Thanks for your interest in the finer details of my physical health, jopar.
I hope you don't mind me putting you straight though? I'm probably in a better position than most to clarify some of the issues for you after all.
I lost my hypo awareness many years ago - back at a time when my HbA1c's were typically around 7%. There is absolutely no truth in your suggestion that this was a result of persistently low blood sugar levels in some misguided attempt to reduce my HbA1c. In fact, if my HbA1c at the time is anything to go by, my bg levels were anything but persistently low. In truth, they fluctuated widely, just as they often do in T1's who eat a lot of carbs and try to balance that with large doses of insulin. My GP called it 'good control', bless him.
Now my HbA1c's over the previous 3 years average at 4.7%. My bg no longer fluctuates wildly anymore, but stays pretty constantly within non-diabetic territory. I have far fewer hypos as a direct result of much more stable, predictable bg patterns. I have some hypo awareness these days, albeit relatively subtle, but frankly the safest insurance policy for any insulin dependant diabetic is a good diet, low doses and frequent testing.
Frankly, I try not to go on about it too much, but I couldn't ignore the implications of your post. I'm quite aware HbA1c's are a concern for many diabetics - usually because they are too high and a fairly reliable predictor of health problems at some point in the future. I have no wish to make others feel uncomfortable about their difficulties in lowering their numbers by posting mine as some kind of unobtainable, or unadvisable, target. After all, I am fortunate enough to have the tools available to me to achieve these numbers - a good diet, insulin, bg meters and an absence of insulin resistance. Others are less fortunate.
I hope that clears things up for you?
fergus
I hope you don't mind me putting you straight though? I'm probably in a better position than most to clarify some of the issues for you after all.
I lost my hypo awareness many years ago - back at a time when my HbA1c's were typically around 7%. There is absolutely no truth in your suggestion that this was a result of persistently low blood sugar levels in some misguided attempt to reduce my HbA1c. In fact, if my HbA1c at the time is anything to go by, my bg levels were anything but persistently low. In truth, they fluctuated widely, just as they often do in T1's who eat a lot of carbs and try to balance that with large doses of insulin. My GP called it 'good control', bless him.
Now my HbA1c's over the previous 3 years average at 4.7%. My bg no longer fluctuates wildly anymore, but stays pretty constantly within non-diabetic territory. I have far fewer hypos as a direct result of much more stable, predictable bg patterns. I have some hypo awareness these days, albeit relatively subtle, but frankly the safest insurance policy for any insulin dependant diabetic is a good diet, low doses and frequent testing.
Frankly, I try not to go on about it too much, but I couldn't ignore the implications of your post. I'm quite aware HbA1c's are a concern for many diabetics - usually because they are too high and a fairly reliable predictor of health problems at some point in the future. I have no wish to make others feel uncomfortable about their difficulties in lowering their numbers by posting mine as some kind of unobtainable, or unadvisable, target. After all, I am fortunate enough to have the tools available to me to achieve these numbers - a good diet, insulin, bg meters and an absence of insulin resistance. Others are less fortunate.
I hope that clears things up for you?
fergus