Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Hi Clara, When I have that problem I eat protein and a smallish amount of low GI veggies. My bg will usually behave. YMMV. ~a T2, dx 2002, d&e...Byetta and split Lantus. In a message dated 1/4/2006 3:46:54 PM US Eastern Standard Time, burtoncl@... writes: Hello Everyone, When I test before lunch and it's high, should I delay lunch and do something about it, or should I eat lunch and then test 2 hrs after that and see what it is then? Thanks. Clara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Depends on what you can do. Are you using insulin or oral meds? If insulin, which one. If oral meds, which one(s). How high is high? And if you decide to delay lunch, do you know how long it takes for your bg to get back to whatever number you consider " safe " ? Does your question assume that your fasting bg and breakfast numbers were NOT high? Sorry to answer a question with a bunch of questions, but there are lots of variables - simple answers are usually not found here. CarolR Clara Burton wrote: > Hello Everyone, > > When I test before lunch and it's high, should I delay > lunch and do something about it, or should I eat lunch > and then test 2 hrs after that and see what it is > then? Thanks. > > Clara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 No, I'm not on insulin or oral meds. I'm on the diet and exercise method. In this case, my BG was 157 but sometimes it's higher. Usually it takes a couple of hours for it to get to a " safe " number. Also, in this particular incident, my fasting and breakfast numbers were not high. Clara --- Carol croberts@...> wrote: > Depends on what you can do. Are you using insulin > or oral meds? If > insulin, which one. If oral meds, which one(s). > How high is high? And > if you decide to delay lunch, do you know how long > it takes for your bg > to get back to whatever number you consider " safe " ? > Does your question > assume that your fasting bg and breakfast numbers > were NOT high? Sorry > to answer a question with a bunch of questions, but > there are lots of > variables - simple answers are usually not found > here. > > CarolR > > Clara Burton wrote: > > Hello Everyone, > > > > When I test before lunch and it's high, should I > delay > > lunch and do something about it, or should I eat > lunch > > and then test 2 hrs after that and see what it is > > then? Thanks. > > > > Clara > > __________________________________________ Yahoo! DSL – Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less. dsl.yahoo.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Would exercise help to bring it down in this situation? Sue On Wednesday, January 4, 2006, at 04:26 PM, Clara Burton wrote: > No, I'm not on insulin or oral meds. I'm on the diet > and exercise method. In this case, my BG was 157 but > sometimes it's higher. Usually it takes a couple of > hours for it to get to a " safe " number. Also, in this > particular incident, my fasting and breakfast numbers > were not high. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 It takes so long for my BG to come down that if I test before lunch or some other meal and it's high, and then I exercise, I'd have to wait about a couple of hours before eating the meal. Then I'd be eating way off schedule and my lunch would become my dinner or my dinner would become my bedtime snack, etc. Drinking water also doesn't cause my numbers to go down very quickly either. I'm at a loss about this. It would make me end up eating only a couple of meals a day if I have to delay the meals for so long. --- Sue marysue@...> wrote: > Would exercise help to bring it down in this > situation? > Sue > > On Wednesday, January 4, 2006, at 04:26 PM, Clara > Burton wrote: > > > No, I'm not on insulin or oral meds. I'm on the > diet > > and exercise method. In this case, my BG was 157 > but > > sometimes it's higher. Usually it takes a couple > of > > hours for it to get to a " safe " number. Also, in > this > > particular incident, my fasting and breakfast > numbers > > were not high. > > __________________________________________ Yahoo! DSL – Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less. dsl.yahoo.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 At 02:36 PM 1/4/06, Clara Burton wrote: >Hello Everyone, > >When I test before lunch and it's high, should I delay >lunch and do something about it, or should I eat lunch >and then test 2 hrs after that and see what it is >then? Thanks. How high? What would you " do " about it? If I'm too high and am going to eat lunch I just calculate how much Humalog will lower BG's to where I want them. If there are lots of carbs in lunch for some reason, I'll calculate them in, too, otherwise not. Then I fix lunch, take the shot, and eat. I DO check 1 and 2 hours later, though, just to see what's happening. sky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 That's too bad. I find that if my BG is too high, I can get on the stationary bike and ride 5-10 minutes and bring it down dramatically most of the time. Too bad it doesn't work that way for you. The problem is to get myself to do it, though, LOL. Sue On Wednesday, January 4, 2006, at 05:17 PM, Clara Burton wrote: > It takes so long for my BG to come down that if I test > before lunch or some other meal and it's high, and > then I exercise, I'd have to wait about a couple of > hours before eating the meal. Then I'd be eating way > off schedule and my lunch would become my dinner or my > dinner would become my bedtime snack, etc. Drinking > water also doesn't cause my numbers to go down very > quickly either. I'm at a loss about this. It would > make me end up eating only a couple of meals a day if > I have to delay the meals for so long. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 That's what I do, if it's high I wait til it lowers. Otherwise I found I would stay on the high numbers continually. I think in the beginning I was eating too often and had to eventually space out my meals a bit longer than originally planned. If it's high before lunch chances are after lunch it will be higher than you wanted as well, even if it only raised a normal amount. I couldn't get out of that cycle so I started waiting longer or exercising. It's one of those you just have to experiment with. >When I test before lunch and it's high, should I delay >lunch and do something about it, or should I eat lunch >and then test 2 hrs after that and see what it is >then? Thanks. > >Clara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 I'd start taking a hard look at oral meds, myself. Or even insulin. D&E is only a good treatment if it works for you. CarolR Clara Burton wrote: > It takes so long for my BG to come down that if I test > before lunch or some other meal and it's high, and > then I exercise, I'd have to wait about a couple of > hours before eating the meal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Clara, I have been managing with d&e since 1997. Since your fasting and breakfast numbers were not high (I am assuming you are speaking of 2 hours pp test for breakfast?), then do you have any idea what it was that caused you to be out of range before lunch? A snack? Stress? It's good to figure that out. Secondly, if I am too high before I need to eat .. I avoid lots of carbs and fats. Fats keep your bgs higher longer and you need to let them drop. So, in your case, I would probably eat something like a slice or two of chicken/turkey/tuna with one slice of low carb bread or a low carb tortilla. Test in a couple of hours and see if you need a snack in case your bgs have dropped and you now need something to boost them a bit. Suzz, t2, d&e, dx1997 ----------- > > No, I'm not on insulin or oral meds. I'm on the diet > and exercise method. In this case, my BG was 157 but > sometimes it's higher. Usually it takes a couple of > hours for it to get to a " safe " number. Also, in this > particular incident, my fasting and breakfast numbers > were not high. > > Clara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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