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Type 1 Diabetes
Very low blood sugar but still OK
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<blockquote data-quote="EllieM" data-source="post: 2204262" data-attributes="member: 372717"><p>I personally (49 years T1) hate hypos more than just about anything else to do with T1 diabetes. If I could eliminate them altogether I would. When I was twenty or thirty years younger I could definitely detect the loss of cognitive function from a hypo - if I was doing a mathematical calculation I could feel it become more difficult, likewise map reading etc (though I am a poor map reader). My husband used to test my levels by asking me to do mental arithmetic …. </p><p></p><p>My hypo symptoms are now much less than they used to be, though I still wake at night. I would describe it more as an "edgy" feeling than anything else. I make up for it by doing more testing, but it deeply worried me that I had a reading of 2.8 the other day. Having said that, my meter is fairly inaccurate at low levels and I probably should have done a second reading, but I preferred just to treat the hypo.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="EllieM, post: 2204262, member: 372717"] I personally (49 years T1) hate hypos more than just about anything else to do with T1 diabetes. If I could eliminate them altogether I would. When I was twenty or thirty years younger I could definitely detect the loss of cognitive function from a hypo - if I was doing a mathematical calculation I could feel it become more difficult, likewise map reading etc (though I am a poor map reader). My husband used to test my levels by asking me to do mental arithmetic …. My hypo symptoms are now much less than they used to be, though I still wake at night. I would describe it more as an "edgy" feeling than anything else. I make up for it by doing more testing, but it deeply worried me that I had a reading of 2.8 the other day. Having said that, my meter is fairly inaccurate at low levels and I probably should have done a second reading, but I preferred just to treat the hypo. [/QUOTE]
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Very low blood sugar but still OK
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