[Diabetes-talk] Another question
Bridgit Pollpeter
bpollpeter at hotmail.com
Wed Apr 11 03:05:41 UTC 2012
Do you have bedtime snacks? This can cause your morning sugars to be
higher. Or it could just be your body changing and adjusting. I'm a type
1, but I will frequently change how my sugars run about every three to
four months. I then need to make adjustments to my insulin routine. Like
I said, sometimes things just happen and there's no real reason for it.
I'm the same weight, stick to the same routine, exercise the same, and
yet I go through these periods when my sugars completely switch. Where I
was low in the morning and higher in the evening, I'll be higher in the
morning and lower in the evening, or whatever. Fluctuations like this
can happen and you just adjust accordingly. Have you considered doing
your exercise at a different time of day to see what happens too?
Sincerely,
Bridgit Kuenning-Pollpeter
Read my blog at:
http://blogs.livewellnebraska.com/author/bpollpeter/
"History is not what happened; history is what was written down."
The Expected One- Kathleen McGowan
-----Original Message-----
From: diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of d m gina
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2012 9:24 PM
To: diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] Another question
OK then we get the whole thing smile, or just the small part of it like
their meter does, and if so their readings were higher.
Truly I was pleased.
I just want my morning readings to be lower than they are in the
morning. Drives me crazy. They started going higher when I started
walking the tread mill. I was always in the one hundred range, now in
the morning I am over two
hundred.
I don't like this for one minute.
Original message:
> All home meters read "whole blood". However, they are calibrated so
> that their readings show up as they would appear were they using only
> plasma. Laboratories use just the blood plasma.
> As I say, nearly all meters now are calibrated to give plasma
> readings. Methinks your doctor ought to know that.
> Mike
> -----Original Message-----
> From: diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org
> [mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of d m gina
> Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2012 6:04 PM
> To: diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org
> Subject: [Diabetes-talk] Another question
> the doctor asked me if my meter took all of the blood reading or just
> the plazmah. he said this was just the edge of the blood work.
> Now I don't know what he means by this, but someone might know.
> How do I know what our meters do.
> I got confused.
> --
> --Dar
> skype: dmgina23
> FB: dmgina
> www.twitter.com/dmgina
> every saint has a past
> every sinner has a future
--
--Dar
skype: dmgina23
FB: dmgina
www.twitter.com/dmgina
every saint has a past
every sinner has a future
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