On May 16, 4:26 am, Kumar <
[email protected]> wrote:
> On May 16, 11:33 am, Kumar <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> For dynamic understanding:-
>
> Can persisting hyperglycemia be a cause/reason to hyperglycemia--a
> vicious circle? If yes, how?
There are nonlinearities that make achieving a stable control
difficult for me.
Others here talk about control systems that respond slowly or
slugglishly. In my case, my body doesn't produce any insulin, so all
this has been crystal clear to me for 25 years.
Insulin is most effective when all my other systems are running well.
If something goes wrong, and I'm not able to exercise like I want, or
I've got some sort of virus or infection going on, then the insulin
isn't so effective and my bg's will be high. And if my bg's are high I
don't feel like exercising, or all the other things that keep me
running well. I would not describe the overall result being a "vicious
circle" most of the time (although in fact I have used that exact
phrase in the past!) but rather a very delicate balancing act. And
it's not just physical things but emotional and mental states coming
into play too.
Kumar, sometimes I feel that your questions are phrased way too
broadly, and while you're obviously fishing about for some
correlation, you will often get not the broad correlation you seem to
be fishing for but some specific examples out of me. Strangely enough
when I provide specific examples out of my experience others resort to
name-calling. Other times you seem to get stuck in a "vicious circle"
with our favorite trolls working well away from specifics but stuck in
stupid generalities that (to be honest) I simply don't care about.
Tim.