Scandichic
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,708
- Location
- Hampshire
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Michael Gove and his insane educational? policies!
Wow! Post prandial is very important. Infact fasting and post prandial are the most important. If you go onto this website it tells you all about fasting and pre and post prandial levels. Also on the diabetes.org site too which is the Nhs approved site. Sounds like someone needs a refresher course!Really?? My DSN says the opposite! She says spikes are nothing to get overly concerned about so long as the levels are back down to normal before u have your next meal! She even told me not to test my blood post prandial as its not important and to only test morning, night and before main meals!
Having said that, the US DCCT study showed that consistent Hba1C levels for T1 diabetics over a long period of time that are < 6.5% versus those that are between 6.5% and 7% are statistically insignificant in terms of the onset of complications, so it does beg the question as to whether an extremely tight control is worthwhile?
Any chance of providing a link to this. I have googled it and can not find any reference to this.....according to Wikipedia:-
"The authors of the study featured the benefits of close control — clearly reduced eye, kidney, and nerve damage — in their conclusion. This supports the clinical value of tighter control afforded by multiple daily injections (MDI) or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion combined with lower blood glucose targets and lower HbA1C goals. Prior to the DCCT, there simply was no medical proof that the additional burden of intensive insulin therapy over the convenience of fewer shot per day with conventional insulinotherapy was worth the tradeoff".... The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT), was a landmark medical study with a total 1,441 participants between 1983 and 1989, followed up until 1993...... Maybe I am looking at the wrong trial......
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetes_control_and_complications_trial
There are also these libks
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/470738
http://m.care.diabetesjournals.org/site/misc/dcct.xhtml
I think for me the most interesting thing is that the test group had an average of 7.2% on the Hba1c, well away from the 6.05% target, demonstrating just how hard, even with a high level of hp involvement, it is to maintain a "normal" bg level as a type 1.
SO - that's why I want normal blood sugar levels. I want to reverse what I have, and avoid any more.
I think you are on dodgy ground with this one. You cannot compare a diabetic with *normal* long term BG levels with your average non-diabetic. The diabetic has to go to quite extreme levels to achieve this and will most likely eat, exercise and take care of themself in a way that an "average" non-diabetic wouldn't.Indeed, there does seem an argument that being a diabetic with *normal* long term BG levels, could actually result in a fitter, healthier and longer life than many non diabetics.
Exactly. There is no doubt in my mind that low (normal) BG levels reverse many complications and help avoid future complications. There are a number of diabetics in their 30s who have been on deaths door with a very short life expectancy who have turned their health around, and lived into their 80s, through achieving long term normal BG levels.
Indeed, there does seem an argument that being a diabetic with *normal* long term BG levels, could actually result in a fitter, healthier and longer life than many non diabetics.
Surely, if the NHS wants to save money, by keeping us free from complications, it should be encouraging all of us to have normal BG levels.
I think you are on dodgy ground with this one. You cannot compare a diabetic with *normal* long term BG levels with your average non-diabetic. The diabetic has to go to quite extreme levels to achieve this and will most likely eat, exercise and take care of themself in a way that an "average" non-diabetic wouldn't.
It would be far more appropriate to compare the diabetic with a non-diabetic that took similar care of themself.
I think it depends on the type of diabetic and how badly affected they were at diagnosis. Personally, I work to maintain my non-diabetic levels, but it's not an extreme sport by any stretch of the imagination. For fully pancreaticly challenged T1s I read a very different story. The thing about diabetes is it's such a wide portfolio of conditions all wrapped up in one natty label.
@smidgeA couple of things I think I really should comment on; a number of comments in the thread are around hypos and the level at which we have a 'true' hypo - during my difficult conversations yesterday, the consultant explained that real hypos are actually 2.2mmol and below. They say 4mmol or 3.5mmol to build in a margin of error for safety - I already knew this, but it was good to hear him say so.
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