Bluetit1802
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I did tell her, i just didn't say the number.
It is the number that matters! If you just said "low" how does she know it was in the danger zone? She might of thought you were 3 or 4. Tell her the number.
I did tell her, i just didn't say the number.
I did tell her, i just didn't say the number.
I've just had an awful nights sleep, or lack thereof. I will try and get an urgent appointment today.
If I tell the number, what more will they do than tell me to eat something sweet?
I saw another dr who's arranging a referral to an endocrinologist. She took a blood glucose reading as my appointment was early and i didn't have time to eat. It was 5.6. She is going to try and get me a measuring kit.
The blood tests taken the other day revealed nothing unusual and came back ok.
How can you eat something when you are in bed asleep - presumably you were low before you tested on waking, and may have been even lower. You need to tell her everything and push for a referral to an endocrinologist.
That wasn't her comments verbatim. She was simply explaining that the tests didn't reveal anything problematic.Well she sounds like a keeper - make sure you see her every time. Excellent news about the endocrinologist and blood test kit.
Did you ask for a print out of your blood test results? "nothing unusual" and "OK" isn't really good enough. They may have been within normal range, but right on the limit of this and about to tip over. If you ring reception and ask, they should have one ready for you to pick up next visit.
I saw another dr who's arranging a referral to an endocrinologist. She took a blood glucose reading as my appointment was early and i didn't have time to eat. It was 5.6. She is going to try and get me a measuring kit.
The blood tests taken the other day revealed nothing unusual and came back ok.
My son had these symptoms went to see endocrinologist who told him he produes too much insulin!!For about 15 years I've had the symptoms of feeling really hungry very often and becoming weak and shaky and faint if I don't eat. I can't miss meals and struggle if I don't get to eat when I need to, as well as trying to manage my weight. Unfortunately I don't have an official diagnosis as the doctors have been completely useless in diagnosing anything, though they are keen to tell me it isn't diabetes. I've done finger prick blood tests which didn't seem to get any results. I've seen nutritionists who couldn't recommend anything remotely helpful other than the most basic "try and eat healthily" (well, obviously!), and I even did a test where I had a morning appointment with the GP who got me to drink a glucose drink before eating that day. They tell me the results don't yield anything, but the symptoms persist and it's really debilitating. I don't know what else to do. Eating healthily is difficult and expensive. I have insomnia (though very rarely do i wake up hungry). I've been advised to eat things like porridge for breakfast, but that actually makes my symptoms worse (other cereals are better - ironically as is something like a fried breakfast, but I don't have those if very very rarely for obvious reasons). I could go back to the GP but so far they've been worse than useless, and our service locally is suffering due to cuts. The first doctor i spoke to just said, in respect of managing, scoff a packet of biscuits if you're busy. Clearly that's bad advice, but if anyone can relate to what I'm saying I'd be grateful, thanks.
My son had these symptoms went to see endocrinologist who told him he produes too much insulin!!
3.3, which was yesterday.So what's the lowest reading you've got @ghost_whistler (ignoring the previously mentioned low, which you now believe was a mis-test)?
Thank you.Hi again! Good to hear from you. I have been wondering how you were doing.
Your fear and concerns are quite understandable in the circumstances, and I think it is something most of us RHers have gone through (assuming that you do have RH, which is still not confirmed).
How about starting off by making a few small changes, rather than going the whole hog? It would take longer to see the full benefits, so might take a bit of faith to start with, but it would be a gentler introduction to the changes, and ease you into it.
I'm very glad you have some appointments on the way, even if they seem to be a long time coming.
3.3, which was yesterday.
I've tested during the night several times, there was no low readings at all. Night is never normally a problem for me, only a couple of times a year will i feel compelled to eat. I might not sleep well (which is why i'm able to wake up), but hypo isn't the issue there.Ok. So that's much better than your mis-test : ) 3.3 could even be closer to 4, allowing for the margin of error every meter has.
All you can do while waiting for your appointments is to keep detailed records so you can show them to whoever you see. That will provide a lot of information. Record blood sugar, of course, but also food and any extras like exercise, etc
Have you set an alarm to test during the night too? If not, you could try doing that so you can get a proper nighttime test result.
Sorry if youve already answered this but the forum is being very slow today and I can't click back easily - but have you have a recent oral glucose tolerance test?
Thank you.
I read that if you ease into it, you are worse off in that it takes longer to achieve ketosis, which means longer experiencing all the problems related to glucose. I'm trying to do that, but it's not easy. I've just had breakfast of a small portion of kale (i don't have enough to last otherwise), two sausages and two pieces of bacon. Normally i wouldn't eat so much greasy food (it was grilled though). But even that isn't enough fat according to the instructions i've read elsewhere. Also i'm starting to feel the edge of hunger again already!
It seems to me like i'm between the devil and the deep blue sea: clearly my current diet isn't working (unless the problem happens to be caused by something beyond carbs), but reaching ketosis really feels onerous. Everyone that does it seems to be very positive about it, but I really struggle to know how to get by. Then there's concerns that induction causes hypoglcyemia, which i've read elsewhere, and how do you cope with low blood sugar episodes during induction? You can't ignore it, no matter the diet you're on.