My wife had a 2.2 low last night which we got back to 7 after and hour and a half. Her sugars went upto 19 and have now stayed between 18&23 all morning despite constant corrections.
I am thinking her body released some hormones following the low and we are currently battling against that.
Ketones were 0.3 this morning. Anyone had this before.
My wife had a 2.2 low last night which we got back to 7 after and hour and a half. Her sugars went upto 19 and have now stayed between 18&23 all morning despite constant corrections.
I am thinking her body released some hormones following the low and we are currently battling against that.
Ketones were 0.3 this morning. Anyone had this before.
This is a surprisingly normal reaction to a significant hypo. The body releases glucagon, but studies have shown that it continues to do so for up to 24 hours after a low, which pushes the glucose levels up for longer. There is then the side effect that when it stops, the liver tries to re-collect what's been distributed to replenish the glycogen stores and this process puts you at risk fo more hypos.
This is a surprisingly normal reaction to a significant hypo. The body releases glucagon, but studies have shown that it continues to do so for up to 24 hours after a low, which pushes the glucose levels up for longer. There is then the side effect that when it stops, the liver tries to re-collect what's been distributed to replenish the glycogen stores and this process puts you at risk fo more hypos.
As @tim2000s has stated, the liver tries to rebuild the stores over the next 24 hours, so you need to be wary of correction doses. I usually reduce correction doses by upto 50% the day after bad or prolonged overnight hypos.
As @tim2000s has stated, the liver tries to rebuild the stores over the next 24 hours, so you need to be wary of correction doses. I usually reduce correction doses by upto 50% the day after bad or prolonged overnight hypos.
Yes, but keep monitoring. I accept that I will run high for the rest of the day, as if I try to "force" it back down to normal levels, I remain high, and then suddenly, start crashing. A typical outcome is a yoyo effect whereby I will spend 24+ hours bouncing from hyper to hypo, essentially over-correcting, so I just bite the bullet, and keep monitoring.