Yes stress, sickness they can increase blood sugars in anyone diabetic or not.
If the blood pressure is elevated by psychological stress, the theraputic interaction with an animal can reduce the blood pressure by reducing the stress that causes it to be elevated.
I believe that the TDAO injection does raise blood sugars. After my shot my blood sugars began to rise alot.I have had to raise my insulin levels to try to compensate. DOnt know how long this effect will last.
Perhaps Sourdough Bread, but the important point is to monitor your blood sugars.
This is a stress related blood vessel break. It is caused by high stress or elevated blood pressure due to exercise. More information can be found on medical websites.
Quick rule of thumb for diabetics: EVERYTHING can screw up your blood sugars one way or another. NEVER expect them to make sense.
yes if eaten in large numbers. Grapes contain a large amount of natural sugars which diabetics find hard to process.
When diabetics continue to have elevated blood sugar readings they are more prone to infections which lead to amputations.
A blood pressure monitor is not necessary for diabetics to have but it never hurts to monitor your blood pressure. What you do need to have is a blood sugar monitor that will test your sugars to make sure you are not too high or too low.
Some triggers the would cause a diabetic's sugars to rise include: *Stress and *Illness and medication Hoped this helped :)
People having diabeties should avoid banana,grapes,apples and mango To know more about it.Please find the link below http://voices.yahoo.com/best-fruits-diabetics-eat-these-fruits-control-6378592.html?cat=5
Two of the numerous physiological symptoms of stress are sweating and an increase in heart rate. It is important to note, however, that individuals' bodies react to stress in different ways.
Hormones often act or counteract to maintain relatively ideal conditions in the body. During stress (physical and mental) stress hormones are released. These stress hormones are antagonists to insulin; while insulin decreases blood sugar concentration, stress hormones are increasing it. That reaction is normal for fight or flight situations, and is counteracted/normalised by other hormones as the situation changes back to normal. In diabetics, however, the normalisation is less efficient, as they already have difficulties maintaining reference range blood glucose levels. Prolonged stress is not helpful for diabetics.