Hello, I'm new here but have had Type 2 Diabetes for a few years now. I carry some Dextro Energy tablets around with me in case of a hypo. Can someone please advise how many of these will raise my blood sugar level? Thanks.
Hi @tinyf , welcome to the forum.Hello, I'm new here but have had Type 2 Diabetes for a few years now. I carry some Dextro Energy tablets around with me in case of a hypo. Can someone please advise how many of these will raise my blood sugar level? Thanks.
There wouldn’t be a standard answer for this, because there would be too many variables. For example how low the blood glucose level had been, to cause the hypo, What else had been consumed, any meds ,exercise.I carry some Dextro Energy tablets around with me in case of a hypo. Can someone please advise how many of these will raise my blood sugar level? Thanks.
Thank you Antje77. I'm no expert as far as Diabetes is concerned but I suspected I'd had a hypo after I had a banana and toast for breakfast and found myself sweating. I took a couple of the Dextro tablets and it seems settled now.Hi @tinyf , welcome to the forum.
According to your profile, the only medication you're on for your diabetes is metformin, which is not a medication associated with hypos.
Do you have a particular reason to expect going too low?
And to answer your question: I'm a T1 diabetic and use insulin. Most hypos I have only need a quarter to a half dextro tablet, other people need a bit more. It also depends on the hypo.
Do you use a meter to test your blood glucose?
Sorry, Antje, I forgot to mention that I don't use a meter to test (too expensive) and have been unable to find my testing strips for the blood tests. I've ordered mor but it's been a while since I did a test although a paramedic said my blood sugar level was normal when I had to call an ambulance last week when I was experiencing pain and difficulty sleeping with constipation.Thank you Antje77. I'm no expert as far as Diabetes is concerned but I suspected I'd had a hypo after I had a banana and toast for breakfast and found myself sweating. I took a couple of the Dextro tablets and it seems settled now.
Are you saying I shouldn't expect a hypo unless I have Type 1 diabetes?
Any thoughts or advice from you or anyone else is appreciated. I'm also an asthma/COPD sufferer and am about to be assessed for Parkinson's. It all seems to be happening at once and I'm not finding it easy to keep on top of it.
Thank you, lovinglife and Lakeslover. I'm only on Metformin for the diabetes. I was aware that banana and toast was carb-high but with so much going on in my medical life at the moment I'm finding it all a little too much to remember. I've got a Parkinson's assessment tomorrow> I'm apprehensive about what that will reveal but it is necessary, of course.Hi, both banana and toast are food which are more likely to increase blood sugar rather than cause a hypo, but the best way to be sure is to test at the time.
It is very unlikely for a type 2 on Metformin only to have a hypo which needs treating. But other medications given to type 2 diabetics can cause hypos. Are you on any other medications for diabetes?
Thanks for that, Lakeslover.Sometimes all you can do is go with the flow. None of us are perfect.
Hope the assessment is ok.
So few/little @Antje77, are these the same dextro tablets I'm thinking of? c.4g of carbs per tablet?And to answer your question: I'm a T1 diabetic and use insulin. Most hypos I have only need a quarter to a half dextro tablet, other people need a bit more. It also depends on the hypo.
I took it to DM as to not derail this thread, us both being on insulin.So few/little @Antje77, are these the same dextro tablets I'm thinking of? c.4g of carbs per tablet?
I'd certainly need more than that (I'd go for at least 3 for a total of 12g of carbs for starters, though quite possibly more depending on how I feel), and if I'm stuck with eating dextrose tablets I've probably wasted another 10min (and gone progressively lower) searching for some more palatable alternative too!![]()
Hypos are typically caused by too much insulin in the system, so tend to be suffered by insulin users and also users of some drugs such as gliclazide, which stimulate the pancreas to produce more insulin.Are you saying I shouldn't expect a hypo unless I have Type 1 diabetes?