Alineden
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 136
- Location
- West Cumbria
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Not much really
Hi. Thanks for your reply. I should take Metformin 3 times a day but frequently forget including today.Hi,
If the sensor readings are accurate, the lows you are feeling are hypoglycaemic episodes. If I read it correctly the spikes are after meals. Both drops are about three and a half hours after food. The symptoms could also be false hypos, but are you on any meds for lowering blood sugar levels?
Did you finger prick to check if the results are close to the libre readings?
Keep safe
I didn't finger orick test as I'm working away from home and didn't bring my test kit with me.Hi,
If the sensor readings are accurate, the lows you are feeling are hypoglycaemic episodes. If I read it correctly the spikes are after meals. Both drops are about three and a half hours after food. The symptoms could also be false hypos, but are you on any meds for lowering blood sugar levels?
Did you finger prick to check if the results are close to the libre readings?
Keep safe
I didn't finger orick test as I'm working away from home and didn't bring my test kit with me.
I got my HbA1c down from 74 on diagnosis to 41 over about 9 months but I'm due another blood test and I'm expecting it to be back up after having a poor diet throughout summer.What meals did you have before the lows?
Have you got access to a doctor whilst abroad or a glucometer to see if you are going hypo?
The only other thing is how long have you noticed that you are getting symptoms? Has being abroad altered your dietary intake?
Are you still low carb?
If you are having continuous low blood sugar levels, you will need to see a doctor.
Having hypos will have an effect on your life and your health.
I have looked again at the readout, and your lows are not below 3.5 and that is on the borderline of going hypo, so it could all be normal for you.
What was your last Hba1c level?
Sorry about the questions, but I can only go on my own experience with Hypoglycaemia.
Keep safe
Though the libre does suffer from compression lows (ie if you lie on it it can often show lower than it actually is), so whether you actually went to below 3 is quite another thing - only an actual blood test would show you - as I said best not to trust the libre if it shows as low as 3It dropped slightly below 3 through the night.
As time goes on with this sensor I'm convinced it is reading low and the symptoms i experienced were hydration related. The readings are still coming in low but I have concentrated on staying well hydrated and haven't had a repeat of those symptoms.I found that unless I inserted my sensor and then waited for 48 hours before activating it, I initially got some extremely low and rather scary readings, mainly overnight:
View attachment 44064
However, I never had any physical signs of actual low glucose/hypos, so in my case it was simply an acclimatization issue, though in general my sensor always read around 1-1.5mmol lower than my normal finger pricks. If testing shows it's not just a sensor issue and you're actually having these very low episodes, then as others have said you do need to find out why, and get medical advice if needs be.
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