queenbee01
Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
🙂Morning all, Not been around for a couple of weeks, it's been busy at the B and B.
I'm getting confused about my Glucose meter readings. In the last month I have swapped over from using urine testing strips to Glucose Meter readings. I am a Type 2 diabetic taking Metformin and Sitagliptin. In an effort to gain greater control over my BS, I decided to ditch the urine test strips. Since then I have been testing on fasting, 1 hour after a main meal, then 2 hours after a main meal, then once before I retire for the day.
My evening meals are about 50grams of protien with a small mixed salad.
For some weird reason, no matter how low my last meter reading is the night before, my Bs after fasting are always around 10.-10.7 (my nutritionist told me it was because my liver, during the night releases insulin into my blood stream because of the 8 hour period fasting. Apparently this does not happen to everyone.) and apparently my liver is doing this to keep me going because it goes in to fight or flight mode because it does not know when I will eat again.) She suggested taking my medication as soon as I rise and delaying eating breakfast until my blood sugars start to fall to around 6 or 7.
I tried this yesterday. Up at 5.30am blood sugar was 10.7, by 9am it had fallen to 9.8 but by 9.30 it had risen to 9.8. Then I ate scrambled egg on a slice of rye bread with no margarine or butter. 1 hour after my blood sugar had gone up to 10.1 and two hours after it had come down to 7.9
I ate my breakfast when I did because I did not want my BS to start rising again.
I've tried reducing the portion size of my evening meal and not eating any carbohydrates after 3pm but it does not seem to make a blind bit of difference, by BS after fasting is always higher than the last blood test taken the night before.
Secondly, you all go on about maintaining your BS at around 6 -7. How do you do this? is it a constant 6-7 or do you get minor fluctuations through out the day? My Bs readings go up and down all day long, rarely higher than 10.4 and never lower than 5.
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I'm getting confused about my Glucose meter readings. In the last month I have swapped over from using urine testing strips to Glucose Meter readings. I am a Type 2 diabetic taking Metformin and Sitagliptin. In an effort to gain greater control over my BS, I decided to ditch the urine test strips. Since then I have been testing on fasting, 1 hour after a main meal, then 2 hours after a main meal, then once before I retire for the day.
My evening meals are about 50grams of protien with a small mixed salad.
For some weird reason, no matter how low my last meter reading is the night before, my Bs after fasting are always around 10.-10.7 (my nutritionist told me it was because my liver, during the night releases insulin into my blood stream because of the 8 hour period fasting. Apparently this does not happen to everyone.) and apparently my liver is doing this to keep me going because it goes in to fight or flight mode because it does not know when I will eat again.) She suggested taking my medication as soon as I rise and delaying eating breakfast until my blood sugars start to fall to around 6 or 7.
I tried this yesterday. Up at 5.30am blood sugar was 10.7, by 9am it had fallen to 9.8 but by 9.30 it had risen to 9.8. Then I ate scrambled egg on a slice of rye bread with no margarine or butter. 1 hour after my blood sugar had gone up to 10.1 and two hours after it had come down to 7.9
I ate my breakfast when I did because I did not want my BS to start rising again.
I've tried reducing the portion size of my evening meal and not eating any carbohydrates after 3pm but it does not seem to make a blind bit of difference, by BS after fasting is always higher than the last blood test taken the night before.
Secondly, you all go on about maintaining your BS at around 6 -7. How do you do this? is it a constant 6-7 or do you get minor fluctuations through out the day? My Bs readings go up and down all day long, rarely higher than 10.4 and never lower than 5.
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