How Your Hormones Control Your Glucose Levels
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The Pancreas: Your Glucose Manager
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Insulin is produced by beta cells in the pancreas. It instructs your muscle, liver, and fat cells to take in glucose from the blood. This reduces your glucose after a meal.
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Glucagon is made by alpha cells in your pancreas. It instructs your liver to release stored-up glucose (glycogen) when your glucose level is low, say between meals or during exercise.
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The Intestines: Hormone Helpers
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GLP-1 (Glucagon-like Peptide-1) is released from small and large intestine cells. During a meal, GLP-1 increases insulin secretion and decreases glucagon secretion, blocking the large spikes of glucose.
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GIP (Glucose-Dependent Insulinotropic Polypeptide) is made by cells in your small intestine. It also causes your pancreas to let out insulin when you consume carbohydrates.
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The Adrenal Glands: Stress Responders
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Cortisol is also known as the stress hormone. Cortisol makes your glucose go up by making the liver secrete more stored glucose. If you have too much cortisol in the long run—because of long-term stress or certain medications—your body gets resistant to insulin, and it gets harder to control glucose.
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Adrenaline, also known as epinephrine, acts during "fight or flight" episodes, like intense fright or intense exercise. It tells your liver to release glycogen, flooding your body with a burst of glucose. This quick energy might just rescue you in an emergency, but too much adrenaline can lead to high glucose levels.
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Illness or Infection will spike stress hormones and raise glucose.
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Drugs such as steroids make cortisol high, and hence glucose is also high.
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Hormonal Disorders such as Cushing's disease or Addison's disease directly affect the amount of cortisol.
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Type 1 Diabetes results when the pancreas cannot make insulin anymore.
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Type 2 Diabetes results from insulin resistance and decreased insulin production over time.
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Real-Time Readings: The GS1 sensor lies just beneath your skin and takes readings of glucose in the fluid surrounding your cells every few minutes. You see your current glucose on your phone app—no finger sticks needed.
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Trend Arrows: The application shows arrows going up, down, or straight. The arrows tell you if your glucose is going up quickly (maybe because you just ate or were stressed) or coming down (maybe because you exercised or took insulin).
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Custom Alerts: You set your high and low glucose ranges. When your level passes those, GS1 will alert you. That warning earlier in the episode allows you to react—grabbing a snack, adjusting your insulin dose, or contacting your physician—before it gets bad.
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Daily and Weekly Reports: The GS1 app gives you summary charts of your average glucose, time in range, and how often you experienced highs and lows. You can print out or forward these reports to your healthcare provider so that you can tailor your care plan.
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Learn the Basics: Know which hormones affect glucose and how they work.
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Track Your Patterns: Use the SIBIONICS GS1 to gather real-time data about your glucose levels.
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Link Data to Actions: Notice how meals, exercise, stress, and sleep affect your glucose.
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Modify Lifestyle Choices: Plan balanced meals, manage stress, and time your exercise for easier glucose control.
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Collaborate with Your Healthcare Team: Bring your GS1 reports to your doctor or diabetes educator to optimize your treatment plan.