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Old 07-05-2008, 03:58 AM #11
bugbarb bugbarb is offline
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bugbarb bugbarb is offline
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Default probably have diabetes for a long time,

I was diagnosed type 2 diabetes less than 3 weeks ago. It scared the holy youknowhat outof me and I immediately began learning to be compliant. I was disabled by lyme disease 11 years ago...took me down like MS, but very rapidly, was on antibiotics for 6 years. Now 2 years ago I began to develop a neuropathy that seems to only be sensory, not motor and sensory like when I had lyme. It started in my thighs and spread to my torso and then my whole body. My hands and feet are least affected. My former neuro doc said that pn usually/always starts with the hands/feet and moves in from there. Mine is oposite of typical. My current doc thinks my neuro problems may be some sort of post lyme complication. A professor of neurology at UCLA couldn't figure me out so I went back to my primary care doc. Was on lyrica 400mg, clonopin 2 .5 mg tabs daily but that left me high/drunk/stupid so I'm on 5x300mg neurontin daily....sometimes 6 pills. how high does blood glucose have to be to cause neuro problems? My doc complained when I hit 140.
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Old 07-05-2008, 07:20 AM #12
glenntaj glenntaj is offline
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glenntaj glenntaj is offline
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Default Blood sugar does not have to be consistently high--

--to cause the type of microvascular disruption that results innerve damage--wild blood sugar swings, and/or a fairly constant "impaired glucose tolerance" level that would be below that at which one would be diagnosed with frank diabetes, can also do it.

Still, given what you've reported, I wouldn't automatically assume that your "new" neuropathy symptoms are necessarily related to high blood sugar.
They well could be, but too many doctors notice a high blood sugar reading and stop their investigations. Given the Lyme history, an autoimmune molecular mimicry effect may be involved, especially with the atypical body part presentation.
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