Glucose is so central to our body’s functioning that an excess of it has repercussions for virtually every aspect of our physical and mental health. You may recognise a few of these in your own life.
CONSTANT HUNGER
Are you hungry all the time? You are not alone. And here again, it has to do with glucose. First, the short-term impact: if you compare two meals that contain the same number of calories, the one that leads to a smaller glucose spike will keep you feeling full for longer. So even if you don’t change how many calories you eat, just focusing on your glucose levels will free you from constant hunger. Second, the long-term effects: after years of glucose spikes, our hunger hormones get mixed up. Leptin, the hormone that tells us we are full and should stop eating, has its signal blocked; while ghrelin, the hormone that tells us we are hungry, takes over. Even though we have fat reserves, with lots of energy available, our body tells us we need more – so we eat. As we eat, we experience more glucose spikes, and insulin rushes in to store excess glucose as fat, which then