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Liver dump ?

Hi Truffles. The problem with testing first thing in the morning is no one can really know what has been involved in the overnight process; you can only guess that liver-dumping is part of it. That's why I never test first thing but normally only 2 hours after a main meal
 
I agree with Daibell. It can be really hard working out what contributed to a morning reading and I seldom test in the morning also. Your reading probably was a result of a form of liver dump called "dawn phenomenon" where the liver releases glucose into our blood to prepare us for the days rigours. Morning readings take a while to come down usually when diabetics start changing diet and exercising etc. it would probably be best if you now stopped testing until your new test. According to your diagnosis, you could then come back for more guidance on diet/testing and so on,
Good luck!
 
That makes sense to me regarding the GTT test, I never thought of it like that, if you do low carb it's obvious your pancreas is kicking it's heels up and having a cushy time, merrily snoozing when BAM a load of glucose hit's it, So I make note now, that when I have GTT test I must wake the ****** up and get it to do a bit for 3 days. I don't think it's left the building quit yet :lol: Not happy and probably make me feel ****, but needs must ehh. Well posted librarising, and thanks for bringing that to my attention.
 
Hi

Jus an update , ive been eating some carbs in rediness for my glucose tollerance test, and guess what i had a reading of 8.6 which i have never had before, what should i do, should i go back to low carbs or carry on untill my test.

My levels were between 4 and 6 on low carb.

I will do the low carb thing after the test anyway am just a bit worried x
 
Higher glucose levels won't hurt you for a couple of days until the test, so stick with it and enjoy! otherwise the test will not be meaningful. Your readings so far suggest you are not NON diabetic, but wait for the proper diagnosis.
Good luck!
 
Interested in this thread because I'm having a GTT next week. I've brought my HbA1c down from 7.2 this time last year to 5.5 by weight loss and diet only. I'm not low carbing in the way that most people on here do, but I probably don't quite reach 150 everyday. Will this distort the result of the GTT?
 
I'd have thought you'd be fine sugarmog. It's only where the body has been used to very low carbs that it can effect things as far as I know. Why are you having a GTT out of interest? That's normally done to diagnose diabetes, and your 7.2 HbA1c showed you are, even though diet and weight have reduced it greatly since then - well done on that by the way!
 
Grazer said:
Why are you having a GTT out of interest? That's normally done to diagnose diabetes, and your 7.2 HbA1c showed you are, even though diet and weight have reduced it greatly since then - well done on that by the way!

I'm having the GTT partly to see how diabetic I am, but possibly more to remind myself that I am still diabetic, because by all other measurable indicators I don't appear to be. I've had odd blood glucose levels for the past 20 years, highish fasting levels at the doctors and highish GTT results, but my HbA1c results have always been in the normal range until the 7.2 in July last year. This diagnosis was however slightly complicated by another unconnected illness causing me a great deal of emotional stress and possibly pushing my sugars higher.
The reduction in my HbA1c was relatively easy compared with how hard some people on here have had to work. I moderated my diet, cutting out obviously sugary things like sweets and chocolate, and cut back on other carbs. However, I continued (and still continue) to eat moderate amounts of bread, potatoes, rice, pasta, unsweetened cereal and fresh fruit. Within 9 weeks I was at 5.9, a month after that 5.6, and more recently 5.5. A C peptide test done at the same time as the 5.6 test was "normal". I wasn't hugely over weight at diagnosis but I've lost about a stone and a half and I'm now at my ideal weight for my height.
I gave up regular testing at the end of last year, but still have periods of testing to check that nothing has changed. My morning fasting levels are between 4.5 and 5, at two hours after meals I can be anywhere between high 5's and mid 6's, and at 4 hours between 4.8 and 5.8. Even a couple of spectacular falls off the wagon haven't produced the expected disaster. An impromptu sweet of crispy creme doughnut, packet of crisps, bowl of fruit and a carton of orange juice (deliberate as I was testing at the time) had me at 3.9 two hours later (I guess my pancreas went into emergency overdrive) and half a tin of Quality Street (don't ask) peaked me at 6.1 after two hours.
Faced with these kind of results it is very easy to forget that I have a problem and actually quite confusing. It is possible, although unlikely, that I am still only glucose intolerant rather than fully diabetic and that the 7.2 was an aborration caused by severestress. Although this shouldn't make any difference to my diet, which I would consider to be a normal healthy one, it would be useful to have a definitive answer and hopefully the GTT will provide this.
 
Ok, get it. As you say, important to keep to the diet even if tests say you're not a full club member yet! Good luck with the test, let us know how you get on. And stop all that obscene talk about quality street! :lol:
Memories, memories........
 
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