Mine is twice a day and I went from 7.9 -11 without any food and having walked (about a mile). Pre inhaler I would expect a drop to hypo levels doing that :-/
I've always had a sneaky suspicion that steroids and steroid inhalers lead to Diabetes. It is well known that steroids raise blood glucose. Maybe I'm wrong, but it would be interesting to see how many people with Diabetes also use steroid inhalers.
Apologies for basic use of English language in my post, but just diagnosed with hypothyroidism which causes brain fog and other things that elude me at the moment. lol
Mine is twice a day and I went from 7.9 -11 without any food and having walked (about a mile). Pre inhaler I would expect a drop to hypo levels doing that :-/
I've always had a sneaky suspicion that steroids and steroid inhalers lead to Diabetes. It is well known that steroids raise blood glucose. Maybe I'm wrong, but it would be interesting to see how many people with Diabetes also use steroid inhalers.
It's well known fact that that high doses and long term use of steroids cause diabetes. Hence why it's called steroid induced diabetes Engineer88 has type 1 diabetes though which is autoimmune.
@carbsrock I thought steroids destroyed your immune system over time, which in turn sets up an autoimmune disease. My apologies if I have misunderstood.
I use a steroid inhaler twice a day (Seretide 250). I don't notice any peaks after taking it but when it's gets into cough and cold season and i get my bouts of chest infections and end up on prednisolone i literally have to double my basal rates on my pump for the duration of the course as they sky-rocket my BG's.