Whilst it may be some reaction to your bg, it may have nothing to do with diabetes. It is easy to blame diabetes for every niggle but we can still experience all the other conditions people without diabetes get.
You can find out more by testing your bg when you get hot flushes.
It may be some type of allergic reaction to some particular foods.
When I was first diagnosed - 18 months ago - I tested all the time, but had been advised that i only need to test once a week or before driving - glicazide spikes - maybe I should go back to testing
When I was first diagnosed - 18 months ago - I tested all the time, but had been advised that i only need to test once a week or before driving - glicazide spikes - maybe I should go back to testing
To be honest, @rosajean , the fact that you are now experiencing issues you don't understand would warrant ramping up the testing again. Once you work out if your numbers are spiking up, or down, or if you have eaten certain foods before your flushes, you could reconsider.
To be honest, @rosajean , the fact that you are now experiencing issues you don't understand would warrant ramping up the testing again. Once you work out if your numbers are spiking up, or down, or if you have eaten certain foods before your flushes, you could reconsider.
I often do after breakfast. Not so much other meals but straight after breakfast. I’ve put this down to it being a warm meal (fry up) although other hot meals don’t do this.