Now Lucyr your reply is what I was hoping for as I was diagnosed with ASD (autism) at the grand age of 65! I'm not sure I like labels, but life WOULD have been easier if I had worn that label as a banner throughout my life! I agree, a hypo and anxiety have exactly the same hallmark symptoms. It has taken me years to realise this. After all, I am "perfectly alright, thank you." Doctor asks "How are you?" Answer given is "I'm fine thank you!" When all the time you have been having hypos at night, before breakfast, at morning tea/coffee, in the middle of a team meeting or a planning meeting for next year's objectives, over the previous week!! I cannot process questions like "How do you feel?" "What do you like?" Would you like jelly, ice cream, fruit or biscuits and cheese?" "All four is not seen as socially acceptable or dietarily desirable." Worse, will what I am about to do/experience turn out to be stressful? How the hell do I know until I am doing it? So, setting a basal rate to take account of potentially stressful situations is kind of a no go area! ""I guess that you, Lucyr, may recognise all of this kind of "stuff". Normal neurotypicals can understand these "foibles" but often dismiss our behaviour as just plain "weird". Hey Ho!
Medication? Now there's an interesting subject! Do you find your response to medicines atypical? The world of medication is unusual since the side-effects of many pharmaceutical compounds are identical to the condition that they are meant to treat! Not sure why this is? Me neither!
A single 20mg capsule of Fluoxetine keeps me less prone to panic attacks. High dose propanolol makes me faint. (I required four catheter ablations to relieve my atrial fibrillation.) A single 20mg tablet of Citalopram takes off all restraints. Two paracetamol tablets are an excellent, fast acting sedative/hypnotic and will put me to sleep. Half a paracetamol tablet reduces anxiety greatly. Half an aspirin is an excellent anti-depressant. I am told that these effects are atypical responses. However, for me, these are real and only recognised after many years yet easily dismissed as the placebo effect.
So diabetic control? Simple; a nightmare. My HbA1c hovers around 7.2-7.4 (in old money) but on a daily basis? May be 10 hypos a week! Thank you for replying. I suspect that many other people with autism have similar diabetes issues. I wonder what the experts know?