39 is good, it's into non diabetic range. The drop from 110 to that is outstanding, you should be really proud of thatFrom 110 mmoI to 39 on each blood test non diabetic range but can’t get any lower no matter how much weight I lose how few carbs I eat and how much exercise I do. Doctor says this is fine but I’d like to be closer to 30
Snap. But I’m stuck in prediabetic levels not below them. In fact I’ve gone into a very slow but definite decline lately despite not making any changes to the detriment that I can identify. I suspect we each have slightly different “set” levels, genetics and causes of our diabetes that can effect what the best we can naturally achieve is even under ideal conditions. And then there’s the tricky issue of what we can actually maintain longterm in terms of management and life balance overall.From 110 mmoI to 39 on each blood test non diabetic range but can’t get any lower no matter how much weight I lose how few carbs I eat and how much exercise I do. Doctor says this is fine but I’d like to be closer to 30
Being on insulin it makes sense not to go too low because of the hypo risk. Which is not an issue when not on medication of course.I was going to have the same question, why go lower? I was v. high and managed to get down to 31, then my clinical team changed my regime as they were worried about night time hypos with numbers that low and wanted me to sit in the 40s.
I dropped from 50 to 36 and have stayed around 36 or 37 since then, despite continued low-carbing, IF and weight loss. I suspect 36/37 is where my body thinks I naturally should be.From 110 mmoI to 39 on each blood test non diabetic range but can’t get any lower no matter how much weight I lose how few carbs I eat and how much exercise I do. Doctor says this is fine but I’d like to be closer to 30