So yesterday and today at around the same time of 4pm my blood sugars have dropped to 4.1 and today 4:8. I've not been doing anything differently. I eat at lunchtime (low carb) and then normally eat again at about 7pm. I take 4 Metformin a day and a statin. Just wondered if anyone else has had this as I'm at a loss to understand why. I've been doing really well lately but these are leaving me feeling absolutely shattered.
I was diagnosed in January of this year. My abh1c have reduced from 92 to 47 and I normally have levels of anywhere between mid 5's and mid 7's daily.
Many thanks for any advice.
Nanny - As a T2, only taking Metformin, it is very unlikely you would ever have a medically worrying hypo. Where your numbers have been running higher for some time, you can experience hypo-like symptoms when your blood numbers are a bit higher, just because your body it outside it's own comfort zone.
If you are fortunate, and your body can heal from it's time with higher numbers, you may see the 4s often, and some of us often see the 3s, without any issue.
It is extremely unusual for me to have a full 24 hour cycle without some time under 4. That's just how I am, now that my diet and way of living is under control.
When I get
very low (I won't bore you with a load of numbers), it usually happens when it's getting close-ish to a mealtime. If my meal is about to be served, I just wait for that. If my meal is some time away I would be inclined to just have a cup of tea or something. I never have chocolate or sugar. All I want is something just to bring my numbers up a nudge to make the wait for my meal a bit more comfortable.
Everyone approaches these things differently, but the more carb you eat when low, the higher you are likely to go then can spend the next few hours with your blood numbers bouncing around.
For T1s and T2s taking insulin or heftier meds, they have to do things differently.
JUst keep testing and learn a bit more about what happens when. If you're getting lots of lows, then it could become sensible to review your meds down a bit, but clearly that's something to be done in conjunction with your medical team.