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I personally have more troubles with the severe hypos than with the rise before the hypos, but I found that it is important to keep a calendar so that you know when to expect the rise in glucose levels and also when to expect the lows if she happens to be one of the women who has lows afterwards. And also, if she is insulin resistant at that time, she may have to opt to eat a low-carb diet during that time of the month so that there are less carbs requiring insulin and therefore less possibility of glucose highs. Timing is everything. But, yes, we have often heard of this happening at the end of the monthly cycle.
Do write days on a calendar and look for the pattern. For YEARS I would suffer from severe lows at the absolute end of my cycle and it would take me by surprise. Once I discovered the reason and marked my calendar, I no longer worried as much for I knew what to expect on what days. I just lowered my carb intake on the days I expected to run high, and lowered my insulin on the days I expected to drop low. On those days I would also test more often, like every 2-3 hours, so I could catch rising or dropping sugars.
Those activities help me a lot. Especially testing more often on those days and correcting often. If you KNOW that female hormones cause these things, then it somehow is more manageable. Alas, I personally have never had a doctor who brought this up as an issue. For years I would pass out cold every now and then from low blood sugar and my husband finally noticed that it was about the same time of the month every time it happened. My doctors of course did not notice this. Once I did some research and learned about hormonal effects on glucose, I could watch for a slight glucose rise without any reason on a couple of days followed by lows, and the rise and drops were easier to manage.
I personally do not know the names of which hormone causes the insulin resistance, but yes, I do believe that blood tests can show levels of hormones. I would ask my daughter's doctor to look into this. I wonder if hormone therapy is part of the glucose issue? Usually, doctors who prescribe for female problems are not educated about diabetic issues and may not know that a therapy can mess up glucose levels in a type 1 diabetic girl, for type 1 diabetics are not all that common (I have read that only 10 percent of all diabetics are type 1). You might want to discuss this issue with both her endo and her gyn doctors.