emptyplate
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 307
- Type of diabetes
- Other
- Treatment type
- Other
Indeed and that's why I am uncomfortable with the uncertainty.
vit90 said:Nevertheless, if pre and post meal differences are low it would be logical to deduce that I have regained some insulin sensitivity. But again, would that mean baseline glucose levels should be back to a normal range?
vit90 said:Can you have good insulin sensitivity and a high-ish glucose average? I have no idea!
Good start for me too at 5.3 despite yesterday's "not the best" foods and no testing after pre brekky reading; not because of the foods but just how the day went...Morning all 5.5 this morning good start to Friday
Absolutely 110% with you on thatI tend to eat more carbs than many on here in that I still eat bread, some cereals, reheated pasta, potatoes etc and my BS levels are between 4.7 and 5.8 and I'm still, albeit slowly, losing weight. We are all individuals and, as diabetes control is for life not just for Christmas, we need to find a way of doing it which we feel comfortable with and that we can cope with in the long term.
Like a game off chess with the strategies we need to employ in the beat diabetes game6.1 mmol / L this morning.
3.6 mmol / L at bed time.
I suspect my liver dumped some glucagon at bed time to counter act the low.
I double checked the reading with a 3.7 mmol / L result. I was going to eat something to bring my blood glucose up a tad but, thought I'd try an experiment with my normal bed time food.
Result of which was I couldn't drift off for some time - probably due to liver dump.
Conclusion is next time eat something to slightly raise blood glucose level before consuming normal bed time food.
Hope all goes well. I've had both hips done and they made the world of difference. Post op exercise for hips not so vigorous as that needed for knees I believe but you'll defo feel the benefit... Hope all goes smoothly and you'll be back home before you know it... xRight knee replacement , they have cancelled on me twice and changed surgeon so this is third time lucky
I've got the contour next USB. Just pop it into a phone charger plug and I'm up and running again in abt half an hour...though low battery warning gives me fair warning so can still test if I can't charge straight awayI was actually wondering the other day how long the battery in the meter would last. I have spares in the house anyway as the codefree meter's battery is used in lots of other household devices. Have had my meter for about six months and probably done just over a hundred tests - not that many to be honest, although am testing more now than I used to.
I get that but, unfortunately, that's the nature of blood glucose meters.
If you're really worried ask your doctor for a blood glucose test - those are the most accurate.
It would be reasonable to compare that with a finger prick test on your blood glucose test meter taken at the same time.
Yes, that would be logical. I'm not sure what you mean by baseline blood glucose levels. They tend to fluctuate throughout the day. A good indicator is the morning fasting level - hence this thread but, that takes time and lots of consistency to reduce.
I would suggest that is unlikely. The only reliable average I know of is the HbA1c which by the nature of it testing the glycated haemoglobin would suggest that the sustained lows of good insulin sensitivity would reduce the impact of high spikes.
Have heard of using inner upper arm but never tried it5.2 fasting catching up on a wrong trend here.
Still using steroid creams on my hands.
Any where else I could prick please?
Any suggestions.
I tried and punctured a few places in hope of a drop but there was none
5.2 fasting catching up on a wrong trend here.
Still using steroid creams on my hands.
Any where else I could prick please?
Any suggestions.
I tried and punctured a few places in hope of a drop but there was none
Thanks Noblehead, I will persist with the fingers then.I'm unsure if the advice has changed but one time the advice was to consult your diabetes care team if you were considering AST (alternative site testing).
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