This weekend involved a lot of highs. I hit over 250 Friday night, reached 300 on Saturday and was over 500 on Sunday. Sunday’s was the worst. It was also the scariest, and also made me feel like crap. I was coaching a football game Sunday afternoon and I was sweating a lot and felt a little low so I drank some Gatorade. After the game and when I got home I tested and I was at about 240. I then ate Arby’s because Sunday is my diet cheat day. About 2 hours later I started to feel a little crappy, just felt like laying down. No big deal I thought because I was up early and was out in the sun all day. I tested and I was now up to 300. I figured it was because I ate fatty food so it will take a while for my levels to get back down.
Then I started to feel really thirsty and my stomach was starting to hurt. I tested again and now it was over 400. So I take some more insulin to correct. About an hour later, or maybe even less then that, I tested again because I was even more dehydrated, and that’s when the meter gave the worst reading, “HI”
I didn’t panic because I knew I could bring it down, just do everything that I was always taught from my diabetes educator, thank god I’m able to still have a CDE! I corrected on my pump and took the necessary insulin. I tested 30 minutes later, still says high, so I changed my site and corrected with insulin in the new site. I layed down and tried to fall asleep and wake up and hope that it was lowered. I woke up about 45 minutes later and now finally I got a reading, it was down to 435.
Before I finally went to bed at midnight, it was down to 235. I woke up at 4:30 this morning with a blood sugar of 65. Talk about going from one extreme to the other. I went downstairs and had some OJ and of course a few Skittles. I went back to sleep and when I woke up and went to Dunkin Donuts for breakfast, I tested and I was at 106. So luckily I was able to get it down and get it back to where it needed to be. I ran a little high all day today as well, around 200 all day long. I just came back from the gym for an hour and I am about 160 right now. I thought my sugar was running high because I was starting to feel sick, but now I think that I felt sick because my sugars were high.
Well I guess this is part of living the life of a diabetic.
I have had that happen many times. When it does I take the correction insulin with a needle in a new place with no scarring. That way I am sure that it gets into me. The pump might have a problem and I might not get the correction insulin. It takes days to get over those highs.
Also, when I get those highs I drink a gallon of water. It helps me flush the sugar out faster I think. It certainly makes me feel better, not dehydrated.