I've been taking Vit D at round 4000 IU daily for a while. Can't say I've noticed any impact on BG, particularly as my carb intake is low.
I haven't really had any illnesses for a few years now, which might be due (partly?) to Vit D but could equally be down to losing weight, low carb, or not having to use public transport much.
I've been taking Vit D at round 4000 IU daily for a while. Can't say I've noticed any impact on BG, particularly as my carb intake is low.
I haven't really had any illnesses for a few years now, which might be due (partly?) to Vit D but could equally be down to losing weight, low carb, or not having to use public transport much.
I’ve been taking Vit D for years now due to my epilepsy. Always 4000 IU. I’ve never noticed it had an impact on my blood sugar and for the most part during my years of taking it I was on the higher side blood sugar wise than lower side, although I did have burnout during this time but even so I don’t believe it had any impact on what my sugars were.
Hello Darion,
Blood glucose changes can be affected by many factors, such as heat, exercise, illness etc but haven't heard of vitamin D affecting glucose levels.
In regards to running at higher glucose levels - do you ever do any basal fasting tests to check your background ratio is set at the right level ? I have found that if I want to lose weight that keeping myself in range and getting levels stable are helpful with weight loss, running high/low affects the way the body is processing glucose and can affect appetite too as when running high we are more hungry as the cells aren't getting the energy, same as running hypo. However getting the basal level right is the foundation for good control and so if your running consistently high during day/night it's vital to check this and adjust.
Here's a link to get you going, its so useful to gain an insight into your basal rate to see if it's at the right level, we all need to check this from time to time: https://www.mysugr.com/en/blog/basal-rate-testing/Hey juicyj
I've never tried the Basal fasting I guess that could be interesting to see the results.
Thanks for the tip!
I'm T2 so my experience might not be directly relevant to yours. But in the last few years, yes. Not had a diabetic level HbA1c since January 2020, and rarely get an unexpected post-meal reading over 6mmol/l.Have your bloods always been well controlled?
I'm T2 so my experience might not be directly relevant to yours. But in the last few years, yes. Not had a diabetic level HbA1c since January 2020, and rarely get an unexpected post-meal reading over 6mmol/l.
If you get more energy from the Vitamin D, it might increase your activity, which then could have a lowering effect on your glucose levels.
I dont know your age, but I would try to avoid these structural nightly highs, they damage your body. Maybe try freestyle libre or another cym/fgm in order to be alerted in case of highs or lows.
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