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Children, Teens, Young Adults & Parents
Pregnancy
First trimester nighttime lows
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<blockquote data-quote="Juicyj" data-source="post: 2079761" data-attributes="member: 53162"><p>[USER=500520]@Clairebee[/USER] It will take a few days to see a knock on, and yes eating late won't help as you'll be testing before bed, seeing a high and potentially taking a correction dose which you may not need, I made this mistake earlier this week as was running high before bed, was tired, took a correction and woke at 3am in a sweat at 3.6. It sounds like you know exactly what to do, the unknown factor are the changes in hormones which are difficult to calculate for. When I was pregnant I was more worried about going high than low, as running high meant too much glucose for baby to feed on. It's a balancing act for sure, but try not to worry, stress isn't good for you or baby, so take it easy on yourself, you're doing a great job x</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Juicyj, post: 2079761, member: 53162"] [USER=500520]@Clairebee[/USER] It will take a few days to see a knock on, and yes eating late won't help as you'll be testing before bed, seeing a high and potentially taking a correction dose which you may not need, I made this mistake earlier this week as was running high before bed, was tired, took a correction and woke at 3am in a sweat at 3.6. It sounds like you know exactly what to do, the unknown factor are the changes in hormones which are difficult to calculate for. When I was pregnant I was more worried about going high than low, as running high meant too much glucose for baby to feed on. It's a balancing act for sure, but try not to worry, stress isn't good for you or baby, so take it easy on yourself, you're doing a great job x [/QUOTE]
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