That is a difficult thing to respond to... You may just naturally be the sweetest of the bunch and come the next ice age you will survive due to the antifreeze in your body. Or... Are you breaking down protein for energy. When I am in this state I get a constant raise level of 5.6. Nothing brings it down.
Even as prediabetics it is very useful to see the trend (whether the numbers are going up or down). I measure my fasting BS every morning and then take the monthly average. For example:
August 2013 - 5.57
September 2013 - 5.79
October 2013 - 5.94
November 2013 - 6.05
December 2013 - 5.78
January 2014 - 5.80
February 2014 - 5.99
March 2014 - 6.22
When I got to March and the numbers had kept increasing I joined this forum and in April changed my eating habits to low carb/medium fat.
April 2014 - 5.52 (5.3 since starting the low carb/medium fat)
May 2014 (so far) - 5.28
This means that I'm doing something right and it's worthwhile to continue.
If your fasting levels are that good, I'm surprised you have been diagnosed as prediabetic. I would have thought that these levels are still perfectly normal.
If your fasting levels are that good, I'm surprised you have been diagnosed as prediabetic. I would have thought that these levels are still perfectly normal.
I think, Deb, that it is the fasting BG that counts (although I'm a newbie and I may be wrong).
It is always better to err on the side of caution than to pretend it's not so bad and live as you always lived. With a fasting BG of 6.9 I would put you squarely into the prediabetic range.
I had lunch earlier and a couple of hours later my BG was 4.7. Of course I'm pleased with that, but I have also been shopping (and hence, walking) and that would always reduce the BG levels.
Deb, I have just been looking at a book by Gretchen Becker (from all I know she's well respected in her advice on diabetes and prediabetes). In that book is a chart. According to that chart the BG of a normal (non-diabetic) person returns back to what it was before a meal was eaten, whereas in her chart the BG levels of a prediabetic person DROP below what it was before eating.
Obviously, charts such as this are generalisations, but I think you and I have to live as though we will remain prediabetic for life. Some say that it can be reversed, but I suspect that if we bring our BG levels all back into normal and start going back to eating the way we used to, we'll be right back where we started within days/weeks/months.
Still, I think we are very lucky to have found out so early.