I would agree apart from people who are ketoadapted on low carb diets who actually need less glucose in their blood because their neurons have shifted to get more energy from alternative sources.under 3.5 isn't good for anyone
I would agree apart from people who are ketoadapted on low carb diets who actually need less glucose in their blood because their neurons have shifted to get more energy from alternative sources.
I have always been told anything below 4 is when to treat a hypo. I was also told that if I'm away to have a meal 3.9 is ok but any lower I should treat the hypo before the meal.
Thats what I have been doing lately.Personally what I do with a level in the late 3's (with no active IOB) is to have a jelly baby and wait 5-10 mins and then inject/eat or have my food then inject afterwards, making a small reduction in the dose so my bg would be higher when I next ate.
Actually the 2,1 was in the dentist chair after a root canal - and not a single person knew I was low, not even my dad who'd driven me to the office (I was going to drive but though after that wort of stuff better to have him do it if possible - good thing as well). My dad was shocked at how low I got and the ppl in the dental office where clueless and useless about it - my dad was less then pleased since the dentist actually had a hissy fit that I popped four gluco tabs when I wasn't suppose to have anything for an hour after, she and they where cluless about treatment (needless to say I reported them to the medical board around here, and refuse to use them again as being unsafe ppl to be near).Is this a little like drinking where other people know you are drunk long before you do? Has anyone ever spotted it before you did?
I suspect that under conditions of shock or trauma glucose may be withdrawn from the peripheral blood and conserved in the core, just as blood itself is conserved in the body core in those conditions. So your core BG would have been higher than the 2.1 measured at the periphery.Actually the 2,1 was in the dentist chair after a root canal - and not a single person knew I was low, not even my dad who'd driven me to the office (I was going to drive but though after that wort of stuff better to have him do it if possible - good thing as well). My dad was shocked at how low I got and the ppl in the dental office where clueless and useless about it - my dad was less then pleased since the dentist actually had a hissy fit that I popped four gluco tabs when I wasn't suppose to have anything for an hour after, she and they where cluless about treatment (needless to say I reported them to the medical board around here, and refuse to use them again as being unsafe ppl to be near).
Agree the great body hypo awareness symptoms
are and can be the bodies pre-warning alert function .
I find my head switches into a real 'fight' mode
Craves food with excessive hunger within lowered
BG levels .
Thus makes me seek out something to eat 'fast'
to prevent my own BG levels crashing lower .
I do find I have to act according to my bodies trigger signals
quickly .
This is when hypo awareness is the bodys pre warn system on .
Some people don't have this at all - how 'do' they cope ?
With the lack of this built in - body function
I would be very interested to hear
Artemis the porcine insulin has a kick like a mule with hypo's... well - after switching my insulin, I now understand the saying "four is the floor"....!!
Two and a half weeks off Levemir and four days off Novo - and all of a sudden I can feel anything around / lower than a 4.5.... prior to this I was in the 3's and not noticing - which was worrying after only being on insulin 2.5 months!
Thanks so much for all your replies - has helped convince me I was on the wrong insulin (for me) and helped me make the decision to try another.... long may this new hypo-awareness last!
Life becomes very frightening and difficult when you lose all your in built ea
Life becomes very frightening and difficult when you lose all your in built early warning hypo signs. Until you lose them you don't realise what a vitally important and to some extent unrecognised role they play in safe diabetes management. At first when I started to go unconscious without warning I thought it must be a one off but after numerous episodes where I lost consciousness it became more obvious that something had gone seriously wrong with my hypo awareness. There are various reasons for losing awareness including length of time since diagnosis, autonomic neuropathy, frequency of hypos and changing to a different insulin.
There are recognised ways to try and restore some of your own awareness by running slightly higher blood glucose for a period of time and in some cases this works well. In my case this had no effect and I became terrified of going anywhere on my own as it's like living on a knife edge waiting for the next serious episode. I started to use a pump 13 years ago to try and achieve as good control as possible and reduce circulating insulin to a minimum but I was still going unconscious. I thank goodness for technology in the form of CGM in which I have to put total trust along with many finger bg tests. I did get referred to consider a pancreas transplant which if successful does restore hypo awareness but for various reasons I chose not to pursue it at that time.
Living without hypo awareness puts diabetes at the front of my mind all the while, relying on CGM has made my life infinitely safer but it doesn't replace self awareness. I would welcome the chance to shake and sweat again with a bg in the 3's, in fact I think I'd really enjoy it!
rly warning hypo signs. Until you lose them you don't realise what a vitally important and to some extent unrecognised role they play in safe diabetes management. At first when I started to go unconscious without warning I thought it must be a one off but after numerous episodes where I lost consciousness it became more obvious that something had gone seriously wrong with my hypo awareness. There are various reasons for losing awareness including length of time since diagnosis, autonomic neuropathy, frequency of hypos and changing to a different insulin.
There are recognised ways to try and restore some of your own awareness by running slightly higher blood glucose for a period of time and in some cases this works well. In my case this had no effect and I became terrified of going anywhere on my own as it's like living on a knife edge waiting for the next serious episode. I started to use a pump 13 years ago to try and achieve as good control as possible and reduce circulating insulin to a minimum but I was still going unconscious. I thank goodness for technology in the form of CGM in which I have to put total trust along with many finger bg tests. I did get referred to consider a pancreas transplant which if successful does restore hypo awareness but for various reasons I chose not to pursue it at that time.
Living without hypo awareness puts diabetes at the front of my mind all the while, relying on CGM has made my life infinitely safer but it doesn't replace self awareness. I would welcome the chance to shake and sweat again with a bg in the 3's, in fact I think I'd really enjoy it!
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