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Hypos and T2.
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<blockquote data-quote="Trinkwasser" data-source="post: 43348" data-attributes="member: 11875"><p>Your nurse needs poking with a Clue Stick!</p><p></p><p>I've suffered from Reactive Hypoglycemia most of my life: the insulin turns up a day late and a dollar short so your BG jumps up after eating then crashes rapidly, and the speed of the drop can generate hypo *symptoms* even at officially non-hypo numbers.</p><p></p><p>I've had worse symptoms at 5.5 following a rapid drop than at 3.5 when I got there slowly - that's my usual level where I start to become symptomatic in normal circumstances. It's not uncommon either that Type 2s who've been running chronically high numbers develop hypo symptoms (ie. dumps of neuroendocrines) at normal or even above normal BG: this should wear off over time as the body resets its concept of normal</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Trinkwasser, post: 43348, member: 11875"] Your nurse needs poking with a Clue Stick! I've suffered from Reactive Hypoglycemia most of my life: the insulin turns up a day late and a dollar short so your BG jumps up after eating then crashes rapidly, and the speed of the drop can generate hypo *symptoms* even at officially non-hypo numbers. I've had worse symptoms at 5.5 following a rapid drop than at 3.5 when I got there slowly - that's my usual level where I start to become symptomatic in normal circumstances. It's not uncommon either that Type 2s who've been running chronically high numbers develop hypo symptoms (ie. dumps of neuroendocrines) at normal or even above normal BG: this should wear off over time as the body resets its concept of normal [/QUOTE]
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