While those numbers are pretty much perfect in itself, they are a tad on the low side for someone newly diagnosed and still titrating their insulin doses, I think it's not a bad idea to eat a little something if you're seeing those numbers at night.This weekend I have been riddled with anxiety, my readings were 5.1 and falling quickly, I treated this as a hypo which I think was a mistake but I panicked, then last night I woke about 2am and my level was 5.3
It's a process and it takes time to learn.I don't carb count yet......I haven't been told or taught how to
For now, I'd test before bed and if your on the lower side you could have a little snack. (I was told 8 before sleeping at the very beginning but now am happy to go to sleep much lower.)now I am scared to fall asleep incase I have a hypo in my sleep.
Hi Antje77!Welcome to the forum @kades .
While those numbers are pretty much perfect in itself, they are a tad on the low side for someone newly diagnosed and still titrating their insulin doses, I think it's not a bad idea to eat a little something if you're seeing those numbers at night.
You're doing very well to take in account not only your reading but also checking if it's a steep drop or a steady line!
Can you contact your team tomorrow to ask about your doses? They may want you to adjust them a bit.
What did you use to 'treat' the 5.1, and how high did this treatment make you rise?
What I do when I'm lower than I like but still above hypo territory is to eat a small bite of something with carbs (fruit, bread) and see what it does before aggressively treating with quick acting glucose (which I of course do if I'm hypo).
It's a process and it takes time to learn.
What you can do to speed up the process is counting the carbs in your meals (check the back of the package or use google for unpacked foods) and noting how many carbs you had and how much insulin. If you log this on the Libre app you can nicely see how this meal affected your blood glucose, and this can help you and your diabetes nurse in deciding how to adjust your doses.
For now, I'd test before bed and if your on the lower side you could have a little snack. (I was told 8 before sleeping at the very beginning but now am happy to go to sleep much lower.)
Make sure you keep something to treat a hypo right at your bedside so you can treat right there if you drop too low, you should be able to treat without issue.
If you're scared about nighttime lows, what about setting the alarm of your libre a bit higher so it wakes you up before you're low? You can set it at 5 or 5.5 if you like.
Nothing to do with too high or not too high, you're at very early stages and anything you see is a learning opportunity in the first place.I treated my lows with a carton of orange juice and an apple this took me to 14 which I know is too high!
Brilliant!I will call the diabete team tomorrow and speak to the nurse but I have lowered my dose by 1 unit today and have been in range most of the day.
Depends. For some it does, for som it doesn't.Does the anxiety ever go away?
It can happen, but it's pretty rare for most, especially if you make sure to have your meter and something to treat on you. Even rarer in those who use a sensor.I think my biggest worry is going below 4mmol and the treatments not bringing my level up and then having a severe hypo.
So now you've started carb counting, way to go!Thank you! I hadn't even thought of calculating what rises my glucose by how much......that is helpful.
Thank you, I am a massive worrier so in my head I think I will have a hypo that I cannot treat and go into a coma! But like you say once I have experienced one I will understand it a bit better and hopefully learn how to avoid them.Hi @kades and welcome to the forums.
Before sensors, T1s relied on hypo symptoms to tell us when we have gone low, and to wake us at night if we went low then. Most people have clear warning symptoms, and getting into the habit of always being near a hypo treatment means that you can avoid anything more than a mild hypo. (Believe me, from personal experience, going hypo in a shopping centre without glucose is a minefield because it can be difficult to work out how to buy sugar when you are running low and feeling slightly confused.). And no T1 should ever think about driving without being sure there is glucose (or equivalent) with them in the car.
My past problems with hypos have occurred (pre sensor) when I ran my levels too low and had far too many hypos, which impaired my hypo awareness.
I suspect you will feel much less anxious once you have had your first real hypo and can recognise the symptoms.
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