The link between glucose (blood sugar) responses and the foods you eat
Research into individuals' glucose responses to foods containing carbohydrates has identified how this varies from person to person. Learn more here.


Andrea Givens, MS, RD, CSSD,
Medical Affairs


Sarah Koenck, MS, RD,
Medical Affairs
Published:
June 11, 2025
Read time:
3 minutes
- The way that different foods containing carbohydrates affect glucose levels can vary from person to person.
- Foods that could lead to glucose spikes for one may result in a slower, steadier rise in glucose levels for another.
- Learning how your glucose levels respond to eating certain foods with a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) can help you adjust your diet to keep your glucose levels steadier throughout the day.
We’ve all heard the standard nutrition advice: eat plenty of fruits and vegetables, lean protein, healthy fats, and minimize added sugar.
While this may be helpful guidance, the reality is that we’re all different and respond uniquely to the same foods based on our physiology. Specifically, glucose responses after eating foods containing carbs can vary quite a bit from person to person.1,2
Tracking glucose levels with a CGM
Even when considering the glycemic index of foods and the glycemic load (a metric calculated upon the quality and quantity of carbs in a food item or meal), individual responses can vary.
With a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), you can learn your individual glucose response to meals and food choices, which can help you achieve more steady glucose.3
Lingo is a CGM that measures glucose levels in your interstitial fluid, the thin layer of fluid surrounding your body’s cells, and streams this data to your phone in real time.
Knowing how your glucose responds to different foods can help you make better decisions about what you eat.4
For example, here are some questions that personal insights from a CGM may help you answer:
- Should you opt for thin crust on family pizza night?
- Which fruit and protein combo might work best as a mid-morning snack?
- How big of a serving of rice should you have with your meal?
- Should you eat a salad before your pasta?
- Would swapping out fruit juice for some water or tea make a difference?
- Should you plan to go for a stroll after eating a baked potato?
Some research highlights how data from CGMs can help you make better nutrition choices based on your unique responses to food. Let’s look at one study published in the journal Nutrients that monitored healthy individuals wearing the Freestyle Libre CGM to track their glucose after eating different foods.1
Individual glucose response findings with a CGM
The study had 34 young, healthy volunteers (25 female, 9 male) wear CGMs for 14 days, which is the normal wear life of the biosensor. Participants completed an oral glucose tolerance test where they consumed 75 g of glucose and observed their glucose responses over 2 hours using CGM.
About half of the subjects were classified as high responders to 75 g of glucose, while the remaining were categorized as low responders.
Over the two-week study period, participants consumed four different test meals: a rice-based meal, a sandwich meal, a chicken salad, and a fruit bowl. They ate each one on a different day after an overnight fast and took CGM readings every 15 minutes for 2 hours following the test meals. The meals ranged from including 59 to 94 g of carbohydrates, making up between 45 and 92% of the meals’ total calories.
High responders’ glucose levels were nearly identical after consuming the rice-based meal as to the 75 g of glucose in the oral glucose tolerance test (41% of participants).
For the sandwich and chicken salad meals, 42% and 32% were identified as high responders. Only 23.5% of subjects were classified as high responders to the fruit bowl. And, in both high and low responders, glucose decreased the fastest after the fruit bowl.
Both groups experienced peak glucose levels 45 minutes following meals. However, high responders’ glucose had a higher peak and stayed elevated until 75 minutes after the meal before decreasing, especially in meals with carbohydrate contents greater than 50% (rice-based meal, sandwich).
In contrast, low responders’ glucose did not peak as high and decreased towards baseline after the peak 45-50 minutes after meals. These findings highlight how variant people’s responses to glucose are.
How personal CGM data can help your nutrition choices
Knowing whether or not you have a high or low glucose response to certain foods could help you pick the foods and meals that are most likely to keep your glucose steady.
For instance, meals that are lower in carbs (such as a chicken salad) can be better options for people who have a high response to carbohydrate-rich meals (such as a rice-based meal).
And if you know that a meal is going to contain carbohydrate-rich components that lead to a big glucose response (like rice), you can plan to include sources of protein, healthy fat, or fiber to reduce their effects.
Alongside your nutrition choices, using a CGM could also help you build healthy habits. In one study, people using a CGM had improved glucose levels due to making healthier food choices, exercising more, and weight loss.5
For example, some people may find in their CGM data that going for a walk or other moderate exercise after eating a meal with carbs helps blunt a glucose spike compared with when they eat the same meal without any activity afterwards.
Lingo is a biosensor and coaching app that can help you identify your individual response to food — especially meals with carbohydrates — by monitoring your glucose after you eat. You can learn which food choices and lifestyle habits could support steady glucose based on your own metabolism.
A final note from Lingo
Learning how your glucose levels respond when you eat certain foods can help you to build healthy habits to avoid or lessen glucose spikes. Also known as blood sugar spikes, these occur when there is a rapid increase in glucose levels in your bloodstream. This can happen due to consuming certain foods, stress, or intense exercise.
It’s normal for your glucose levels to go up and down throughout the day, but regular and consistent spiking can have a negative impact on your health and well-being.6 Some research has associated consistently elevated glucose with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.7,8
Tracking your glucose with Lingo could help you to build healthy habits that support more steady glucose and your health goals.
The Lingo Glucose System is intended for users 18 years and older not on insulin. It is NOT intended for diagnosis of diseases, including diabetes.
The Lingo program does not guarantee that everyone will achieve the same results as individual responses may vary. Consult your healthcare professional before making changes to your diet or exercise regimen or if you have an eating disorder or a history of eating disorders.
© 2025 Abbott. All rights reserved. The biosensor shape and appearance, Lingo, and related brand marks are marks and/or designs of the Abbott group of companies in various territories. Other marks are the property of their respective owners.
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