Normally, the body makes insulin when it's needed. Right after meals, it produces enough insulin to process the blood sugar from that meal, moving it out of the blood and into the body's cells. Between meals, the level of insulin drops before it drives blood sugar levels too low.When the insulin comes from injections, it's harder to maintain levels of insulin that keep blood sugar from going too low, or too high. ]]>Fat Farm]]>
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Normally, the body makes insulin when it's needed. Right after meals, it produces enough insulin to process the blood sugar from that meal, moving it out of the blood and into the body's cells. Between meals, the level of insulin drops before it drives blood sugar levels too low.When the insulin comes from injections, it's harder to maintain levels of insulin that keep blood sugar from going too low, or too high. ]]>Fat Farm]]>
March 3, 2011 - 12:55amThis Comment
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