Roughly 10 days before back to normal.Hi - I had to have a single cortisone injection in my shoulder yesterday which was completely frozen. The GP knows I have diabetes type 2. I have read that such shots can cause a rise in blood sugar. This has slightly annoyed me as I've been working really hard to reduce my BS through life style changes and have lost 2 stone in 3 months and dye my next H1abc test in two weeks. I've read some horror stories on the web re how such shots can increase blood sugar and for the first time in two months my urgine strip showed an abnormal reading (2.8) last night. Does anyone know how long cortisone shots can cause BS to be elevated for and how long it takes for BS to go back to normal ?
To be fair, the GP has a duty to provide enough info to enable informed consent, which would include telling the patient what the likely side effects were. Often getting this sort of info doesn't affect our decision, but is useful for us to have. Often the GP assumes it's not important, but they don't realise that it's important to us.Roughly 10 days before back to normal.
The choice to have the injection was up to you though, so hardly fair to blame the GP.
Looking at it from another angle raised blood sugars for 10 days or constant agony? Hope things improve for you soon.
I suspect it will have some impact, is there any reason not to delay the A1c test?Thanks - I was really trying to find out if it was likely to have any negative impact on my forthcoming H1abc test - or as only up to 10 days and H1abc measures over 3 months impact would be minimal.
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