• Guest - w'd love to know what you think about the forum! Take the 2025 Survey »

In the dark

dweeb

Newbie
Messages
1
My husband is very secretive about his health. After 18 months of promises he finally went to a doctor today to have his diabetes checked. He found out he was diabetic 5 years ago while spending a week in the hospital. This was before I came into his life 2 years ago. He told me his level today was 320 (17.7 mmol/l). Everything I see shows blood sugar levels above 120 (6.6 mmol/l) are dangerous. Is there another "level" I am missing? I don't know what this means or where to even start. Please send me suggestions.
 
Hi dweeb and welcome to the forum So that you can help your husband I am sending you some basic information written by the Forum Monitors for new members. In the UK we measure our blood levels in mmol/l. To get MG/dl you multiply mmol/l readings by 18 so you can understand the information on recommended BG levels. Here is a link to a converter to make things easier for you:

http://www.diabetes.co.uk/blood-sugar-converter.html

 
dweeb said:
He told me his level today was 320 (17.7 mmol/l). Everything I see shows blood sugar levels above 120 (6.6 mmol/l) are dangerous.
Hi dweeb,

there's no exact cut off point where blood sugar levels suddenly become dangerous. What happens is that the higher they creep up, and the longer they stay there, the more you put yourself at risk of complications.
NICE guidelines say aim to get an average of 7.5. The big studies of diabetes over time (eg the DCCT trial) suggest that complications are significantly reduced if you can get average blood sugar down to around this level.

I think everyone would agree though that 17.7 is too high, if he is consistently at that sort of level. Not only for long-term complications but for how ill he feels right now - is he very thirsty, tired etc? The good news is that he has agreed to see a doctor. Getting blood sugar levels down will lower his risk of complications and make him feel better. Good luck with it - it's scary to watch someone you love struggle with coming to terms with this kind of thing.
 
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn More.…