Hi @NoopNoop and welcome to the DCUK forums.Hi, I was diagnosed with type 1 this week, so still reeling from the shock and trying to understand everything. I just got my hba1c results back and it's 145. So apparently that's really high and it's going to take a while to bring that down. My BG was 29 on Monday, now it's hovering around the teens. Am I at high risk while my hba1c is so high? Do I need to do or not do anything to try and mitigate those risks? I have an identical twin. Would it be possible to have a blood transfusion to try to bring down my hba1c quicker? Would that help reduce some risk? I should be hooked up with community DB nurse from Monday, but wanted to ask some questions before then. Thanks in advance. Jim
Think of HbA1c as a rough historical record of your average blood glucose levels over the last three months. It shows what your daily levels were like, and you can't go back and change those. What you can do is focus on here and now and what you do going forward. The way you 'fix' your HbA1c is by getting your daily readings down and then re-testing in 2-3 months.
What I really meant to say was that you generally leave at least 2-3 months between the tests to see the impact of your interventions that HbA1c is not a metric that changes drastically from hour to hour. It might well be that for different reasons, you test less frequently.Unlikely they will retest a type 1 in that short space of time. There is a lot to learn and take on board. The most important results will be Time in Range from his CGM How the insulin is being managed to avoid hypos and hypers. HbA1c will eventually go down but it will take time and is an unrealistic criteria for a newly diagnosed Type 1 with a steep learning curve. In my opinion.
Hi, I was diagnosed with type 1 this week, so still reeling from the shock and trying to understand everything. I just got my hba1c results back and it's 145. So apparently that's really high and it's going to take a while to bring that down. My BG was 29 on Monday, now it's hovering around the teens. Am I at high risk while my hba1c is so high? Do I need to do or not do anything to try and mitigate those risks? I have an identical twin. Would it be possible to have a blood transfusion to try to bring down my hba1c quicker? Would that help reduce some risk? I should be hooked up with community DB nurse from Monday, but wanted to ask some questions before then. Thanks in advance. Jim
I understand that now, thanks for clarifying.If you had a hba1c immediately after a transfusion then yes you may see a reduction in hba1c as not all the blood in the test is yours.. but there is no benefit if you have not fixed the cause.. you’d simply be masking the truth
In reality all you can do is work on your bg control
Short term high hba1c won’t harm you it’s long term that causes all the nasty stuff to happen
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