Showing posts with label symptoms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label symptoms. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Caffeine Weirdness

I love my coffee in the mornings. I drink it black for a few weeks, then switch to cream and splenda, then drift back to black. We've got a pod coffee machine at work, so fresh and tasty coffee is always available. I love pod coffee machines - I have one at home as well - because even I cannot screw up coffee when using them.

Since I've been fighting this cold - almost gone, thank goodness - I've had to swear off caffeine. For some reason one cup of coffee makes me jittery for hours right now! I'm used to being the kind of person who can drink a cup of coffee and go to bed an hour later, so this sudden overreaction to caffeine is really annoying.

Hopefully as the cold departs, the caffeine reaction will too. I'll stick to decaf until then.

This has to be the weirdest side affect for a cold I have ever had.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Blood Sugar 101

Blood Sugar 101 Book CoverAfter much anticipation, my copy of Blood Sugar 101 by Jenny Ruhl arrived this week. It did not disappoint. The book is full of the best tips, techniques and information from Jenny's site, BloodSugar101.com. I've loved Jenny's site since I first encountered it, so buying her book was an absolute must.

Despite the somewhat alarmist subtitle - "What they don't tell you about Diabetes!", the book is very straightforward and to the point. I think this should be a standard 'Textbook' for diabetics. It's got so much useful information on diabetes itself - all backed up by actual medical studies - combined with information on insulin, oral meds, supplements, plus useful techniques for lowering your sugar levels and A1C. I would have never realized chest pain is a Metformin side effect without her detailed analysis.

She asks and answers a lot of very critical questions: Does Diabetes have to progress? (No), At what blood sugar level does organ damage start? (140-160 [7.8-8.9] post meal levels), What should you eat to reduce your blood sugars? (Fewer Carbs).

She explains how to use your meter to find out what foods you react to - no one size fits all diet plans here - as well as coping techniques to stay on your diet. One of these I really like is the idea of 'off plan' eating instead of cheating. How you think of things, the words you use, have a huge effect on how you feel about them. "Cheating" brings a lot of guilt and shame, but "Off Plan" eating brings the focus back on the fact that it's your choice.

It can be a very scary book at times - Jenny is very straightforward about how the disease progresses and the risks of various complication. But it's enormously hopeful too, because it gives practical techniques for avoiding them by keeping your blood sugars low. There's a very simple progression of techniques - Adjust your diet, adjust/add meds, adjust/add insulin - to help you find the right balance of techniques to meet your own goals. She really promotes the least expensive and invasive techniques (diet) before medication and insulin, without pretending that a diet solution is going to work for everyone.

If you have questions about the different types of diabetes, how insulin and glucose are managed by the body, what causes diabetes, how effective different drugs are and what side affects they have, what supplements actually work, and what your doctor should be doing to help you manage your disease, you'll find answers both in the book and at Jenny's website.

I'd recommend this book for anyone with diabetes, and anyone who knows a diabetic. It's available from Amazon or through Jenny's site. But don't just stop at the book. Be sure to visit BloodSugar101.com for even more incredibly useful information, plus Jenny's blog critiquing the latest published studies.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Stuttering

Apparently when I was very young, four or five, I used to stutter. I don't remember doing it at all, but in the last year or so it's come back.

When I'm tired, or stressed, or need to eat I start to feel this chattery teeth sensation. Then I'm forcing myself to slow down to get words out. It's really disconcerting, because I can be one of those mile-a-minute talkers. Not being able to get words out, or not being able to get past repeating a single word or syllable is another is scary scary.

Of course the big part of the fear is that I'm once again out of control. So far I haven't been unable to get words out at work, but today I wasn't feeling well and I had to slow my speaking down to keep talking.

I've tried looking up any tie between diabetes and stuttering, and come up empty. I'm guessing that it's just co-incidence that it's come back so soon after my diagnosis and medication. It's definitely one of the strangest and scariest changes I've had in the last couple of years.