Grandma Misti
Well-Known Member
I have been diabetic (type 2) for decades. I went on autopilot for a lot of that time, since I had a routine down that meant reasonably blood sugars at every test. Recently, I had COVID post viral syndrome and that seems to have kicked me in the endocrine system - scary rise inhbA1c has me back and researching it all over again, since what I "knew" in the 1990s isn't working anymore.
The goals as I knew them back then were to keep out numbers "as low as possible", but the hard line was at 7.8 "where complications start". (My readings were usually lower, and that was considered good, but unnecessary.)
The goals I see now are in the 4s and 5s, and I am curious at the change. Has new research found a lower "hard line" where complications start?
The goals as I knew them back then were to keep out numbers "as low as possible", but the hard line was at 7.8 "where complications start". (My readings were usually lower, and that was considered good, but unnecessary.)
The goals I see now are in the 4s and 5s, and I am curious at the change. Has new research found a lower "hard line" where complications start?