Uh oh....high blood sugars!
Ok so I've been doing great but the last 2 days my blood sugars have been in the 120's when they've previously been in the 80's. I'm freaking out a little since staving off Type II diabetes was the main reason for this surgery. Hell, by this point it may be Type I? That's what happened to my mom, only without the DS.
Any experts out there have any info on why my blood sugars would be suddenly so high? Anything I may be deficient in that would effect it? I've emailed my surgeon for my new round of labs so I'm hoping I find out something!
Thanks for your help!
Any experts out there have any info on why my blood sugars would be suddenly so high? Anything I may be deficient in that would effect it? I've emailed my surgeon for my new round of labs so I'm hoping I find out something!
Thanks for your help!
These are fasting. First thing in the morning. I'm getting my annual bloodwork done today so I should know something soon. The A1C is included.
I'm hearing that hormones, thyroid and iron can mess with your blood sugars. I know iron is a problem for some on here and I have had low thyroid issues in the past. It takes the T4 and free something test to pick up on it but its there...barely. It could be becoming a bigger issue now. I guess we'll see!
I'm hearing that hormones, thyroid and iron can mess with your blood sugars. I know iron is a problem for some on here and I have had low thyroid issues in the past. It takes the T4 and free something test to pick up on it but its there...barely. It could be becoming a bigger issue now. I guess we'll see!
So MANY things drive blood sugars into small anomalies. Maybe you got a little zap of stress these past few cooler mornings that made your toes curl with the chill. Just that could be enough to change your blood sugar. A silly example, I know, but I'm trying to show you that blood sugar levels are complicated.
Yeah, eating a few extra carbs might have given you a little more *bounce* in levels. In other words, when you ate your chocolate, it might have cause a bit of a bolus, causing a little more insulin to kick in, causing a bit of a drop, causing a bit of a rebound....Like reactive hypoglycemia in miniature.
What I just described is totally within normal limits of how normal people's systems can react to unaccustomed carb intake. I'll be money you're just fine. But go get that A1c done to be sure.
Yeah, eating a few extra carbs might have given you a little more *bounce* in levels. In other words, when you ate your chocolate, it might have cause a bit of a bolus, causing a little more insulin to kick in, causing a bit of a drop, causing a bit of a rebound....Like reactive hypoglycemia in miniature.
What I just described is totally within normal limits of how normal people's systems can react to unaccustomed carb intake. I'll be money you're just fine. But go get that A1c done to be sure.
Also keep in mind that all diabetics have a high sugar reading in the morning (fasting). It's just one of those odd things. I'm sure there's some biochem reason for it, but I'm too lazy to look up the pathway right now LOL. Also stress, some antibiotics, some medications, farting gnomes and some odd fairies can make fasting blood sugar spike. Since it's a snapshot of one moment in time, I'd get the A1C reading like has been suggested since it's a 3 month average. I would suggest to do it again in a couple months to see if you are trending up.
Hugs,
Ratkity
edit: See EN was posting as I was and said the same thing. Careful of farting gnomes, though. They can reek havoc on many things.
Hugs,
Ratkity
edit: See EN was posting as I was and said the same thing. Careful of farting gnomes, though. They can reek havoc on many things.
get your a1c checked but they could be higher then normal if you are starting to get sick or come down with anything. Stress can also cause you to have higher numbers. Also if they do say its D have them check for antibodies, it is possible to get T1 later in life, its not common but it is possible. Also you could take and check before you eat then check again 2 hours after you have eaten to get an idea how effectively your body is handling the foods.
Which test rules out the worry of ever developing type I diabetes? I have SIL's who are identical twins. One has type I and one does not. This was of interest to researchers so they participated in a study. SIL was told she was at no risk of ever developing type I because of.....? (Apparently a long-known test?)