We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode How a glucose monitor can help tame blood sugar spikes and crashes

How a glucose monitor can help tame blood sugar spikes and crashes

2025/6/30
logo of podcast All Things Considered

All Things Considered

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
D
Dahlia Perlman
J
Judy Freeman
K
Karen Kennedy
M
Michael E. Ducloff
S
Sarah Berry
Topics
Michael E. Ducloff: 控制血糖对于改善餐后不适至关重要。通过学习如何稳定血糖水平,人们可以减轻情绪波动、疲劳和其他相关症状,从而提高整体生活质量。了解食物对血糖的影响,并采取相应的饮食调整,是维持健康的关键一步。 Judy Freeman: 我一直对血糖水平如何影响我的减肥努力和日常精力感到好奇。我希望通过使用持续血糖监测仪来了解我的身体对不同食物的反应,以及如何优化我的饮食习惯以达到更好的健康状态。我特别关注血糖波动与我的情绪和能量水平之间的关系。 Sarah Berry: 我们的研究表明,许多人在摄入碳水化合物后会经历显著的血糖骤降。这种血糖的快速升高和随后的急剧下降会导致一系列负面影响,包括食欲增加、情绪波动和疲劳感。血糖骤降者往往会在下一餐中摄入更多的卡路里,并且更容易感到饥饿。 Dahlia Perlman: 为了避免血糖骤降,关键在于调整饮食结构。首先,避免单独摄入大量碳水化合物,而应将其与蛋白质、健康脂肪和纤维结合。例如,早餐可以加入豆类,午餐选择罐头鱼和坚果,晚餐则可以考虑扁豆和种子。此外,不要将一天的碳水化合物摄入量集中在一餐中,而应将其分散到多餐中,这样可以更有效地稳定血糖水平。 Karen Kennedy: 在用餐时,建议先食用蛋白质和脂肪,最后再摄入碳水化合物。例如,如果你的餐盘里有牛排、沙拉和烤土豆,先吃沙拉和牛排,然后再吃烤土豆,你会发现血糖的升高和下降幅度都会减小。这种进食顺序有助于减缓碳水化合物的吸收,从而避免血糖的剧烈波动。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Have you ever noticed a few hours after a meal, you start to feel a bit moody, less alert, maybe anxious or even angry? If so, you're not alone. Scientists have been studying this phenomenon in a lot of people. As Michael E. Ducloff explains, the fix involves learning how to tame your blood sugar.

At age 76, Judy Freeman is in great health. She's a well-known potter in Alpine, Texas. She doesn't have diabetes or heart disease. She's not overweight, and she's super active. I work maybe 20 hours a week out in the studio, and I try to walk at least four or five times a week. But in the past year or so, Freeman hasn't felt like herself. She's been more tired, and she'd like to shed a few extra pounds. So

So today, Friedman decided to try a new strategy. She's going to wear a continuous glucose monitor for a few weeks. Arrow points up glucose is rising. The monitor estimates your blood sugar every few minutes and sends the value to your phone so you can keep track of your blood sugar throughout the day and see how various foods affect it. I'm interested in finding out how the glucose levels might affect my ability to lose weight and just how it affects my

overall energy level. She's ready to insert the device. It contains a needle that goes into your skin. Okay, you ready? One, two, three. Did it hurt? I didn't feel a thing, just a little pressure. Today, anyone can go online and buy a continuous glucose monitor. It costs about $50 and lasts a couple of weeks. Studies have shown that these devices really help people with diabetes, but they're still trying to figure out if they can help people without diabetes, like Freeman.

Sarah Berry is one scientist leading this effort. She's a nutritionist at King's College London and chief scientist at the company Zoe, which sells nutrition plans that use these monitors. She and her colleagues have analyzed data from thousands of people wearing glucose monitors.

What they found is that many people are what she calls... Dippers. That's right, dippers. Basically, after eating carbohydrates, their blood sugar rises quickly and then about two hours later, dips low. Way low. So you'll have this big increase followed by this big crash.

In one study, Beer and her colleagues showed that these dips can trigger people to overeat. If you are a dipper, those people feel more hungry more quickly. They tend to, on average, eat 80 calories more at their next meal.

and 320 calories more over a whole day. Barry and her team published their findings in the journal Nature Metabolism. They also found that dips correlate with moodiness and fatigue, which brings us back to Judy Friedman in Alpine, Texas. The

The first day she wore the monitor, guess what her blood sugar did a few hours after lunch? Sure enough, it had shot up at some point, and then it plummeted down to the lowest point. Freeman had a huge dip, and during it, she felt anxious, even depressed. It was a sinking feeling, like if I don't get up, I'm just going to stop breathing and die. It was so overpowering. She says she's had this feeling from time to time, but she never connected it to what she ate.

So how can Freeman keep these dips from occurring? Dahlia Perlman is a research dietician at Stanford University. She says, number one, avoid meals and snacks that consist mostly of carbohydrates. Don't eat naked carbs. Eat them with some protein, some healthy fats. And with more fiber. So for example, add beans to breakfast, canned fish and nuts to lunch, lentils and seeds to dinner. Number two.

don't eat all your carbs for the day at one meal. Sprinkle them across several meals. It doesn't matter at the end of the day how many carbs you ate. It matters at the end of the meal. Finally, nutritionist Karen Kennedy says, at meals, eat the protein and fat first. Carbs last.

Let's say you have a steak and a salad and a baked potato. If you were to eat the salad and the steak first, then you will see that you don't have as much of a spike or as much of a drop afterwards. And here's the great part. You don't need to buy a glucose monitor to figure this out. Simply pay attention to how you feel about two hours after a meal. If you get moody, anxious, or super hungry, you're probably a dipper. For NPR News, I'm Mikelene Ducliff.