Deborah 85
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 91
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
To be honest, it’s not the GP that I see, it’s just the nurse. I still don’t really know what I’m supposed to be looking out for.Your GP should have warned you about Gliclazide. Mine didn't either.
Thanks that’s really helpful!This is for starters: https://www.diabetes.co.uk/diabetes_care/blood-sugar-level-ranges.html
There is a lot more info on the main website, so spend some hours surfing and reading, both on the website and in the forums. You can also use the search bar on the top right for questions about specific things, like gliclazide. Stupid search bar doesn't do shorter words or phrases, so searching for 'false hypo' won't get you very far, but google might help.
Not sure if you've had @daisy1 's useful welcoming post, but it will appear on this thread.
Thank you, that’s very helpful. as I said, I didn’t know how for sure to get my bg up so I just had some chocolate but I have found that’s not the best thing I should have had? I don’t know if the shaking was just because I was scared as I didn’t know what happening and I knew I didn’t feel good. Or if it was a symptom.As a T1, I rarely post in T2 threads, because the conditions are different, but I have to say here if you got to the point where you were shaking uncontrollably, it means your body was going into what's called autonomic response and you seriously needed to eat some sugar at that point.
You can reach a stage where the body has i identified that your bg was way too low, so it started pumping out adrenalin to tell the liver to release stored glucose to get you back to a zone it's happier with.
Low bg on its own won't make you shake, you could slip away quietly into an early grave with a low bg if it weren't for the autonomic response. The low bg induces the adrenalin release, and it's the adrenalin which makes you shake.
A washed out feeling may continue for a while even after you've, hopefully, eaten some glucose - adrenalin kicks around the system for a while.
It's all well and good the other posters saying you should just try and ride these periods through, but if you're getting to the stage of shaking, you absolutely need about 10g of fast acting glucose.
Once you're better, then you've got time to figure out in the longer term whether your meds need adjusted, not when you're on the verge of fitting.
I have updated my profile.
I still don’t know if it was a hypo or if it was just a fake one.
That’s the second time I have been as low as 4.7 but the last time I didn’t feel any different, this time I was shaking so I’m unsure myself why this was differentThanks for updating your profile.
I can't help you with the hypo question. I have never had one, although I do go to the low 4s at times, but feel absolutely fine when I do, and I'm not on any medication.
That’s the second time I have been as low as 4.7 but the last time I didn’t feel any different, this time I was shaking so I’m unsure myself why this was different
The nurse has told me that I only need to test the now three times a day. Once in the morning when I get up before breakfast and then before dinner and before bed. Normally they are sitting at around 7 when I wake up and then around 6 when I get home after dinner and then around 6/7 when I’m going to bed. Is that still really high?4.7 isn't low, but the problem with Gliclazide is it could have been going up from a much lower level once your adrenaline and liver kicked in, or could have been on the way down to a much lower level, which is why you need to keep a meter with you at all times, always always test before you drive, and test every 10 or 15 minutes if you get physical symptoms to make sure you are not dropping lower. Also, keep some jelly babies or glucose tablets with you at all times, and have spare ones in your car.
What are your levels like in normal circumstances during the day, such as before meals and 2 hours after eating, plus morning fasting and bedtimes? If these are nice and normal due to your eating plan it may be worth speaking to your nurse about reducing the gliclazide.
The nurse said she would revisit the dosage if I kept going low but she said 4.9 was low and would send me into a hypo?You need to carry some glucotabs which are fast acting glucose tablets and can be purchased from places like Boots. Gliclazide can make your blood sugar drop very low. Mine was constantly falling around 3.9, luckily my GP took me off it when I showed him my BG logs. As someone said earlier you need to carry your meter with you and if your reading is low then please don’t drive.
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