re regularly waking up tired or with high morning readings, it could be your body over correcting a low. Adjusting evening insulin, having a small balanced snack before bed, or reviewing your daily activity can make a big difference in avoiding those overnight dips.
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*Disclaimer: The diabetes memes are intended to put a smile on our community's faces and are not intended as medical advice. These memes are not created to ridicule diabetes management or people living with diabetes. Glucology takes diabetes management seriously and would recommend seeking advice from your medical practitioner before changing anything about your diabetes management.

The content of this Website or Blog is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this Website or Blog.

If you think you may have a medical emergency, call 911 (in the US) or 000 (in Australia) immediately, call your doctor, or go to the emergency room/urgent care.

Remember to always seek advice from your medical practitioner before changing anything about your diabetes management. The above information is not medical advice This nutritional information comes from online calculators. IBD Medical attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, figures like estimated nutritional information for recipes contained on this website, calories, fat, carbs, etc. are provided as a courtesy and are not guaranteed to be accurate. The reader is solely responsible for ensuring that any nutritional information obtained is accurate. IBD Medical is not responsible for adverse reactions, consequences or effects, resulting from the use of any recipes or suggestions herein, or procedures undertaken hereafter. This email is not intended as nutritional advice and readers of this website are ultimately responsible for all decisions pertaining to their health. Customers concerned with food allergies need to be aware of the particular ingredients that are used in recipes.
 
1 comment
by Angela goode on May 26, 2025

This kind of thing is impossible to ignore it happens everywhere every day unless you want to live in a cave some where I find after many years of being a diabetic I no longer crave or enjoy the sweet things we are all different.If it bothers you take something sugarless you enjoy you never know you could start a trend
Good luck

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