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<blockquote data-quote="JoKalsbeek" data-source="post: 2325985" data-attributes="member: 401801"><p>Hi [USER=532291]@Dubs52[/USER] ,</p><p></p><p>Don't worry about the blurred eyesight. When your glucose levels are high, they distort your vision. Your brain's been compensating for that for a while now. So when glucose levels go back down, which glic would do, your brain has to get used to not compensating anymore... It probably would've gotten better on its own in a week or two. (If you experience this again as your blod sugars normalise, just get some cheap reading specs, as it is of a passing nature). VashtiB's already given you the link to The Nutritional Thingy, and Xfieldoc to dietdoctor.com, so those bases are covered. </p><p></p><p>You'll be okay. Get yourself a meter and you'll be able to see that for yourself. There is hope here.</p><p>Jo</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JoKalsbeek, post: 2325985, member: 401801"] Hi [USER=532291]@Dubs52[/USER] , Don't worry about the blurred eyesight. When your glucose levels are high, they distort your vision. Your brain's been compensating for that for a while now. So when glucose levels go back down, which glic would do, your brain has to get used to not compensating anymore... It probably would've gotten better on its own in a week or two. (If you experience this again as your blod sugars normalise, just get some cheap reading specs, as it is of a passing nature). VashtiB's already given you the link to The Nutritional Thingy, and Xfieldoc to dietdoctor.com, so those bases are covered. You'll be okay. Get yourself a meter and you'll be able to see that for yourself. There is hope here. Jo [/QUOTE]
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