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Re: Screwy Meter Readings

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> I just checked my blood sugar 4 times right in a row. The

> first reading was sky high, 176. The next reading was 159

>... same meter.... 3rd reading, same meter 143. Switched

> meters and tested 146. All of this within a minute or so.

> I had taken a 1/4 of a regular glipizide tablet and wanted

> to make sure I wasn't going too low. HA! What a surprise

> those numbers were.......... What would throw the numbers

> around like that? Bad strips? Low battery?

Hi

You got variation, but for a moment, forget the differences and just

look at what you got.

Worst: 176

Best:143

Average:156

% difference 176 to 153: 12.8%

% difference 143 to 153: 8.3%

Within reasonable tolerances for field use.

Now, forget all that. It doesn't matter. Whether it was 143, 156 or

176 - it was too high. What did you eat at the meal before that

reading? What activity had you done since the meal?

It is an indicator that your meal, or your meds, or your activity, or

all of those, needs review. Not your meter or your batteries.

Cheers, Alan

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I think the problem with the numbers is my medication. I took my

regular meds very early this morning, around 7am. That included 5mg

of extended release glipizide and 500mg of metformin. The extended

release glipizide does not control as well as I would like but it

does keep me from real highs to real lows within a matter of an hour.

I have been compensating the extended release with a fourth of a

regular glipizide tablet if my numbers were creeping up in the

evenings. I had the same dinner tonight that I had last night. No

spike last night but big one tonight. Has to be the med schedule. I

am truly hoping my next A1C will be higher than my last so I can

convince my doctor that I need a different medication schedule. She

just wouldn't listen to me the last visit because the A1C was 5.3

If she knew I was taking extra glipizide, she would be very unhappy..

but I have the meds and will use them if I need to.

> Hi

>

> You got variation, but for a moment, forget the differences and just

> look at what you got.

>

> Worst: 176

> Best:143

> Average:156

> % difference 176 to 153: 12.8%

> % difference 143 to 153: 8.3%

>

> Within reasonable tolerances for field use.

>

> Now, forget all that. It doesn't matter. Whether it was 143, 156 or

> 176 - it was too high. What did you eat at the meal before that

> reading? What activity had you done since the meal?

>

> It is an indicator that your meal, or your meds, or your activity,

or

> all of those, needs review. Not your meter or your batteries.

>

> Cheers, Alan

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, I never thought I would hear someone say they wanted a HIGHER

A1c reading. LOL

If you tell your doctor that the only way you had the great 5.3 was

because YOU were adjusting your meds based on what your body was

telling you, wouldn't that " shut her up " so to speak? Would that

perhaps convince her that you were the best judge of what you needed?

Do you also take a fast acting insulin? If so, would it be better to

use that than to take the extra glipizide, which is a sulfonyl urea? I

understand that sulfs cause your pancreas to pump out insulin whether

or not you need it, whereas a short acting insulin works and then goes

away.

> I think the problem with the numbers is my medication. I took my

> regular meds very early this morning, around 7am. That included 5mg

> of extended release glipizide and 500mg of metformin. The extended

> release glipizide does not control as well as I would like but it

> does keep me from real highs to real lows within a matter of an

hour.

> I have been compensating the extended release with a fourth of a

> regular glipizide tablet if my numbers were creeping up in the

> evenings. I had the same dinner tonight that I had last night. No

> spike last night but big one tonight. Has to be the med schedule.

I

> am truly hoping my next A1C will be higher than my last so I can

> convince my doctor that I need a different medication schedule. She

> just wouldn't listen to me the last visit because the A1C was 5.3

>

> If she knew I was taking extra glipizide, she would be very unhappy.

..

> but I have the meds and will use them if I need to.

>

>

> > Hi

> >

> > You got variation, but for a moment, forget the differences and

just

> > look at what you got.

> >

> > Worst: 176

> > Best:143

> > Average:156

> > % difference 176 to 153: 12.8%

> > % difference 143 to 153: 8.3%

> >

> > Within reasonable tolerances for field use.

> >

> > Now, forget all that. It doesn't matter. Whether it was 143, 156

or

> > 176 - it was too high. What did you eat at the meal before that

> > reading? What activity had you done since the meal?

> >

> > It is an indicator that your meal, or your meds, or your activity,

> or

> > all of those, needs review. Not your meter or your batteries.

