COVID-19 and risk for people with Diabetes & Diabetic Neuropathy
Does anyone know why diabetes is on the risk list for covid complications? I am wondering if people with neuropathy (a common affliction for those with Diabetes) are also at a higher risk for complications?
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@dorisena. I forgot to mention that my friend who was on intermittent fasting had to have his gallbladder removed. The first thing the surgeon asked him was whether he had lost alot of weight. Not sure if this is related but he did lose over 36 lbs.
@dorisena good morning. How quickly did you loose the 30lbs.? I am also diabetic and have had problems with both high and low readings. So I can relate to the people not understanding what I would be going through.
v/r,
Tammy
I don't want to confuse anyone. I did the Optifast program fifteen years before I was diagnosed with diabetes and after I no longer had the low sugar problem. I did not lose the suggested two or more pounds per week on 800 plus calories because I did not exercise much and was still recovering from the pinched nerve in my upper spine. The director said not to worry about the slow loss and it took three months to lose thirty pounds. Before that I went to bed hungry for a month and only lost two pounds even though I was working in the garden that summer. I know that low blood sugar can come from stress issues and I lived many years under unfavorable family issues. Low blood sugar can starve your brain and leave you unconscious or it can kill you. I do not ever have that problem in my life anymore. Weight loss will always be slow with me mostly because I am not at all athletic and never have been. And I like to cook.
I believe I can live nearly normal with careful eating, some exercise, and good mental health, and a supportive family, with no stress. I am blessed. Dorisena
I have a 9 yr old granddaughter with Type1 since she was not quite 7 years old. I worry about both her and rest of family - her brother is 10; both of their parents are RNs in a hospital (one in ER). I was a nurse also. I worry about all of them!
I seem to be the opposite. I have severe stress, and it raises my blood sugar something awful.
Yes, that is what is confusing to me after all these years. Stress and medicine can raise your blood sugar but in the beginning, stress lowered my blood sugar. In either case, eating on a regular schedule seemed to help the situation immensely so I could manage the stress at the time, either way. But I never figured out what made my body switch over the years. Some people eat more with stress and other people say "how can you eat at a time like this?" so the body response is pretty complicated. I am working on it. I am pretty blunt about my stress in my life. I stayed in my marriage until "death do us part" so my stress is now buried two miles north in the cemetery.
Every day I tell myself that he couldn't help himself and I forgive something. I am healing. I am learning. I am "not done yet." Dorisena
Most of my stress is from my son. He and his family live next door. I think his history of drugs in his teens took its' toll on him in the form of dementia. He can't talk without anger and yelling. His siblings call him the scammer. He justifies how he treats me. Others tell me that he is very narcisstic . One of his daughters is also narcisstic, and all 3 have learning disabilities. These are toxic people.
I understand very well, mummy. I lived with it for 5 0 y ears but didn't know that it was toxic until the last few years when I studied on my new computer late at night. I lived through it because we had a very big house and he avoided me to punish me for not worshiping him and doing what he wanted when he wanted it done. I was meant to be his devoted slave because he was so special.
Yes, you can recognize dementia many times because the previous decent logic has been destroyed and he believes his lies.
Everything the children say and do, one of us taught them. So the daughter learned from her father, or didn't learn what she normally should have learned about life early on. Most say there is no cure because they believe they don't need to change. I won't tell you what to do about it. Any decisions you make will be better than what you are enduring. There is no pill for this. Dorisena
@wisco50 I as a retired nurse feel for them I worry that none will come down with this that are on the front line and in ICU . When I hear one has died it tares me up My heart goes out to you I pray for both of them with you to be safe .
Thank you! I fear for everyone who has a job dealing with the direct public right now!