Sunshine2297
Member
- Messages
- 17
Sort of like black blobs but not so defined.. anyway I'll do a BM and I'm 2.0..1.9.. even LO.
In the 12 years I've been diabetic I've never felt so awful after a hypo as I do tonight.
I think to a certain extent you may be right, I think the main thing is because of how hypo aware I was before. I used to be a very bad diabetic, I'd just go off how I felt and inject x amount of insulin or drink some juice. (I know lock me up!) Anyway, I think to go from being so aware of my symptoms and levels, to being so hypo and not feel it is so so strange. I used to get extremely shaky, but now I feel dizzy and have visual disturbances I think that change has shocked me.I’m wondering if the problem is that now you’re seeing the lows. If you didn’t use the Libre and couldn’t check as rapidly, would you know? If you didn’t know, would you react differently?
Makes me flashback to the first time I checked my blood sugar the moment I realized I was hypo unaware. It was the first week after I’d quit an extremely stressful job, and my stress level was gone. Emotionally I was a clean slate (an unemployed clean slate). I was just doing stuff, and decided to check my blood sugar. It was an extremely crazy lo number. I saw it and could not believe it, so I checked again to find the same thing. Terrified I got on the floor and curled up into a ball and waited for help. No one came. After laying there awhile I realized I felt fine. I got my butt off the ground, and decided to make lunch.
Sure the lo number might not be a good thing, but seeing it shouldn’t be the problem. Seeing it is just data- use data to manage the problem. So I’m wondering if that’s where you’re at- with Libre now you’re seeing the data.
Thank you Ellie!! This is what I really needed, reading someone elses experience and just normalising it a little bit I guess. I'm definitely going to aim to keep my levels around the 6-12 mark and see if that will help. I have a telephone review in a month or so, it's nice to go back with things I've already triedOK, I've had several periods of hypo unawareness whenever I've had too many hypos.....And, after 50 years of T1, I have to say my symptoms are no where near as dramatic as they used to be. So, how do I cope
1) I don't let myself run low enough to frequently hypo. (last time I used the libre this happened). Basically, once my hba1c goes much below 7 or 50 ish (choose your units) I risk losing awareness, so I concentrate on time in range and avoiding the highs and lows
2) When I last lost awareness my clinic suggested I aim to run between 6 and 12 for a few weeks, and it came back.
3) If I could still use the libre (it no longer works for my body) I'd add a transmitter (miao miao?) to give me alerts before I went hypo (eg 4.5 or 5). I like to believe that it's not high blood sugar that keeps hypo awareness, but the avoidance of too many hypos in the first place.
But lots of virtual hugs. If there was one single thing that I could choose to eliminate in T1 diabetes, it would be the hypos. I hate them with a passion.
very bad diabetic
Is there a fear in the UK about being hypo unaware? I’m thinking maybe yes, but I don’t understand the rationale.
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