Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
 | 

type 2 diabetes

by clbear, Aug 05, 2004 12:00AM
my blood sugar recently jumped from 8.0 range to 19.4-22.0 presently on  3 500 mg/day with a lung infection what is the highest acceptable range and what damage will this cause? is there a separate site for type 2? thank you

by JDRF-Team-ES, Aug 05, 2004 12:00AM
Unfortunately, I'm not certain about the numbers you are presenting.  If the 8.0 - 19.4-22 is your Hemaglobin A1C, then that sounds pretty high to me.  Since I am not a physician, I can't tell you what the highest acceptable range is or what the consequences might be.  The length of time your blood sugars remain high will also have an impact on the consequences.  I do know that studies have found that diabetics with A1C's below 7 drastically reduce their risk of having any of the long term complications of diabetes which can be very serious.  

I don't know how you are currently treating your diabetes, but when blood sugars are extremely elevated for long periods of time in Type 2 diabetics, insulin injections may be recommended to help lower the blood sugars. I know how scary injections can be to a Type 2, but if that is what your doctor ultimately recommends, I promise you that it will be better than how you are probably feeling now and certainly beter than having some of the complications that can occur from prolonged high blood sugars.  Your higher blood sugars may also be caused by your lung infection, so this may be a temporary setback  for you.  Keep following your doctor's advice and I hope you feel better soon.
Es
Member Comments (2)

by JDRF-Team-LRS, Aug 06, 2004 12:00AM
CLBear,
You might enjoy a diabetes discussion board that's got topics for Type 2s and Type 1s and for the stuff we share.  

I highly recommend this site:
http://chat.joslin.harvard.edu:8080/~diabetes

You don't need to register to read the information there, but you may need to register to post (it's free, tho').  Folks who post can choose to be anonymous.

No one there is a physician either, but there're a lot of experienced folks with diabetes looking to give & to get good tips, tricks, and encouragment.
Post Comment
To
Comment
Post Comment
Recent Activity
kris123 feels better today
vicki9168 is tired but whats new
Alex_X_18 grades are in I made 3 B's and anA
jnelsen joined this community
Welcome them!
Dec 12
Bonlambert joined this community
Welcome them!
Dec 10
NeedsHelpBAD commented on i need some one to te...
Dec 10
Irnoid joined this community
Welcome them!
Dec 10
Sakitumi added the Diabetes Tracker
Dec 10
RSS Expert Activity
EVIDENCE-BASED APPROACH TO NEUTER S...
18 hrs ago by Arnold L Goldman, D.V.M.
HOW DO/SHOULD DOCTORS THINK ABOUT T...
18 hrs ago by Arnold L Goldman, D.V.M.
Simple tool to Assess your Risk for...
Dec 14 by Lee Kirksey, MD
Community Members