> >

> > Cheers, Alan

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Hi ,

I do not take any insulin. I only have the two medications I am

supposed to be taking; XR Glip and 1 metformin. My doctor doesn't

believe me when I tell her I was way high and then way low on the

regular glipizide. She wouldn't even look at my journal entries last

visit. The only reason that A1C would have been that low was because

I had some really low readings with the regular glipizide. I was

fighting to stay above 70 even when I was eating breakfast and lunch

on a regular schedule. Then I was always real high after supper. So

I asked to switch to the extended release in hopes of having more

stable numbers throughout the day. It just doesn't seem to be

working as well as I had hoped so I added the 1/4 glip to compensate

when my numbers are higher than I want them to be. It is just dumb

luck that I happen to have the regular glip tablets. My doctor would

never prescribe that much medication for me........ so it seems

sensible if the A1C is higher next visit, she will be forced to

change my med schedule.....

There is method in my madness!! :-D

> , I never thought I would hear someone say they wanted a

HIGHER

> A1c reading. LOL

>

> If you tell your doctor that the only way you had the great 5.3 was

> because YOU were adjusting your meds based on what your body was

> telling you, wouldn't that " shut her up " so to speak? Would that

> perhaps convince her that you were the best judge of what you

needed?

>

> Do you also take a fast acting insulin? If so, would it be better

to

> use that than to take the extra glipizide, which is a sulfonyl

urea? I

> understand that sulfs cause your pancreas to pump out insulin

whether

> or not you need it, whereas a short acting insulin works and then

goes

> away.

>

>

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<snip>

> I am truly hoping my next A1C will be higher than my last so I can

> convince my doctor that I need a different medication schedule. She

> just wouldn't listen to me the last visit because the A1C was 5.3

>

, I'm sorry, but that's just plain crazy.

Don't wish for a higher A1c, just change to a different doc.

Your meal may have been the same - but what was it?

Cheers, Alan

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Crazy perhaps, but I am not in a position to change doctors. That is

just out of the question at the moment. Supper was Mazetti and a side

salad. Mazetti is a casserole made with ground beef, hot sausage, bell

pepper, onion, tomato soup, cream of mushroom soup and whole wheat wide

noodles. Like I said, I ate the same thing last night with no spike.

I took my meds early this morning. I usually don't take them until

around 11am or later depending on when I finally got to bed the night

before. My morning numbers had been better since I started the

extended release glip....... around 100 to 110 instead of the usual 140

to 150.

> , I'm sorry, but that's just plain crazy.

> Don't wish for a higher A1c, just change to a different doc.

> Your meal may have been the same - but what was it?

>

> Cheers, Alan

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On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 05:39:50 -0000, " "

wrote:

>Hi ,

>

>I do not take any insulin. I only have the two medications I am

>supposed to be taking; XR Glip and 1 metformin. My doctor doesn't

>believe me when I tell her I was way high and then way low on the

>regular glipizide. She wouldn't even look at my journal entries last

>visit.

I know we're sounding like a stuck record but...

New doctor time. One that arrogant, I might even be tempted to file a

complaint with the state medical board.

---

De Armond

See my website for my current email address

http://www.johngsbbq.com

Cleveland, Occupied TN

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At 01:39 AM 7/9/05, wrote:

>I do not take any insulin. I only have the two medications I am

>supposed to be taking; XR Glip and 1 metformin. My doctor doesn't

>believe me when I tell her I was way high and then way low on the

>regular glipizide.

what I find myself wondering is why you're being given both metformin and

glipizide when your dosage of metformin is so low. Seems like it would make

more sense to take your metformin up to the highest dosage first. If you

get the extended release sort, there's little (I had none) intestinal upset.

I can't understand why you're even having massive highs and lows unless the

glipizide is just forcing too much insulin into your system when, as a type

2 diabetic, you probably already have lots of it in your blood even if

insulin resistance keeps it from being used properly.

>She wouldn't even look at my journal entries last visit.

Can you find a new doctor? You need someone who wil work WITH you, not

against you. You're paying them, they're not paying you.

sky

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Hi ,

I would be quite happy to change doctors if it were financially

possible. However, with no insurance, it just isn't at this time. I

am treated at the local hospital outpatient clinic which is place for

peopeople with no health insurance and very limited financial

resources. I kept my insurance coverage for as long as I possibly could

but after my husband was hospitalized and the insurance company denied

his claim, it left us with a $7000 medical debt. We paid over half of

it, all out of pocket. We still owe over $3000 to the hospital even

though they know our situation and that my husband is diabled with

emphysema.

So until something changes, I am stuck with this doctor. I have to

make do with what I have to work with instead of what would be ideal.

I will change doctors as soon as it is possible. Until then, I will do

the best I can with what I have available.

>

> I know we're sounding like a stuck record but...

>

> New doctor time. One that arrogant, I might even be tempted to file a

> complaint with the state medical board.

