I'm type 2 and in week 5 of 800 calories (real food) and my bloods have been normal since week 1, now they are often in the low 4's and a few times have dropped into the high 3's.
I've had a lot more energy this week and have been exercising more because of it but I had a pretty extreme energy crash yesterday and quick onset mental confusion.
My experience with M.E./CFS means I'm used to crashes but this felt somehow different so I'm wondering if this is normal when bloods go too low?
I was on Metaformin (for 3 weeks) I stopped 2 days ago but it is probably still in my system.
Any advice?
I'm going to be a little careful here because I don't want to appear too picky.
However, depending on most medical care providers about hypoglycaemia, quite a few T2s can feel okay with high 3s and not have the symptoms of a hypo, whereas others can have hypo symptoms, whilst still in the 4s or 5s.
I would say that you have dropped a bit too quickly after exercise. If you have been diagnosed as T2, then the exercise was too much or you didn't eat applicable to the level of exercise you did.
What was the difference from your normal exercise crashes?
Are you on meds?
You have such a great way with words, @Resurgam.With the Metformin still in your system then your liver will not be free to release glucose in the same way a non medicated person would react, so you might need to avoid punishing your body quite so much until it can react more normally.
On Metformin and a statin there were times when I was wandering around in a daze - I should not have persevered with them for so long - five weeks nearly wiped me out.
Just eating low calorie would cause me to collapse, back in the days when I was being put on such things even though I had a slender waist, and muscles, which accounted for my density. I can't fast without swings in BG so eat at wide spaced times in the day, just twice, as I think that all the dieting to little effect in my younger days has made my metabolism a bit fragile when under pressure. My body is not so much a temple as a garden - not much to polish but a lot needing weeding....
This is Jenny Ruhl on Metformin duration:I guess what I'm saying is that it probably takes longer than the manufacturer claims for it to really leave the body. I have no idea how long, and we are probably all different anyway. I suspect a lot of other diabetes meds are like this too.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?