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Type 2 & Exercise Advice

Jike

Newbie
Messages
2
Hi Folks,

I'm new to the forum, I was diagnosed in september after a long period of feeling unwell. I'm on metformin 500mg x 2 and clicazide x 1 a day. Things have stabilised after several months on medication, G.P. is happy and i have eventually felt like exercising again (in fact I'm a new man..I thought I was just getting old!!!).

I have been doing a lot of walking but now that I'm feeling good have decided to raise the activity level, I have entered a sprint triathlon later on in the year.

I went for my first training run yesterday and as a matter of interest checked my bg afterwards it was 2.9, I would normally be around 6 or 7 at the time I tested. I'm aware that exercise can lower bg however I don't know a lot about diabetes and my understanding is that 2.9 isn't far away from going hypo...am I right in thinking this?

I would be grateful for advice from any type 2's who regularly exercise. I would just really like to know what to expect and anything that I should or should'nt be doing i.e. isotonic drinks, good or bad? should I be taking sugar on board in the form of these drinks before or after training or at all?

Cheers

Jike
 
Well - you've got 2 choices:

1) Continue with your medication during exercise, and keep a sugary drink handy in case you do go that low again, or
2) Learn how exercise effects your BG, and adjust your medication to suit.

If it was me, I'd favour 2) - but I know some people love to take medication, and eat lots of sugar to compenstae. Why, I don't know.

2.9 IS very low. Standard advice is anything <4 is a hypo. However, I've been down to around 3.5 with no hypo feelings.
 

Hi Jike and welcome to the forum Be careful - 2.9 is already hypo. Here is a link to some advice on hypos and hypo treatment for your information:

viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18529

You say you don't know a lot about diabetes so here is the advice given to newly diagnosed diabetics which you will probably find helpful:


 
Thanks for your help folks. I was managing things well but the exercise seems to have thrown a small spanner into the works....hopefully remedied now after your advice.

Cheers
 
when i exercise i normally eat about 20g uncooked weight of duram wheat pasta which slow releases over 2 to 3 hrs normally but with vigourous exercise tends to where off on me after 1and a half hrs then i have a small apple. if i did the same without the exercise i would be on a 10 by the third hour
 
Hi Jike,

Glad you are managing well most of the time, I also have had trouble getting things stabalsied after exercise.
I personally have found that I need to take on some carbs before and during exercise, a lot depends on the intensity and the duration though.
As you have said that you are taking Metformin and Glicazide which is the same as me except I am on max dose of Glicazide 320mg and 500mg SR Metforfin. I thought I could perhaps offer some advice as I tried reducing my glicizide on exercise days which are typically 4 x 45 min swims, at quite an intensive pace as directed by my specialist, however found that because of the reduced dose my BGs went quite high on an evening and on waking.
What I do now is to take onboard some slow release carbs ( Banana) and have a small carton of fresh orange to drink during the exercise.
I like to start exercising at about 7-8mmol and not go any lower than 4, this has worked for me since I started doing this and I feel a lot better for it, as previously I would go Hypo after my swims and then have to correct which often shot my BGs to high.
Before you start I would recomend that you test your BG and first take on a small amount of carbs mixture of fast and slow release then test again after finishing. If your BG is still below 4 increase the carb intake till you get it about right, remember though that even after the exercise is finished your BG may still drop.
If you get it wrong dont worry just keep on testing and adjusting accordingly, you will feel a lot better in the long term and if you want to continue doing things like triathlons they do require a lot of energy, its all a matter of balancing intake against expenditure.
Hope that helps.

Regards
 
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