You should ask for your HbA1C result as it gives a indication of your starting point, you have a right to know that information. Metformin is not one of the meds which cause genuine hypos, some people get similar symptoms but that is usually just the body adapting to lower glucose levels when you make dietary changes.@Ljc
The surgery is within walking distance for me, less than 1/4 mile there and back. The next nearest ones are 1-2 miles away and both have no vacancies for patients just wanting a change. The priorities are for families with children, which is just as it should be, I'm an old fart and not so important.
I have no idea what my Hb thingy was, they don't want to give you info they don't have to it seems. I have done an online request for access to my full medical records, we'll see what transpires with that but I won't hold my breath.
So meds can cause hypos? Umm..that's something of which I was unaware.
Brutally honest food diary.....now that WILL be hard!! Maybe I should not have had that cheese and ham toastie for lunch.....
Cheers Tony.
I have no doubt whatsoever that it's a decent meter - to sell em in the UK the results have to be within a 10-15% tolerance, the better machines being nearer 10% - but the meter is dearer to start off and the ongoing cost to the user ie you, are the strips and lancets so £11.75 for 50 strips rather than £8.@Leadinglights
Thanks for the heads up on these items, will check them out. Just had a quick look on Amazon- what do you guys think of this one? They claim it's used by St. John Ambulance....? https://smile.amazon.co.uk/Kinetik-...=1&keywords=gluconavii&qid=1625394937&sr=8-28
Tony
@trophywench Thanks for this Jenny, it's all a bit confusing for a newbie like me, my old brain can only accept so much info, then I go to bed and it's all dribbled out in the night and I have to go over it all again until it sinks in......I have no doubt whatsoever that it's a decent meter - to sell em in the UK the results have to be within a 10-15% tolerance, the better machines being nearer 10% - but the meter is dearer to start off and the ongoing cost to the user ie you, are the strips and lancets so £11.75 for 50 strips rather than £8.
The meter I use - on prescription cos I'm T1 - is generally more accurate than 10% when I've checked veinous blood and asked the phlebotomist to request a straightforward BG test as well as the plethora of annual blood tests on the form - but the strips were in excess of £25 last time I bought some myself (don't ask - my own fault!) and in terms of what I need the results for frankly, 10-15% would be perfectly OK 99.99r% of the time. I can dose insulin in divisions of 0.01units - but percentages of small numbers are even smaller numbers and cease to be of great import. Yes yes, I do understand when you're an engineer that comment is blasphemy but we aren't talking about tolerances for machining tungsten carbide valves for a nuclear submarine, or making surgical implants for pet hamsters here, are we?
One thing I would suggest you do try and source though, is a Roche Accu-Chek 'Fastclix' finger lancing machine - and the lancing cassettes to fit. By far the kindest device for bodging holes in fingers - and I've had a bit of practice doing that!
Are they the only resilts? They are a 'full blood count' which shows what is going on in all the components of your blood. It checks that your immune system, and clotting mechanisms etc are functioning properly, and that you aren’t anaemic. The first figure in each row is the result, and the bits in square brackets is the normal range you’d expect the results to be in. So if the first figure is somewhere between the figures in square brackets, it means they’re OK.Managed to access my records, a bit of a convoluted system to navigate, they really don't want you to get this information easily do they?
These are my blood test results, can anyone make any sense out of them?
Full blood count
Haemoglobin concentration 162 g/L [130.0 - 170.0]
Total white blood count 7.8 10*9/L [4.0 - 11.0]
Platelet count - observation 280 10*9/L [150.0 - 400.0]
Red blood cell count 5.01 10*12/L [4.5 - 5.5]
Haematocrit 0.465 [0.4 - 0.54]
Mean cell volume 92.8 fL [78.0 - 99.0]
Mean cell haemoglobin level 32.3 pg [27.0 - 32.0]
Above high reference limit
Mean cell haemoglobin concentration 348 g/L [310.0 - 360.0]
Neutrophil count 4.3 10*9/L [2.0 - 7.5]
Lymphocyte count 2.7 10*9/L [1.5 - 3.5]
Monocyte count - observation 0.6 10*9/L [0.2 - 1.4]
Eosinophil count - observation 0.2 10*9/L [0.0 - 0.4]
Basophil count 0.1 10*9/L [0.0 - 0.1]
Nucleated red blood cell count 0.00 10*9/L [0.0 - 0.0]
It's all just so much gobbledegook to me.....
