starry-night-sky
Member
- Messages
- 15
- Type of diabetes
- Other
- Treatment type
- Other
Last month I had my first appointment at the Endocrinology department and the consultant referred me for an OGTT. The appointment is tomorrow. Just a little background on me, I have always had a phobia of blood tests. I used to refuse them until my health issues got worse and I knew I needed to have one. I was so scared before the first one that I cried in the waiting room. I have been suffering from symptoms of low and high blood sugar for over 2 years now. I had a hba1c last year which was normal and another hba1c test at my first Endo appointment (although I still don’t have my results)
I get my partner to come with me to all my blood tests. I use EMLA cream with an occlusive dressing at every test. On my last blood test (hba1c at Endo clinic) I used clingfilm instead of an occlusive dressing which I regret, because when I took the clingfilm off, the cream had spread everywhere and I could feel the needle going in (I hadn’t felt it on previous tests)
The nurse struggled to find a vein and I kept working myself up and panicking, when she did manage to find one, as I said, I could feel the needle go in, which made me feel dizzy. I was scared and just wanted to get out of there.
I also lie down (I couldn’t do it sat up) put headphones in and listen to music/watch a YouTube video to distract myself. I read online it helps to drink plenty of water and keep warm, so I’ll take a water bottle with me and wear a cardigan and maybe some gloves too, if it will help.
What I’m scared of the most is if I can feel the needle going in again, and also because of the lack of food, I’m scared of feeling dizzy. With other blood tests, I’ve eaten enough food before hand, and felt fine. With one, I only had some snacks before, not a full meal, and I felt dizzy afterwards. It took at least 10 minutes for me to feel better and I had some graze boxes before I left the room.
I am very worried, I have never had two blood tests in one day, I’m scared of something going wrong, I don’t want to feel the needle or feel dizzy/pass out I have never passed out but I have felt dizzy. I can’t eat anything from 8pm tonight and hope the lack of food through the test doesn’t make me feel dizzy/pass out. Obviously this isn’t a question, just want to get my feelings off my chest and see if anyone has advice.
Hello @starry-night-sky (lovely name by the way).
A lack of food should not cause dizziness, so you should be fine, however make sure you drink lots of water, wear a very warm coat and make sure you are super warm before your injection, so keep moving and keep warm, it helps the veins and ensure's there's no messing about when it comes to the test.
What's causing your anxiety ? I know I get a little anxious but with having this condition we need to find a way to manage our fears as we cannot avoid blood tests. How about doing a meditation before the test, 'Calm' is a free app you can download. Distraction techniques do help of course, a friend pinches the skin between her thumb and forefinger when she has a test and the pain diverts her attention away from the blood test itself which helps her manage her anxiety, but getting to the bottom of this will help you cope better for the future.
The only other thing I'd add, @starry-night-sky is to take something with you to do, during the two hours, or however long your blood test is.
You'll be required to sit pretty syll during the 2 hours, so a book, tablet, puzzle book, knitting or whatever you might like to do. Time passes when you're clock watching, so a distraction is good.
If you're not sure you'll have wifi where you're having your test, you could always download a couple of programmes to iPlayer, or from Amazon, or whatever. It could help take your mind off the whole thing.
Is it a two hour test or an extended four hour test?
Going by your first post, you are getting both high sugar levels and low sugar levels.
Do you know why you are getting a oral glucose tolerance test?
I have had quite a few tolerance tests. They will fit a cannula. Ask for a butterfly and warn them of your phobia.
I always take loads of things to do, like my music player, book, pad, ask for access to the WiFi.
I always ask for my readings, note them down on paper or your phone.
At my first I went hypo. They started giving me lucozade, butties, even chocolate, that didn't turn out ok! If you know of any food intolerance, don't let them push you into eating them.
I never went dizzy fasting, but tell them if you do.
Good luck for tomorrow.
We only normally have a cannula fitted when we are having multiple infusions or bloods drawn. It would be very usual to have one for a 2 hour OGTT as you only have one lot of venous blood drawn at the 2 hour mark.
Sorry, did you mean it would be very unusual?
Well done @starry-night-sky - you've got through the hard part now - great that the cream worked. Have fun thinking up a great treat you can reward yourself with later when it's all finished - a new top, a new book?I am here now. It turns out I DO have to have a cannula fitted. I don’t have a choice. I was very scared and burst into tears. Having the next blood test at 11. This will be the longest two hours of my life. Fortunately the cream worked and I couldn’t really feel anything.
Sorry to hear it hurt when removed, but well done for getting through it, you can relax now, enjoy your lunch.At McDonald’s now eating some lunch. As I said, I couldn’t really feel anything when they put it in, but it hurt when they took it out. I didn’t look so I had no idea what equipment there was, but it felt like it was stuck to my skin with tape, that did hurt when it came off.
I’m scared of blood tests but a cannula is a step up from that for me, so is scarier.
They took a finger prick before I had the drink (4.9) but I think they forgot to take the second.
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