Yesterday I was put on steriods (presnisolone) for another autoimmune condition I have (sarcoidosis). I was told it will send my BG up and quite quickly. I woke on 25 this morning! Anyone on steriods and have advice please? Thank you x
Unfortunately steroids are a pain to deal with, they decrease the effectiveness of insulin and can cause the liver to dump more glucose into your system.
Are you comfortable with adjusting your correction doses to bring your levels down ? If not speak to your diabetic nurse, the other aspect is that we can also become more insulin resistant the higher our levels go to, so lots of testing as well as correcting above what we would normally administer, but again speak to your DSN if you need guidance on doing this.
Hi @4mum_ I had steroid injections about 2 years ago and it took a week for my BG levels to come back down again without loads of correcting, good luck, let us know how you get on ?
Hi @4mum_ I had steroid injections about 2 years ago and it took a week for my BG levels to come back down again without loads of correcting, good luck, let us know how you get on ?
My levels rose yesterday morning but constant corrections got it down to 9.5 pre bed at 10pm. I took the meds with my evening meal around 7pm. I woke this morning on another high of 22, which after correction and 30 min walk to work rose to 27! Been emailing my DSN throughout the day.
Ok, so, 30mg a day and reducing by 5mg each week, 6 week course. Yeah, that will be horrible on the bg levels. I can't advise on whether or not to take them, but it is generally not a good idea to suddenly stop taking them while on a high dose.
I take 7mg everyday, but it's part of being a transplant recipient and there is no way around it. I have heard of doubling and tripling insulin while on pred, but you really need to get a hold of someone to get those levels down. I don't know anything about your condition that your doctor is using pred to treat, but I'd be looking for as much info on it as possible to see if there are alternatives to pred.