Danielle Rafter
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 77
If you feel low at 5, are you used to having much higher levels most of the time? Just curious, as I’ve got my Omnipod set to aim for 5 in its bolus calculator.
I was diagnosed at age 3 and its horrible. My mum and dad used to inject my insulin and I used to run away because I hated it and I also used to hide away
Same here diagnosed at age 3, was forced so self inject via a diabetic camp one summer aged 5 and never really looked back.
Hi there Danielle.
Have a bit of a similar problem - I get tired, when my BS is around 5.3 mmol/l (with a little + or - variation).
I also think you are quite right, in assuming it is because of having low BS often - at least I think that's the case for me.
Yup, remember those days, when I was a little kid, although for me, that was about 50+ years ago...
If you have hypo symptoms when not clinically hypo, it's probably because your BGs are consistently higher than what the should be. If you have an extended period of good control, avoiding hypos and highs, then hypo symptoms should return when you are clinically hypo
12 is quite high though...
My sensor bleeps at anything higher than 12 because I go lower more than higher so my pump doesn't go on the alert and give
12 is too high for everyday readings and may eventually lead to diabetic complications. Your doctor shouldn't really be allowing you to stay at that level at all. You are experiencing feelings called a false low. Why? Because your sugars are running higher most of the time and only returning to near normal levels occasionally. Your body is used to a high level as it's normal, and sees the lower levels as a low, when it isn't really.
What do you class as low?
Obviously we are all different, but it's my understanding that the body needs to get used to lower blood sugars, at which point the horrible low feelings will stop. At 5 it isn't a true low, and running your sugars much higher than that will definitely cause issues in the long run, such as the dreaded diabetic complications such as retinal damage leading to blindness, or diabetic neuropathy, which can lead to amputations.
Have you heard of Dr Richard Bernstein? He has really good recommendations for T1s and their management, and he knows what he's talking about, having been T1 now for about 50 odd years.(He has no complications at age 86). His books are available on Amazon etc, or possibly a local library might obtain them for you.
That’s a really useful link, I’ve got all my insulin calculators aimed to point me at 5mmol.Hello again!
The following link is quite known around here - maybe worth reading. It points out the importance of trying to keep ones blood sugar levels within NORMAL limits. You can find quite a lot of information about these things via Mr. Google.
https://www.bloodsugar101.com/organ-damage-and-blood-sugar-level
(Could be, that I don't have rights to copy a functioning link directly, but you can put the link above "as is" into a web-readers address-field)
Edited to say:
OK - the link is a functioning link. I checked it...
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