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Newbie needing help :(

Jaxx01

Well-Known Member
Messages
294
Location
Bracknell, Berkshire
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Insulin
Ok so I was diagnosed last week formally as Gestational Diabetes but because my fasting result was quite high they reckon I could have been type 2 before I fell pregnant!!

So my story is this :

Was put on Insulin straightaway by the diabetic nurse as my fasting level was high, so had my first dose last night!

This morning, fasting level was 8.5.

Had brekkie and it went to 13.4 BUT then two hours after that it was down to 4.4 (I tested because I actually felt soo rubbish) now I know 4 is what they say is a hypo level.. but it was close so I had a cuppa and a biscuit and it rose to 5.5 and then I had lunch ( a simple jacket potato and beans, low salt low sugar) reading two hours after lunch was 14

Im feeling so overwhelmed with it all and confused and been told that my levels should be 4-7 two hours post meal so obviously Im worried that hitting 13 & 14 isnt great

Im not seeing my nurse until tuesday and theres noone there to answer the phone

Do you think I did wrong by having that biscuit?? Is that what sent it high after lunch??

I just dont know and like I said Im feeling lost

Sorry for the ramble and random figures xx
 
Hi Jaxx01!

Welcome! Try not to panic!

Obviously with being pregnant, it is very important that you get those figures down. Have you been referred to a specialist diabetes clinic? I think as you are pregnant you should be referred as a priority - in some areas that's normal practice, but I don't know if it is all over the country. Anyway, insist!

You probably didn't need the biscuit earlier - although you felt low, 4.4 is a normal BG level - you probably felt awful because you have been running so high for so long that your body is experiencing 'false hypos'. These will pass when your body gets used to being at the correct level.

Your lunch - potato and beans is way too high in carb for most diabetics and would send your levels up as happened to you. You need to look at the total carb content of your food and keep portions of carb small. Carbohydrate converts to glucose and enters your blood stream. In non-diabetics, insulin converts this to energy - in diabetics it just floats around our bloodstream causing problems.

Do you know what insulin you have been put on? There is some insulin that you match to your food, so you count your carbs and inject the right dose. Other insulin is long-acting, so it keeps your BG level between meals. There is also insulin that is a mix of the two - with that, you would have been told at what times you must eat. Let us know what you are on and someone on here will try to help you.

Have a good look round this site, as there is a lot of information on here - ask any questions you need. There is a gestational diabetes section, and the people in there might give you the best advice as they will be in similar situations.

Good luck

Smidge
 
Thanks I did wonder about my choice of lunch but Im just so lost with it all that I didnt really think that hard

Im on humalog mix 25?? She said take it with breakfast and evening meal? that was it... Obviously, I havent a clue...and on the food sheet she gave me the other day, it said a jacket with beans was fine

Thanks for your advice
 
Hi Jaxx01!

OK, so you are on a mixed insulin. This means that you have to try to eat the correct amount of carb for the insulin you have injected rather than altering your insulin injection for what you want to eat if that makes sense.

Although small portions of potato might be OK for you, a whole jacket potato and beans was clearly far too much carb, which is why you spiked (the biscuit will have added to this). If I have beans I only have about two tablespoons and about 80 - 90g of potato is all I can manage. You will need to test before your meals and two hours after to see what foods are OK for you. The following information has been put together by the forum moderators to help newly-diagnosed members. Hopefully, it will make things a little clearer to you, but I really do think you should insist on seeing a specialist to get advice specific to gestational diabetes and to make sure you are on an appropriate insulin regime.

Smidge

 
Hi Jaxx and welcome to the forum
I'm afraid the links don't work when the Basic Information is copied. Here is the link so that you can look at all of it as it's important information.

viewtopic.php?f=20&t=17088#p155405
 
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