friendlyfish
Member
- Messages
- 16
- Type of diabetes
- Reactive hypoglycemia
- Treatment type
- Diet only
My Libre starter pack arrived last week, I attached it on Tueday, it finally seemed to get 'sensible' on about Thursday.
Last night and this morning, I noticed that the Libre registered lower blood sugars when I lie down to read or rest - even when I am not sleeping. When I stand up and move around the blood sugar goes up again. (I have chronic fatigue - so resting is necessary).
Overnight my blood sugars seem to drop into the 3's several times each night.
I already know that one trigger for hypos is when I stand or sit still for too long - like when I need to be polite with visitors or in a meeting or in a queue. This kind of hypo gives me bad symptoms and needs a long rest to recover.
I am wondering if my autonomic nervous system is messing things up?
Anyone know of websites, research or books that cover this? Thanks.
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Not RH but type 2 using the Libre. I definitely get some seriously low blips over the first couple of days after starting a new sensor that occur when I sleep on that arm, or sometimes recline or lean against something when reading. I've assumed it must be related in the main to increased pressure on the sensor restricting blood flow.I've not seen these big dips though after the sensor has settled down. My sensors will generally run 1-1.5 points below my normal Contour Next meter.
Below are patterns I've seen this month on 1st and today (15th) - first days with new sensors, and yesterday (14th) which is last day of the older sensor:
View attachment 18956
Some people have suggested adding the sensor well before their old one's due to be replaced: I did this with my current one (about 22 hours before the old one expired) but haven't seen an improvement so maybe a longer settling period may be necessary. There's a very long Libre thread which I think is where I've seen this discussed, so it might be worth having a search?
Robbity
Yes indeed. My current sensor is now on its last 24 hours - and showing some rather erratic highs. As usual.
Ah well, all in the typical life cycle of a sensor, eh?
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