samowen268
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 103
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
I'm exactly the same, in that my bloods were consistently above 10 for a long time up until about a month ago. The hypo symptom can be due to your blood sugars being lower than your body has become used to, I feel the same, sometimes I start to feel sleepy and warm, i've tested and I've been in the 6-7 range. Your body needs a long time to re-adjust.
High readings also make you feel sluggish and drowsy, as they make the blood become more 'syrupy'. This it harder for oxygen in the blood to get where it needs to go, chiefly the brain. So you feel tired. Diabetes Fatigue is actually a thing, believe it or not!
Now I know that for me, a reading of 9.3, while being out of target is not particularly high. In comparison to what I've regularly been for the last few years, it's **** near perfect! I probably wouldn't correct for it if I weren't eating anything. A lot of people on here would disagree, but that is what works for me. For you that high-ish reading (especially if you've been controlling it for the last few months) could be the reason you're feeling worn out, as I said above about high readings.
To put a spin on things, it may not be anything to do with your diabetes. You could just be tired, or have a slight vitamin deficiency, etc etc. It's more common that you'd believe. Next time you go for a blood test at the hospital ask 'em to check your iron levels too.
Hope this helps hun and hope you're feeling better soon!
Do you normally see 9.3? It could be that you're having hyper symptoms at those levels and hyper and hypo symptoms can be rather similar.
Feeling tired, achey, worn out are symptoms of high blood sugar, and heading towards double figures is a high blood sugar.
How do you feel when you're euglycaemic? Or what target range are you aiming for?
Maybe consider going on a CGM device, Continuous Glucose Monitoring? The Freestyle Libre has a lot of good reviews, unfortunately it's not free on the NHS yet9.3 is excellent for me, I did consider that because my bloods are so well controlled now that possibly 9.3 is too high, however I've tested and been 10/11 and felt fine recently too, possibly i think my bloods were dropping because I tested 10 mins later and it was significantly lower than before, struggling atm !
@Circuspony did you get any symptoms when you were going really high/unreadable? I noticed that it works the other way too, that if you're high for a long time there's a much higher threshold for when you start feeling the symptoms? I would have to be above 20 for me to start even feeling thirsty!I'm recently diagnosed too and when I first started monitoring my levels they were consistently in high 20s or unreadable (pre insulin)
On Saturday morning I was convinced they were really, really low as I felt very light headed. Tested at 10 - which to be fair to my body IS low compared to where it has been for probably months.
When I first went to the GP I was drinking a lot. Literally I would finish a drink and 5 mins later feel parched. I'd also lost a load of weight and my distance vision had gone blurry. My blood results in the surgery just read 'high' on his monitor, which he told me was 35+.@Circuspony did you get any symptoms when you were going really high/unreadable? I noticed that it works the other way too, that if you're high for a long time there's a much higher threshold for when you start feeling the symptoms? I would have to be above 20 for me to start even feeling thirsty!
Leg cramps and wonky vision are symptoms of high readings too! I don't get the cramps a lot but when I do, they wake me up in the night, and I am one deep sleeperyeah they say the target values are between 4 and 7, which is the best thing to aim for really but if you are between these you really need a bit to eat. Obviously the lower you are the more essential it is.
I totally agree with the night time reading of 8! Nothing worse than going hypo in the night. This is one of the few other things that can actually wake me up, luckily! Generally, if I go to bed and my bloods under 8 I have a slice of toast. It's only if I'm hypo or near hypo (<4.5 for me) that I eat AND stay up.
Do you go for eye screening every year? They may be able to suggest something to help with your eyesight. Its ridiculous that they don't liase with opticians, the eye screening people aren't allowed to talk to you about glasses etc but opticians don't look for diabetes related problems in the eyes when they do eye tests. I'd recommend seeing an optician separately, if you feel like glasses or contacts may help.
Do you carb count etc and have ratios for your carb intake compared to insulin intake? This is a bit of a pain but completely worth the satisfaction of having decent readings
Leg cramps and wonky vision are symptoms of high readings too! I don't get the cramps a lot but when I do, they wake me up in the night, and I am one deep sleeperyeah they say the target values are between 4 and 7, which is the best thing to aim for really but if you are between these you really need a bit to eat. Obviously the lower you are the more essential it is.
I totally agree with the night time reading of 8! Nothing worse than going hypo in the night. This is one of the few other things that can actually wake me up, luckily! Generally, if I go to bed and my bloods under 8 I have a slice of toast. It's only if I'm hypo or near hypo (<4.5 for me) that I eat AND stay up.
Do you go for eye screening every year? They may be able to suggest something to help with your eyesight. Its ridiculous that they don't liase with opticians, the eye screening people aren't allowed to talk to you about glasses etc but opticians don't look for diabetes related problems in the eyes when they do eye tests. I'd recommend seeing an optician separately, if you feel like glasses or contacts may help.
Do you carb count etc and have ratios for your carb intake compared to insulin intake? This is a bit of a pain but completely worth the satisfaction of having decent readings
I have some background retinopathy but it hasn't affected my eyesight that I can tell! I was young too, 4 when diagnosed, nearly 22 now. I'm just getting out of the rebellious stage where you're trying to be like everyone else ha!I have had so much trouble with my eyes, my nurse said because my brain was running on high sugar intake for such a long period of time that as soon as I stopped I would have eyesight issues, I see everything grainy and pixelated it's honestly awful and at first I didn't know what it was which lead to an onset of anxiety attacks, not had a fun year! I've been diabetic since I was 5, and yet it's only now that I'm 18 that I've started to take control of my health, so there is a lot my body is still getting used to, my bloods are always below 10 now which is a MASSIVE improvement after those awful years lol.
Yes, my last eye screening said I had slight Maculopathy, the stage before retinopathy and my nurse has said the little bleeds in my eyes will reverse themselves if I carry on with my new blood glucose control which is a relief! 5 months now and still waiting for my eyes to re adjust, I think the false hypo sensation is also another side effect of my body running on dramatically less sugar, glad you're similar to me with the toast thing before bed, I have a slice of toast too if my bloods are below 8! and I have pretty good awareness of low bloods, so I'm usually aware by the time they've gotten to 4.0, however i am appalling at knowing when my bloods are high unfortunately !
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