For about 4 months now, my wife has been struggling with hypoglycemia. It started a few months before that with what she described as "energy being turned off like a faucet". The cut-off time was initially near mid-day, then moved progressively closer to the start of the day.
When it became clear that she could no longer sweep it under the rug, she agreed to try moving to a ketogenic diet, which I had been following for many years with good results. However, the transition has not been smooth, to say the least.
In the beginning, we tried to transition quickly, with a diet of almost no carb, high protein, medium fat (she could not eat enough fat to qualify as a "high fat" diet in keto terms). It ended in just a few days with severe headache, dizziness and lack of energy.
For about 3 months after that, we tried to increase the carb to approximately 30g/day. However, her health continued to deteriorate to the point that she could not walk 600 m to the nearest shops. Her weight also dropped from 50 to 45 kg. In one instance, she passed out briefly in a massage shop.
So in the last 1 month, we increase the carb to 100 - 120 g/day, consisting of mostly tubers (purple yam, sweet potato, carrot) and non-sweet fruits (avocado, pumkin). It goes with plenty of bone broth, fatty meat. Biscuits and honey/sugar are kept on hand, but only for emergency hypoglycemia. The plan is to stablise her health enough and then decrease the carb little by little until achieving ketosis. It does help to stablise the situation, restore her weight. However, many things still remain to be worked out.
As I noted in the title, the main problem my wife is having at the moment is hypoglycemia, especially at night. She has even tried to eat every 3 hours to combat it. It usually helps during the day. But night time is a bit of hit and miss. Her energy is still very low, abeit better than at the lowest point. She has to be very careful about doing anything at all. Even a long taichi exercise can bring on hypoglycemia even though the latest meal is just 1 hour ago.
There is a long history of diabetes and cadiovascular problems in my wife's family. So it is safe to say that she is genetically predisposed to it. Before 4 months ago, she followed a typical Vietnamese diet (moderate to high carb (rice), moderate protein, relatively low fat).
So I would like to ask for any advice that my wife can apply to help with her health situation. Any experience from someone who was in similar age (late 40s) and health profile and has successfully transitioned to a low-carb diet, would also be appreciated.
This post was written by me, but has been read and approved by my wife.
When it became clear that she could no longer sweep it under the rug, she agreed to try moving to a ketogenic diet, which I had been following for many years with good results. However, the transition has not been smooth, to say the least.
In the beginning, we tried to transition quickly, with a diet of almost no carb, high protein, medium fat (she could not eat enough fat to qualify as a "high fat" diet in keto terms). It ended in just a few days with severe headache, dizziness and lack of energy.
For about 3 months after that, we tried to increase the carb to approximately 30g/day. However, her health continued to deteriorate to the point that she could not walk 600 m to the nearest shops. Her weight also dropped from 50 to 45 kg. In one instance, she passed out briefly in a massage shop.
So in the last 1 month, we increase the carb to 100 - 120 g/day, consisting of mostly tubers (purple yam, sweet potato, carrot) and non-sweet fruits (avocado, pumkin). It goes with plenty of bone broth, fatty meat. Biscuits and honey/sugar are kept on hand, but only for emergency hypoglycemia. The plan is to stablise her health enough and then decrease the carb little by little until achieving ketosis. It does help to stablise the situation, restore her weight. However, many things still remain to be worked out.
As I noted in the title, the main problem my wife is having at the moment is hypoglycemia, especially at night. She has even tried to eat every 3 hours to combat it. It usually helps during the day. But night time is a bit of hit and miss. Her energy is still very low, abeit better than at the lowest point. She has to be very careful about doing anything at all. Even a long taichi exercise can bring on hypoglycemia even though the latest meal is just 1 hour ago.
There is a long history of diabetes and cadiovascular problems in my wife's family. So it is safe to say that she is genetically predisposed to it. Before 4 months ago, she followed a typical Vietnamese diet (moderate to high carb (rice), moderate protein, relatively low fat).
So I would like to ask for any advice that my wife can apply to help with her health situation. Any experience from someone who was in similar age (late 40s) and health profile and has successfully transitioned to a low-carb diet, would also be appreciated.
This post was written by me, but has been read and approved by my wife.