I had AstraZeneca a month ago. Very high BG since.
At first put this down to broken wrist causing me to be less active & therefore insulin resistant. But dont think this is the case.
Am on MDI. Have adjusted my basal slightly but think i need to increase it further as still getting sky high readings. Advice required on how people have done this safely & seen results
Am now concerned about having second dose. Anyone who has had second dose got any feedback please?
Thank you all for posting this. I was already a bit suspicious about taking the vaccin, but I will now definately not take the astrazeneca one.
Thank you all for posting this. I was already a bit suspicious about taking the vaccin, but I will now definately not take the astrazeneca one.
It sounds like it is different for everyone. Mine only lasted a week, worst time was the first few days. 11 weeks later and they've been normal with no spikes for the final 10 weeks of that period. Will see how I do after the second dose! Some people's dropped, some had no difference. I'd suggest be careful to rule out other causes for spikes just because you've recently had the vaccine. It could for example be that you're fighting another illness eg cold and your bodies doing that successfully so you're not getting any symptoms other than higher bloods?Anyone got any idea when the elevated Blood Sugar stops? I'm now in my sixth week from having it and my Insulin requirements suddenly spiked through the roof again last night, and have yet to drop back off again.
I’m 12 days post vaccine BG’s are high, I cannot stay below 10. With highest being 25.. I feel lousy all the time. I’m doing double my normal insulin intake too - don’t know what else to do!Have you managed to bring them down now? Im still struggling
Latest issued advice (UK):I had my second AstraZeneca jab this morning, ten weeks after the first vaccination. Because I had horrible side-effects after the first one, I am trying to anticipate problems by following sick-day rules even before problems start. I’ve increased basal and am taking paracetamol tablets. Although I was hesitant about agreeing to the second jab, I decided to go ahead because getting Covid would be worse. Tomorrow it be will ten weeks since my first AstraZeneca jab; ever since then I have had to increase basal by 10-20 percent and use higher ratios of bolus, but that could be just me. Currently, I’m somewhat worried because I do not know what to look for in the event of blood clot in the brain. Fingers crossed.
We have a choice re the vaccine. I had it ,not only for myself, but for other people as well. However, we don't have a choice as to whether we get Covid. You could choose to stay in the house for the next couple of years to avoid it, but have to go into hospital for an unrelated matter, and catch Covid there, as others I know have done, and subsequently died, one was only in his 30's with no known underlying health conditions.
At first one assumes that ‘they’ know what they are doing. Authorities assuring us that the vaccin would be 100% safe, no long term side effects etc.
Then we had more and more stories about (very old) people dying after vaccination. But authorities saying that these deaths were due to ‘underlying health issues’. Could be true, but it felt already a bit ‘too easy’.
Subsequently trombose side effects started to appear, even fatal ones were younger people were affected. EMA’s first reaction was that these cases were unlikely to be related to the vaccin, where I had the feeling all the time that they were.
Well now, finally EMA admitting trombose can be caused by Astra Zeneca. And the only clue we get is that women below 60 are affected most.
Why is there no info or research on the compatibility of these vaccins for T1s or people with other auto immune diseases? For how long after the vaccination it remains possible to develop trombose? Could there be more ‘lighter’ cases of trombose side effects which might remain unreported, but could possibly cause problems after years? (If i get a heart attack or something in 5 years, it will be very easy to say it’s caused by my diabetes). An example, the mother of a friend of mine (she’s in her 60s) was admitted to a hospital with fluid behind het lungs, about a week after the (astrazeneca) vaccination. But I don’t think a relation was even considered or investigated.
Dont want to scare anyone, but to me this all feels a bit too much like a very big field experiment. Indeed, getting Covid may be worse (or not, if you’re lucky you won’t get very sick). But as long as authorities are not sure what they are doing, I think I prefer getting neither, Covid nor the vaccin.
Same for me the first week was the worst. However, rather than getting better after that first week. I've been on a repeated cycle. Of sensitivity to Insulin slowly increases until about a step away from normal. Then suddenly Insulin resistance spikes again. Each time the spike's been less powerful than the last, but the constant yo-yo-ing is pretty draining.It sounds like it is different for everyone. Mine only lasted a week, worst time was the first few days. 11 weeks later and they've been normal with no spikes for the final 10 weeks of that period. Will see how I do after the second dose! Some people's dropped, some had no difference. I'd suggest be careful to rule out other causes for spikes just because you've recently had the vaccine. It could for example be that you're fighting another illness eg cold and your bodies doing that successfully so you're not getting any symptoms other than higher bloods?
What isa Dexcom plsIn terms of vaccine immune responses 3 days is very short - your system will continue to adapt over 14-21 days - compare what you may feel versus actual BG levels in this first 3 week timeframe. So pragmatically deep breath and keep monitoring & control BGs as necessary.
Oops, sorry - only saw this post after I posted the replies above.Hi all
This thread is about high blood sugars following the Covid vaccine. If you want to discuss possible long-term effects, or other wider issues around the vaccine, please do so within a new thread.
Thanks
It is a continuous glucose monitor (CGM). Extremely rare to be prescribed by the NHS even for T1s, but available privately without prescription in UK cost £159 per month.What isa Dexcom pls
Thank you yes I have read the libra can be inaccurateIt is a continuous glucose monitor (CGM). Extremely rare to be prescribed by the NHS even for T1s, but available privately without prescription in UK cost £159 per month.
https://www.dexcom.com/en-GB/uk-dex...7ReisaUJGDEgcLmyAxyWH5bPHqf7VBQhoCMq8QAvD_BwE
Another alternative is the Freestyle Libre - cheaper but less accurate and possibly more tricky to use - there are very many posts on these forums on this.
Oops, sorry - only saw this post after I posted the replies above.
So in mitigation I went through the latest UK yellow card data covering vaccine side effects from 9 Dec 20 to 28 Mar 21 to see what has been reported regarding BG levels post vaccination:
As of 28 March 14.6 million doses of Pfizer vaccine including about 3.7 million second doses had been administered.
As of 28 March 19.5 million doses of AZ vaccine primarily first dose had been administered.
Average report rate of ANY side effect for the covid vaccines is 3-6 reports per 1,000 vaccinations.
For the Pfizer vaccine approximately 80 reports have been lodged to date of BG disturbances (mostly BG rises). This is equivalent to a reported incidence of 0.000548% per overall doses administered.
For the AZ vaccine approximately 200 reports have been lodged to date of BG disturbances (mostly BG rises). This is equivalent to a reported incidence of 0.000103% per overall doses administered.
That this result is astonishingly small is not surprising given a tiny number of the population monitor their BG levels, and so far the yellow card analytics are not mapped to underlying health states (such as diabetes). But if anyone is feeling pro active please do log any BG effects post vaccination via the yellow card site. This may help future understanding of how to control BGs when having vaccinations.
https://coronavirus-yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk/
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