Hypoglycemia’s symptoms have one unique characteristic . The symptoms are many and varied and effect different people differently, unlike other diseases
Most diseases have one symptom or characteristic and are easy to analyse – hence overly swollen glands in the back of your throat and the doctor can say fairly definitely you are suffering from Tonsillitis.
Here are a number of symptoms which have been established by doctors as a clear link to hypoglycemia:
- Dizziness
- Nervousness
- Depression
- Irritability
- Headaches
- Drowsiness
- Anxiety
- Mental confusion
- Arthritis
- Allergies
A complete list of the labels and symptoms given by doctors can be found in my ebook “The Recipe to Conquering Hypoglycemia”
But the tricky aspect of hypoglycemia is that although the above are symptoms of hypoglycemia, the disease is a bit like a chameleon – it can take on other disease symptoms. There are times a person is dizzy or anxious but is not hypoglycemic. The problem is that for years doctors labeled people with symptoms like ‘nervousness’ but did not go to the root cause and conclude that hypoglycemia was causing the problems. They were often told to get some rest, or get a change of scene or that it’s a passing phase. Only when matters became far worse were the people taken more seriously. By then it was too late because diabetes had taken hold or they had suffered a stroke.
On the bright side, this is why hypoglycemia is unique – you can do something about it, unlike other diseases. If you make the effort to investigate your own symptoms, and record them in a journal, you will start to get to the bottom of your maladies and before long you will feel much better and a cure will take place.
“The Recipe to Conquering Hypoglycemia” gives a complete plan of how to help yourself. You need some guidance and mentoring because, after all, no doctor in the world could devote the time the way you can, to do what has to be done.









