Hi there.
for some reason my body has decided to save things up and then hit me with them all at once. from someone with generally low BP and normal bloods the last month has seen some significant changes.
my normally low BP is now high - managed by meds (losartin 75 mgs per day) (day 25 of these)
my colesterol is high so hello statins (day 25 of these)
and my blood sugar has decided that being diabetic looks like fun so joined in - managed by 1 tablet of Metformin per day. (on day 8 of taking these)
so, and i fully understand that diabetes is serious, trying to keep a positive outlook on this and learn what lifestyle changes i need to make - lets just say that up to now my lifestyle could be described as sub optimal. Therefore exercise has reappeared in my schedule for the first time in years and i am looking at what i eat much more carefully. the words fruit and salad have also mysteriously made their way into my vocabulary (and shopping list).
my first question though is about the accuracy of the home glucose monitoring devices. I got one as I am a data nerd (its my job to design systems that analyse data) so naturally i want data points to log and monitor. - the system i have is giving readings in the 6.0 -6.4 MM0L/L for the past 5 days (not a lot of data points but a start) which the nice chart that came with it says is in the normal range. Obviously I am happy with this provided its accurate but if these devices are not really that accurate then the data is meaningless.
so hi and let see where this journey leads to
for some reason my body has decided to save things up and then hit me with them all at once. from someone with generally low BP and normal bloods the last month has seen some significant changes.
my normally low BP is now high - managed by meds (losartin 75 mgs per day) (day 25 of these)
my colesterol is high so hello statins (day 25 of these)
and my blood sugar has decided that being diabetic looks like fun so joined in - managed by 1 tablet of Metformin per day. (on day 8 of taking these)
so, and i fully understand that diabetes is serious, trying to keep a positive outlook on this and learn what lifestyle changes i need to make - lets just say that up to now my lifestyle could be described as sub optimal. Therefore exercise has reappeared in my schedule for the first time in years and i am looking at what i eat much more carefully. the words fruit and salad have also mysteriously made their way into my vocabulary (and shopping list).
my first question though is about the accuracy of the home glucose monitoring devices. I got one as I am a data nerd (its my job to design systems that analyse data) so naturally i want data points to log and monitor. - the system i have is giving readings in the 6.0 -6.4 MM0L/L for the past 5 days (not a lot of data points but a start) which the nice chart that came with it says is in the normal range. Obviously I am happy with this provided its accurate but if these devices are not really that accurate then the data is meaningless.
so hi and let see where this journey leads to