>

>

> ---

> De Armond

> See my website for my current email address

> http://www.johngsbbq.com

> Cleveland, Occupied TN

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What meter is this? The older ones that take more blood, it's very easy to not

get enough blood on the strip.

Yours,

Dora

Austin, Texas

villandra@...

Re: Screwy Meter Readings

> I just checked my blood sugar 4 times right in a row. The

> first reading was sky high, 176. The next reading was 159

>... same meter.... 3rd reading, same meter 143. Switched

> meters and tested 146. All of this within a minute or so.

> I had taken a 1/4 of a regular glipizide tablet and wanted

> to make sure I wasn't going too low. HA! What a surprise

> those numbers were.......... What would throw the numbers

> around like that? Bad strips? Low battery?

Hi

You got variation, but for a moment, forget the differences and just

look at what you got.

Worst: 176

Best:143

Average:156

% difference 176 to 153: 12.8%

% difference 143 to 153: 8.3%

Within reasonable tolerances for field use.

Now, forget all that. It doesn't matter. Whether it was 143, 156 or

176 - it was too high. What did you eat at the meal before that

reading? What activity had you done since the meal?

It is an indicator that your meal, or your meds, or your activity, or

all of those, needs review. Not your meter or your batteries.

Cheers, Alan

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Guest guest

I use the True Track meter most of the time. It was the one giving

me the goofy readings. I also checked once with a One Touch. The

last two readings were close so I took those two numbers to be about

right.

> > I just checked my blood sugar 4 times right in a row. The

> > first reading was sky high, 176. The next reading was 159

> >... same meter.... 3rd reading, same meter 143. Switched

> > meters and tested 146. All of this within a minute or so.

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Those noodles very likely caused the problem. Doens't matter whether

they're whole wheat or any other kind it's still a grain and will raise

BGs. Prepared soups such as tomato and mushroom should be checked for

carb counts too.

But I'm sure ot hers have mentioned this by now. I've been gone for 3

days, just catching up on accumulated email.

Vicki

Re: Screwy Meter Readings

> Crazy perhaps, but I am not in a position to change doctors. That is

> just out of the question at the moment. Supper was Mazetti and a side

> salad. Mazetti is a casserole made with ground beef, hot sausage,

> bell

> pepper, onion, tomato soup, cream of mushroom soup and whole wheat

> wide

> noodles. Like I said, I ate the same thing last night with no spike.

>

> I took my meds early this morning. I usually don't take them until

> around 11am or later depending on when I finally got to bed the night

> before. My morning numbers had been better since I started the

> extended release glip....... around 100 to 110 instead of the usual

> 140

> to 150.

>

>

>

>> , I'm sorry, but that's just plain crazy.

>> Don't wish for a higher A1c, just change to a different doc.

>> Your meal may have been the same - but what was it?

>>

>> Cheers, Alan

>

>

>

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Well, unless they're soy noodles :)

I'm tempted to try some of these that were recommended as a " protein serving "

option on

the Nutrisystem Board I visit - but I'm very wary of soy noodles after a bad

experience with

this high-dollar stuff I bought once.

http://p2.hostingprod.com/@thaikitchen.com/soynoodlesoupbowl.html#

SulaBlue

> Those noodles very likely caused the problem. Doens't matter whether

> they're whole wheat or any other kind it's still a grain and will raise

> BGs. Prepared soups such as tomato and mushroom should be checked for

> carb counts too.

>

> But I'm sure ot hers have mentioned this by now. I've been gone for 3

> days, just catching up on accumulated email.

> Vicki

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At 07:20 PM 7/10/05, SulaBlue wrote:

>Well, unless they're soy noodles :)

>

>I'm tempted to try some of these that were recommended as a " protein

>serving " option on

>the Nutrisystem Board I visit - but I'm very wary of soy noodles after a

>bad experience with

>this high-dollar stuff I bought once.

I've never wanted to eat lots of soy products, myself, after reading about

all of the uh, estrogen-like chemicals in soy beans. I can't remember the

name. On the other hand, at my age maybe it wouldnt matter if I ingested

estrogen-like stuff. Who knows?

Last night I ingested three ears of corn. Bad idea, I know, but I was weak.

Checked BG at 1/2 hour intervals and it warn't a purty sight. I so love

fresh corn. Tonight I'll try ONE ear and have a steak along with and see

what happens. Had a huge veggie salad at lunchtime. Tune in tomorrow for

the exciting results. 8-/ That is, those who haven't delegated my

messages to the (gasp!) trash bin. O Woe.

-=skydancer=-

I tried sniffing coke once but the

ice cubes kept getting stuck in my nose.

www.skydancers.com

http://www.skydor.com

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