How many here are diabetic?
How many here are diabetic?
When I went to my Dr to discuss sleep issues I also had some high blood sugar readings to discuss with her. I had gestational diabetes while pregnant with my son and was feeling the same way at the time of the Dr appt. She said that she had just checked my levels in Feb (this was May) and they were fine so she blew that off and focused on the sleep issues. The blood sugars were marginal.. just a little high at the time.
So when I began to learn about apnea I learned that it can be linked with diabetes. So I decided that I would stop checking my sugars, adjust to being on Cpap then begin checking again.
This week I have felt pretty crappy... so I started checking again and my sugars are twice what they were in May when I addressed it with the Dr. So I will call her again to see her....
How many here are diabetic? I'm just curious if the link mentioned in the research is observed on this board. I am NOT overweight and other than my history of gestational diabetes and sleep apnea I have no risk factors. I am scared that I am now diabetic and she blew me off before.
Thanks!
So when I began to learn about apnea I learned that it can be linked with diabetes. So I decided that I would stop checking my sugars, adjust to being on Cpap then begin checking again.
This week I have felt pretty crappy... so I started checking again and my sugars are twice what they were in May when I addressed it with the Dr. So I will call her again to see her....
How many here are diabetic? I'm just curious if the link mentioned in the research is observed on this board. I am NOT overweight and other than my history of gestational diabetes and sleep apnea I have no risk factors. I am scared that I am now diabetic and she blew me off before.
Thanks!
Yeppers for me.
I've been "prediabetic" for about as long as I think I've had sleep apnea.....about 10 years. Then was fianlly diagnosed as mild Type II diabetic about 6 months before I started my XPAP therapy. I monitor my sugar very infrequently now.....it's been within limits for the last year and a half...and my last 4 A1C tests were right on the money. I'm on a one-pill-a-day prescription and that, with my XPAP seems to be doing the trick.
Kajun
I've been "prediabetic" for about as long as I think I've had sleep apnea.....about 10 years. Then was fianlly diagnosed as mild Type II diabetic about 6 months before I started my XPAP therapy. I monitor my sugar very infrequently now.....it's been within limits for the last year and a half...and my last 4 A1C tests were right on the money. I'm on a one-pill-a-day prescription and that, with my XPAP seems to be doing the trick.
Kajun
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Mask: Ultra Mirage™ Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: APAP, 8-14 cm H2O. |
This therapy WORKS!!!
Diabetic?
Yes, diet controlled.
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Mask: TAP PAP Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Improved Stability Mouthpiece |
Humidifier: S9™ Series H5i™ Heated Humidifier with Climate Control |
Additional Comments: Bleep/DreamPort for full nights, Tap Pap for shorter sessions |
My SleepDancing Video link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jE7WA_5c73c
Yep, Insulin dependent. I also noticed a 50 unit drop in the amount of insulin I have to take per day once I went on CPAP.
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Humidifier: HC150 Heated Humidifier With Hose, 2 Chambers and Stand |
Additional Comments: 11cm/H2O, Encore Pro 1.8i, Pro Analyzer, Encore Viewer1.0 - 3 Remstar Pro2's, 1 Remstar Auto |
Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, shouting: "Wow what a ride!"
I still play Cowboys and Bad Guys but now I use real bullets. CAS
I still play Cowboys and Bad Guys but now I use real bullets. CAS
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Lucky so far on the Diabetes Was just tested in June and got 99 mg/dL If I understand what I've read right it's just under pre-diabetes levels. But then again I didn't follow the fasting times properly. Was still eating pizza and and drinking sugary icies well past midnight and I showed up promptly at 8am for the test. Should of really been thinking, but it was D&D night and well we were playing till early hours of the morning. I told my Dr. that after I realized the mistake and he said it was fine because the number would of just been lower. My question is how often should you be checked if you're at high risk. I've looked all over and haven't seen anything that has a suggested testing interval.
Christy
Christy
Admiral Cougar
I was at pre-diabetic (type 2) levels, for a few years, up to the point when I started PAP therapy. Since then, it's been climbing. A few weeks ago I started testing again and got shook up by the numbers. Something jogged my brain and remembered some posts on the forum about adding cinnamon to one's diet. Did some searches on the forum and on other web sites (there have been some studies done) and within the last week or so started taking cinnamon capsules and adding cinnamon to some foods and my coffee and the numbers have been coming down. Still trying to figure out what I can and can't eat.....doesn't seem to correlate with what I'm reading on the diabetes websites. When I tried taking Metformin/Glucophage a couple of years ago, I had an adverse reaction from it.....so I quit that.
The damned testing strips ain't exactly cheap (to do this as often as one needs to).
We'll see what happens.....
Den
The damned testing strips ain't exactly cheap (to do this as often as one needs to).
We'll see what happens.....
Den
I've been an insulin dependent diabetic for 24 years now, I've been using an insulin pump for the last 7 years and it keeps me pretty much under control.
I just started using my CPAP machine 3 weeks ago and have not seen any changes in my blood sugar levels, however, I'm fairly new at using my CPAP machine so I don't know if it will change with time, I'm getting better sleep though, I don't snore anymore at night and feel more rested in the mornings.
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CPAPopedia Keywords Contained In This Post (Click For Definition): cpap machine
I just started using my CPAP machine 3 weeks ago and have not seen any changes in my blood sugar levels, however, I'm fairly new at using my CPAP machine so I don't know if it will change with time, I'm getting better sleep though, I don't snore anymore at night and feel more rested in the mornings.
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CPAPopedia Keywords Contained In This Post (Click For Definition): cpap machine
Over the past few years, the criteria for diagnosing Type II has become stricter. There may even be a time when fasting BG levels are in the upper normal range even though sugar runs rampant during the day, causing harm before diagnosis. Here is a short article describing some of the levels that lead to a positive diagnosis.
http://www.healthandage.com/public/heal ... betes.html
http://www.healthandage.com/public/heal ... betes.html