I haven't felt shaky or sweaty with low blood sugar for 30 years.
The main symptom for me is anxiousness and difficulty thinking, or reading and suchlike.
With a certain light, my vision too will be affected.
I find it's the fast drops that are most dangerous by far. And I know these would return if I returned to a normal, Western diet.
I get hypo symptoms and when I check it's below 4, so I rectify this. The only time it might be affecting me is nighttime as I do wake up sweating, cos I did use to have this before I was diagnosed
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How can a HB1AC of 33 be classified as too low. My last HB1AC was 5.0 % or 31 and this was achieved without any hypos only tight (Non-Diabetic level) control.My Doctor didn't complain
Non-diabetics don't get diabetic complications so that is my target.
Someone eating a very low glucose diet could well have a very low HBa1c, without any "hypos", regardless of if they were diabetic or not.
Another way of looking at it is this. If you have an HBa1c of 5% and erratic blood glucose, you are definitely having hypos. If you have an HBa1c of 5% and stable blood glucose, you are not having hypos. Because HBa1c measures an average, but doesn't measure whether blood sugar is stable or erratic, the HCPs have to treat low HBa1c as a reason to investigate in case blood sugar is erratic, in which case low HBa1c will be an indicator of hypos. But low HBa1c does not necessarily mean hypos.
True. The point at which actual hypos occur is going to be different (lower BG) for someone on a low carb diet because they are much less dependent on blood glucose and they are regulated to a lower level of blood glucose as being "normal" for them.
Non diabetic people can get hypos too. They are milder and easier to recover from and rarely progress to unconsciousness if untreated.
I was more considering the situation of people getting the majority of their glucose from GNG rather than diet. Which is a different situation from most "low carb diets"
I get hypo symptoms and when I check it's below 4, so I rectify this. The only time it might be affecting me is nighttime as I do wake up sweating, cos I did use to have this before I was diagnosed
that is indeed one of the reasons why very low HbA1cs are associated with hypos in those who are truly insulin dependent.One of the normal responses to falling blood glucose is to stop putting insulin into the blood.
Old thinking "patients are incapable of managing BGs safely, so we make them stick to a high range"I've had a call from DN today saying by hba1c is 33 which is too low, I need to see them on Thursday to find out what they are going to do. I think I'm taking too much insulin and might have nighttime hypos. If I am could this be why the result was low.
Thanks
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