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<blockquote data-quote="ringi" data-source="post: 1629876" data-attributes="member: 410240"><p>@<a href="http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/members/princenaz.455510/" target="_blank">Princenaz</a>, base on no real information about you, it sounds like your blood glucose increases greatly when you eat, your body then produces too much insulin, your blood glucose then drops to a very low level and sometime later your liver releases glucose. So that by the time the medics do their tests, the results look OK.</p><p></p><p>If you have access to a blood glucose meter and lots of test strips, there is an easy to way find out if I am right.</p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Test your BG</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Eat a meal that is <strong>normal </strong>for you</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Then test your BG every 15 minutes for the next 5 hours. (remain sitting and relaxed while doing this.)</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Plot the results on a graph (most meters have a memory if so you don't need to write to readings and times as you do them, but check you can access the memory before depending on it.)</li> </ul><p>Post this graph the graph on here as lots of us knows what a BG graph looks like for the diffeernt type of diabetes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ringi, post: 1629876, member: 410240"] @[URL='http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/members/princenaz.455510/']Princenaz[/URL], base on no real information about you, it sounds like your blood glucose increases greatly when you eat, your body then produces too much insulin, your blood glucose then drops to a very low level and sometime later your liver releases glucose. So that by the time the medics do their tests, the results look OK. If you have access to a blood glucose meter and lots of test strips, there is an easy to way find out if I am right. [LIST] [*]Test your BG [*]Eat a meal that is [B]normal [/B]for you [*]Then test your BG every 15 minutes for the next 5 hours. (remain sitting and relaxed while doing this.) [*]Plot the results on a graph (most meters have a memory if so you don't need to write to readings and times as you do them, but check you can access the memory before depending on it.) [/LIST] Post this graph the graph on here as lots of us knows what a BG graph looks like for the diffeernt type of diabetes. [/QUOTE]
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