hi and welcome @GordonSSS
That is a very narrow window of comfort you have! I do NOT envy you.
The symptoms you are describing sound less like hypo symptoms and more like stress hormone reactions to the hypo.
What happens is that your body's blood glucose drifts a bit lower than it likes, and triggers a whole cocktail of stress hormones to be released - some of which are intended to stimulate the liver to release glucose into the blood stream. The shaking etc, is less the hypo, and more the stress hormones flooding the system (think of a near miss in a car accident, the symptoms are almost the same, aren't they?)
Sounds like two things are happening for you - firstly your stress hormone release is on too fine a hair trigger, and secondly, your liver is may not responding to the hormones by releasing enough glucose. Have you tracked whether your bg rises, even if your shakey feelings continue?
Please bear in mind that I am NOT medically trained, and am not qualified to diagnose ANYTHING over the internet!!!
Have they specifically tested your stress hormone levels? (that may have been the 24 hr urine collection, to eliminate Cushings disease) but there are other things that can go wrong.
Have they done an MRI at all? It was an MRI that spotted that I have a tumour in my pituitry gland that pumps out too much of one hormone.
I am sorry that I cannot offer you any answers at all, but maybe I can point you in a direction for further research, or more questions to ask, if you do go down the PRivate route.
That is a very narrow window of comfort you have! I do NOT envy you.
The symptoms you are describing sound less like hypo symptoms and more like stress hormone reactions to the hypo.
What happens is that your body's blood glucose drifts a bit lower than it likes, and triggers a whole cocktail of stress hormones to be released - some of which are intended to stimulate the liver to release glucose into the blood stream. The shaking etc, is less the hypo, and more the stress hormones flooding the system (think of a near miss in a car accident, the symptoms are almost the same, aren't they?)
Sounds like two things are happening for you - firstly your stress hormone release is on too fine a hair trigger, and secondly, your liver is may not responding to the hormones by releasing enough glucose. Have you tracked whether your bg rises, even if your shakey feelings continue?
Please bear in mind that I am NOT medically trained, and am not qualified to diagnose ANYTHING over the internet!!!

Have they specifically tested your stress hormone levels? (that may have been the 24 hr urine collection, to eliminate Cushings disease) but there are other things that can go wrong.
Have they done an MRI at all? It was an MRI that spotted that I have a tumour in my pituitry gland that pumps out too much of one hormone.
I am sorry that I cannot offer you any answers at all, but maybe I can point you in a direction for further research, or more questions to ask, if you do go down the PRivate route.