Many people will agree with the cholesterol not being of too much concern but clinicians do seem to be obsessed with it being low, low, low for 'at risk' people. It is needed by the body for all sort of functions, synthesis of hormones, vitamin D, tissue repair but it does seem to be a matter of opinion whether a higher level is of concern, hence the rush to put people on statins.Thanks @Leadinglights for that.
When I had a blood test in Aussie, the clinician there told me not to be concerned about cholesterol at all. He said the latest research said that a high count was not bad at all.
Apparently the medical profession always assumed from the 1800's when post-mortems were performed on heart attack victims, they always found high levels of cholesterol in and around the injury site, consequently they proclaimed that high cholesterol is a bad thing leading to heart attacks. This has been the medicos prevailing view ever since and is taken as written in stone.
He told me the latest research could not support this cause and effect scenario, and they were doing a lot of investigations and had reached the conclusion that far from causing the injury, cholesterol was rushed to the injury site to protect the injury and was like a fire engine coming to put out a fire. That was how he described it.
I have not done any investigations on line about it and cannot vouch for it's veracity. Just reporting what I was told a few years ago.
Tony
The reason clinicians are "obsessed" with getting LDL cholesterol lower for at-risk people is because of the huge volume of consistent, high quality evidence from controlled trials and observational studies which demonstrates a clear link between LDL cholesterol levels and cardiovascular disease. The reason why statins are commonly recommended is because another very large, consistent and high-quality body of evidence demonstrates that they are very safe and very effective means for lowering LDL.Many people will agree with the cholesterol not being of too much concern but clinicians do seem to be obsessed with it being low, low, low for 'at risk' people. It is needed by the body for all sort of functions, synthesis of hormones, vitamin D, tissue repair but it does seem to be a matter of opinion whether a higher level is of concern, hence the rush to put people on statins.
I hope things make a bit more sense to you now.
device_id | seq_num | glucose(mg/dL) | glucose(mmol/L) | date | time | manual | cs | ketone | lo | hi | premeal | postmeal | nomark | fasting | event | insulin_type_1 | insulin_amount_1(U) | insulin_type_2 | insulin_amount_2(U) | carbs(g) | medicine | weight(lbs) | bp_low(mmHg) | bp_high(mmHg) | exercise | exercise_time(min) | memo | ketone_value(mmol/L) | gki_value | gki_glucose(mg/dL) | gki_ketone(mmol/L) | device_id_from |
F046036K1674 | 6 | 180 | 10 | 2021-07-12 | 18:50:50 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | Metformin[3] | 0 | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | | | | | | G |
F046036K1674 | 5 | 225 | 12.5 | 2021-07-11 | 19:04:36 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | Metformin[3] | 0 | 0 | 0 | Low Intensity[1] | 2 | short bike ride | | | | | G |
F046036K1674 | 4 | 259 | 14.4 | 2021-07-11 | 08:39:14 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | Metformin[3] | 0 | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | | | | | | G |
F046036K1674 | 3 | 259 | 14.4 | 2021-07-09 | 20:15:26 | N | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | Metformin[3] | 187.391 | 0 | 0 | Medium Intensity[2] | 10 | 10 miles ride | | | | | G |
F046036K1674 | 2 | 155 | 8.6 | 2021-07-08 | 18:32:30 | N | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | | | | | | G |
F046036K1674 | 1 | 144 | 8 | 2021-07-08 | 17:59:57 | N | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | None[0] | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | 0 | 0 | None[0] | 0 | | | | | | G |