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<blockquote data-quote="In Response" data-source="post: 2634744" data-attributes="member: 527103"><p>How long is a piece of string?</p><p>Sometimes, I could get raised blood sugars a couple of days before a cold.</p><p>Sometimes I could get raised blood sugars the day before a cold. </p><p>Sometimes I could get raised blood sugars on the day my nose starts running. </p><p>Sometimes I get raised blood sugars and never get a cold. </p><p>If I see my blood sugars rise any sooner than 2 days before a cold, I probably put it down to something else (e.g. stress) and my mind does not associate the rise with the cold. </p><p></p><p>As a pedantic engineer, these are not spikes - a spike goes up and comes down quickly. These are raised blood sugars (they go up and stay up) unless I give myself extra insulin.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="In Response, post: 2634744, member: 527103"] How long is a piece of string? Sometimes, I could get raised blood sugars a couple of days before a cold. Sometimes I could get raised blood sugars the day before a cold. Sometimes I could get raised blood sugars on the day my nose starts running. Sometimes I get raised blood sugars and never get a cold. If I see my blood sugars rise any sooner than 2 days before a cold, I probably put it down to something else (e.g. stress) and my mind does not associate the rise with the cold. As a pedantic engineer, these are not spikes - a spike goes up and comes down quickly. These are raised blood sugars (they go up and stay up) unless I give myself extra insulin. [/QUOTE]
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