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will this tiredness ever go?

lizz-starr

Newbie
Messages
1
Hi, i'm a type 1.5 diabetic. I took insulin straight after diagnosis but it seemed to kickstart my pancreas and for 3 years now i've been on no medication. Now i'm more diet controlled which seems to be getting stricter and stricter.
I do suffer from sympomatic hypos when i haven't eaten for a period of time or have been more active than usual. At the other end I obviously get highs and generally these can be anything up to 15, my average range is 5 - 11(after meals), though in the last month i've gotten a few very high readings (22,19,25).

Problem is my Hba1c always comes back perfect, last was 5.6% after what was probably a month on the low side due to changes in environment, basically I moved to uni.
This seems to make doctors think everything is okay, like its a mask but really i get ups and downs as much as any diabetic does!

I'm really worried about upcoming exams, i find revising really taking its toll of diabetes and vice versa. Like it was when I was first diagnosed during high school exams. I seem to get tired a lot and I have mentioned this to my doctor who did mention 'chronic fatigue' syndrome or not there is definately some element of extreme tiredness that affects me. I'm finding it difficult to balance out revision and i also currently have a lot of other things going on coursework and field work and i'm worried on how it will affect my exams.

Its incredibly difficult to say how my blood sugars will react during exams and i clearly need to be careful and consistant with diet and monitoring. I just feel like i've gotten the short straw all the time and all i want to do is get on with my life.
Thanks.
 
Exams are always stressful, but you know when you do a pub quiz and from somewhere get an answer you never knew you knew? Well revision is a bit like that, you may not realise that the knowledge is sticking but it will. The worst thing you can do is worry about forgetting as then your brain is full of "oh I've forgotten" that it wont recall what it does actually know, and it does know it coz you've read it 5 time in revision! So seperate revision worries from blood sugar worries-they aren't related!
 
Hi Lizz and welcome to the forum As you know the HbA1c is just an average and doesn't show the actual peaks and troughs of your levels that you are getting. I wonder if you need to look at your diet again and lower your carbohydrate intake. You were probably told to eat lots of "healthy carbs". The Forum Monitors have written some advice for new members (ignore the "newly diagnosed" mention as I know you are not) which includes advice on diet which I think will help you and make you feel better than you do now. Give it a try and see how you feel. Ask as many questions as you like as someone will always have an answer for you.

 
I am mum to an 18 year old type 1 - she has a HbA1c of 15%, but regularly has "lows" at night, and I'm really at a loss as to how to help her. She's on Apidra and Lantus. Should we review the advice given to her about "carb counting" etc and just reduce carbs? Help!
 
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