Now that I have gotten my hands on a glucose meter I’m wondering if there is a target range that we should consider healthy?
A T1 friend shared her target range with me so I have something to input to my device (4.0-10.0). Would this still be a good range to aim for in a non-diabetic person or person with RH?
For a non diabetic with normal glycaemic/ insulin control, there should be no need for a range, because there is nothing to be wary of!
A T1 should be in the range of what you have said.
My range is not any of the above two examples.
I want to keep my range somewhere within normal range or just above normal levels which is between 4-7mmols at the spikes after food.
The reason is to prevent the trigger for the reaction.
My trigger is just over 7mmols, you're may be little higher.
The object and target is to stop the hypos. This is how you do it.
If you don't spike high, you don't trigger the reaction. The hyper spike causes the overshoot of insulin, this then causes a sugar crash and because you crash so much, your body's ability to stop it doesn't work and you go hypoglycaemic.
No spike, no hyper, no overshoot, no hypo!
To use the monitor efficiently, you may have to use it around meals to find out which foods spike you higher than the target you feel comfortable with and not ending in a hypo. You test pre meal and two hours after first bite. And if your post meal reading is over the limit you have set or 2mmols higher than pre reading. Something in that meal is causing it, usually the carbs or sugars.
You may have to test your fasting levels to see if you are anywhere close to prediabetic or diabetic levels.
And you may want to find your time of spike, mine after testing and the eOGTTs have me around 45-50 minutes.
My hypo occurs between 3 hours 15minutes and 3 hrs 45 minutes.
I did a lot of experimentation, that is how I discovered that my intolerance levels to carbs is so low.
It is easier for me to avoid them, then mess about with portion size.
And I avoid the hypos, by not eating carbs.
I hope that helps. But keep asking, anything you are not certain of. Happy testing!
Oh I nearly forgot!
Keep a food diary, record everything you deem important.
Best wishes.