---
title: 'Real Madrid Players´ High Glucose Shocked Scientists'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=OratVo2x37Y'
video_id: 'OratVo2x37Y'
date: 2026-06-29
duration_sec: 306
---

# Real Madrid Players´ High Glucose Shocked Scientists

> Source: [Real Madrid Players´ High Glucose Shocked Scientists](https://youtube.com/watch?v=OratVo2x37Y)

## Summary

Real Madrid players wearing continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) during a Champions League match revealed surprisingly high blood sugar levels—averaging 159 mg/dL—that would indicate diabetes in a resting individual. However, scientists explain that during intense exercise, such elevations are a normal physiological response driven by stress hormones, not a sign of disease.

### Key Points

- **Mysterious White Discs** [00:00] — Real Madrid players wore white discs on their arms, speculated to be fitness trackers or heart monitors, but they were continuous glucose monitors (CGMs).
- **Study Setup** [00:24] — Scientists tracked glucose levels of 18 Real Madrid players continuously for two weeks, including during a Champions League match.
- **Active vs. Bench Players** [00:53] — Active players averaged 159 mg/dL glucose; bench players averaged 133 mg/dL. Active players' levels would be in the diabetic range if fasting and resting.
- **Peak Glucose Levels** [01:06] — Some players hit 180–200 mg/dL. The reserve players averaged 133 mg/dL.
- **CGM Caveats** [01:20] — CGMs measure glucose in interstitial fluid, not blood. They lag behind blood sugar by 15–20 minutes and may overestimate by about 16 points.
- **Sustained Elevation** [02:07] — High glucose levels persisted during most of the game and took time to return to baseline—not just transient spikes.
- **No Carbohydrate Supplementation** [02:36] — Players did not consume sports drinks or energy gels; most drank only water. Last meal was 3.5 hours before the game.
- **Stress Hormones Involved** [03:21] — Exercise triggers cortisol and adrenaline, causing the liver to release glucose into the bloodstream, explaining the high levels.
- **Context Is Key** [03:49] — High glucose during intense exercise in elite athletes is normal physiology. The same value at rest while fasted would indicate diabetes.
- **Common Misinterpretation** [04:07] — A higher glucose value after a meal or exercise is not disease—it's a normal physiological response, similar to temporary increases in blood pressure or heart rate.

### Conclusion

Understanding glucose data requires context: temporary elevations during exercise or meals are normal, while chronically high levels at rest signal concern. CGMs are tools for pattern recognition, not instant diagnosis.

## Transcript

Real Madrid fans notice the players wearing a mysterious white disc on their arms. There was a lot of speculation. Are those fitness trackers? Are they heart function monitors?
Those are actually continuous glucose monitors, or CGMs, and what they revealed during a Champions League game, no less. Really surprise scientists, including me, and it's going to
completely change how you think about blood sugar. Because in a different context, the numbers from those players would look like diabetes. Scientists set out to study 18
rheumatoid players, and they tracked their glucose level, their sugar level in their body, continuously for two weeks, including during a Champions League match. Here's what they found. During the game, the active players, the ones that were actually playing for at least 12 minutes or more,
they averaged 159 milligrams per desk leader of glucose. Just for context, in a fasting, resting individual, this level would be in the diabetic range. And several players
hit much higher between 180 and 200 milligrams per desk leader. The reserve players, the players that were mostly on the bench, they averaged 133. Now, here's an important caveat. These devices,
the CGMs, they don't measure glucose levels in the blood. They measure sugar glucose right under the skin. It's what we call interstitial fluid. It's the liquid between the cells, so they're really useful to show patterns over time, and they mirror sugar levels in the blood.
But there's a bit of a gap. There's a time gap. They lag behind blood sugar levels by about 15 to 20 minutes, and there's also a bit of a value gap. Studies have estimated this, and the CGM can
overestimate blood sugar levels by about 16 points. So instead of 159, their average in the blood might actually be in the 140s, and those high values might actually be in the 170s instead of
190 or so, right? Which still surprised me. I did not expect the values to be that high. And the other thing is these weren't transient values. They weren't quick peaks of sugar going up, and quickly
coming back down. You can see on the graph, players kept those high values during most of the game, and even after the game, it took a while for it to come back down. Now, here's an important question, where the player is drinking a bunch of gatorade with a lot of sugar in it, or were they eating a lot
of snacks during the break with a lot of carbohydrates, and is that why the sugar levels are so high? Fortunately, the researchers thought of all this, and they explained in the study, the last meal was about three and a half hours before the game. So they weren't completely fasted,
but they had eaten right before the game. This is what you would expect. And they typically did not supplement with additional carbohydrates during the game, including sports drinks and energy gels.
Most of the players report drinking only water. So why do we see these high glucose levels higher in the players that are playing compared to the bench players, even though there's not more carbohydrates, more sugar going in. Well, exercise triggers stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline,
and those can spike your glucose. They can cause your liver to produce and pump more glucose into your bloodstream. So here's the key realization. If I had one of these readings when I'm fasted
and sitting down, that would be incredibly alarming because that would indicate diabetes. But in these young, highly fit elite athletes during competition, intense exercise, at the highest level,
these values appear to be completely normal physiology. And this is the mistake that a lot of people make when they interpret their own blood sugar values. A higher value after a meal, for example, when we sometimes call a spike doesn't mean disease. It doesn't mean you have diabetes. It's all
about the context. High sugar levels when you're fasted and resting. Yes, that's a concern. But an increase in glucose after eating, for example, or during or after exercise, completely normal physiology.
That's just like blood pressure and heart rate, by the way. If it's chronically high, at rest, all the long you're exposed to high blood pressure or high heart rates concern.
But if it's temporarily elevated during a specific stimulus, like exercise, for example, that it's a normal physiological response, not a concern. So that is the key difference between
understanding your glucose data, your CGM data, and completely misreading it. If you want to understand your blood sugar changes, are they normal or should you be concerned? We have a full deep dive
in this video right here. Check it out. And please share this video with a friend who wears a CGM and panics every time they see a blood sugar spike.
