Ya azure , Im sure it is , but my gp and diabetes team have done tests and say hormones are normal . Wonder are their specific tests i should request.Sorry you're feeling down. I think most of us have days like that because diabetes is a pain and you can never just rely on everything being ok, which for me is the most wearing thing. It's a full time job almost, making sure all's going well.
I haven't had as sudden a change as you, but I do find my sensitivity to insulin seems to vary, and the same meal can give quite different results afterwards two days in a row.
Could it be hormonal? I've found I can have strange lows due to hormones.
My insulin requirements change every so often. I've always put it down to "diabetes" and just got on with it (getting frustrated sometimes).
Ages ago I read that some diabetics find their insulin requirements changed with the seasons. I used to think that was nonsense, as we all need to make changes and I'd never noticed any pattern to it. Now I'm not so sure. I'm going to keep an eye on things with the changing seasons and work out if there is actually a pattern to my increases/decreases in insulin doses.
I've been having some hypos recently and am wondering if it's due to the cooler weather. I intend keeping note of any changes I make, to see if they do correspond in any way to the seasons. - Obviously that will take quite some time!
For what it's worth, Louise, I'm a type 1 who is now menopausal. Before, when I had periods, the first day was unbearable. I'd be suicidal and my sugars would go really high, then plunge to really low as my period started.Ya azure , Im sure it is , but my gp and diabetes team have done tests and say hormones are normal . Wonder are their specific tests i should request.
Raps , can i ask did you have your blood sugars going all over the place before menopause (feel free to ignore this if its too personal ) . Have never noticed big highs or lows in past .For what it's worth, Louise, I'm a type 1 who is now menopausal. Before, when I had periods, the first day was unbearable. I'd be suicidal and my sugars would go really high, then plunge to really low as my period started.
Many doctors don't recognize that insulin is a hormone and as your body's hormones change, so does your reaction to insulin.
Might I recommend tracking your sugars during your period to see if you're having the same reaction each month? It may not change your doctor's mind, but at least you'll know what's going on and can adjust accordingly.
Good luck.
Yes, but for me, that's really normal. The extreme highs and lows before my period were consistent, month over month, though.Raps , can i ask did you have your blood sugars going all over the place before menopause (feel free to ignore this if its too personal ) . Have never noticed big highs or lows in past .
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