This patient support community is for questions related to juvenile diabetes including celiac disease, depression, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia / diabetic keto-acidosis, hypoglycemia, islet cell transplantation, nutritional issues, parenting a diabetic child, pregnancy, pump therapy, school issues, and teens with diabetes.
Our bodies adjust somewhat to higher numbers feeling "normal." For a person who consistently runs in upper 100's - 200s, a reading of 100 can feel awful. That's part of why it's so difficult for some folks to improve their control. By gradually reducing our "average" (a1c is a good measure of that), our bodies gradually adjust to more near-normal ranges.
We experience the feelings of hypoglycemia when our bg drops quickly, as you have described. If a person dropped quickly from 280 to 180, it would feel similar a person dropping from 180 to 80. Finally, oral meds are very difficult to "fine tune" -- as you have experienced.
The stress and adrenaline that goes with it lowers her blood sugars. Every time she performs or does some thing that causes an adrenaline rush her blood sugars drop low and quick. We now try to run her blood sugars a little higher when we know she will be in these situations so as to avoid the severe lows. A friend of mine on the other hand has the exact opposite reaction and runs her child’s sugars little lower, but adjusting her basal rates
I would suggest discussion this situation you are having with your doctor and asking him/her the best way for you to adjust your medications. GOOD LUCK
What's a normal range for you?
I'm just curious so I can see how my numbers compare, cause I'm working to get my number down but I regularly have numbers in the 70-80.