victoria__1986
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 117
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Hi,
I am currently on the second week of carb counting, and it is going really well. Until today when I hit a road block.
I am due on and my sugars are 18-19. I understand you should not use high correction doses, so do I alter the amount of quick acting I give before carbs? I'm currently on 1 unit to every 10g of carbs. My sugars after dinner were 18.8. Way too high!
Any advice on this would be appreciated!
Thankyou
This has been a fascinating read and something I had not thought about. I am 55 had been on metformin and gliclazide for about five years. Then in November I started bleeding like I have never experienced before and this continued for a month until being given medication to stop bleeding.
Sitagliptin was also started in November, but because the gynae issue needs an investigative operation, and the pre op appointment identified my BG was much too high for anaesthetic I was started on insulin two weeks ago. That and very strict carb reduction has brought my BG down and I hope that when I get to hospital tomorrow there will not be anything to prevent the investigations going ahead.
I was not regularly testing before the Sitagliptin was introduced in November, but the results through December and Early January were much higher than the Hba1c done in November would have indicated.
Reading your posts have made me consider if it was the gynae problem that contributed to my BGs being so high at this time. It is thought endometrial hyperplasia is causing the problem but tomorrow they will take a biopsy to see if anything more concerning is present.
Thank you for your post - it has given me something extra to ask about tomorrow.
Regards
Debbie
i have a fibriod that bleeds 24/7 for last 7 month , still my gp wont refur me back for the op until im stable in my hbc1 testsso i can understand how it feels a my sugers raise when it gets bad , xx
i will do to . ive really waited since last july like this it was on the day of the op i was told i was type 2. i have to rejoin the nhs que again toI know I'm a bloke but what your GP says doesn't sound right at all. Go back to your GP and ask for justification or even a second opinion as it may be that your erratic bloods may be due to whats happening in your body.
Also I've had many different operations under general anaesthetic and they simply put me on a drip which balanced my bloods. They only need to control you whilst you're under as after, any hypos or highs, can be treated accordingly.
Even simpler when on a drip. They can also balance you at a level suited to your bloods eg if you're happier running slightly higher level than normal.
My advice is to go back to your GP and don't take any nonsense.
Dom
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