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    • 9 hours, 49 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      When I test positive, I increase my insulin dosage to a “sick day” level, which can be anywhere from 125% dosage to 400%. I usually start with small increases in dosage, and work my way up until my blood glucose levels even out. Also, increase my water intake. I would not call my Endo unless I was unable to get my blood glucose down over a lengthy period of time. That has never been the case.
    • 9 hours, 52 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      If I had ketones thrn I am sick. If mid to large I wd call my endo or if also vomiting or dehydrated from diarrhea. I wd go to the ER
    • 11 hours, 6 minutes ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      If I were not feeling too bad, I would change my site, increase my insulin, drink more water and monitor closely
    • 11 hours, 6 minutes ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      When I test positive, I increase my insulin dosage to a “sick day” level, which can be anywhere from 125% dosage to 400%. I usually start with small increases in dosage, and work my way up until my blood glucose levels even out. Also, increase my water intake. I would not call my Endo unless I was unable to get my blood glucose down over a lengthy period of time. That has never been the case.
    • 11 hours, 14 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Do you know how to test for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      None of the specialists I’ve seen have suggested, recommended or prescribed methods for doing this in the lovely 40 years I’ve been T1D. My 80th birthday is the summer. It will officially be half of my life.
    • 11 hours, 16 minutes ago
      Patricia Dalrymple likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      I'd most likely call my endocrinologist and ask their advice.
    • 11 hours, 29 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      I increase my basal and insulin ratios if I eat until I show no longer test positive. I do only test if I have been high for a longer than usual time.
    • 11 hours, 30 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      If I were not feeling too bad, I would change my site, increase my insulin, drink more water and monitor closely
    • 11 hours, 51 minutes ago
      Judith Halterman likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      I'd most likely call my endocrinologist and ask their advice.
    • 11 hours, 54 minutes ago
      Derek West likes your comment at
      Do you have a management plan if you test positive for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      If I were not feeling too bad, I would change my site, increase my insulin, drink more water and monitor closely
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      Do you know how to test for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      None of the specialists I’ve seen have suggested, recommended or prescribed methods for doing this in the lovely 40 years I’ve been T1D. My 80th birthday is the summer. It will officially be half of my life.
    • 1 day, 9 hours ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      Do you know how to test for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      I have a blood ketone monitor. It works just like a glucometer.
    • 1 day, 11 hours ago
      Kathy Hanavan likes your comment at
      Do you know how to test for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      Perhaps only the poets who love alliteration could love the phrase, “killer ketones.” The ungodly pain experienced is your body eating and devouring itself. 🥵 Ketones are relentless killers. Do not give the bad guys a chance.
    • 1 day, 12 hours ago
      Judith Halterman likes your comment at
      Do you know how to test for ketones? Please share more in the comments.
      Perhaps only the poets who love alliteration could love the phrase, “killer ketones.” The ungodly pain experienced is your body eating and devouring itself. 🥵 Ketones are relentless killers. Do not give the bad guys a chance.
    • 2 days, 6 hours ago
      Anthony Harder likes your comment at
      Do you have ketone testing strips?
      Hi, Marty. Does your specialist have a source for that claim? It makes little sense that ketones would rise faster than BG since the metabolic pathway is much slower. If there's a source, however, I'd look further into the claim. FWIW, I've been a Type 1 for over 50 years; I can't remember the last time I tested for ketones. I possess no ketone testing strips.
    • 3 days, 8 hours ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      Does your insurance cover injectable glucagon, nasal glucagon, or both?
      Covers it with co pay
    • 3 days, 10 hours ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Does your insurance cover injectable glucagon, nasal glucagon, or both?
      It covers both. I prefer to have the the nasal version as I think it would be easier for someone else to administer.
    • 3 days, 11 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you have a non-expired glucagon prescription?
      I’ve been T1D for 60 years. As a child my mother didn’t like needles or injections so she just fed me when low. In college, explained use to dorm mates and classmates would’ve been a waste of time. Now married, my wife assumed the role of my mother and doesn’t like using needles on me either. I don’t have glucagon.
    • 3 days, 11 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you have a non-expired glucagon prescription?
      Yes, always have one or two nasal glucagon kits (Baqsimi) at home in easy to reach locations (ie at bedside and special container in living area) and always keep one with me when I go out ( along with glucose tabs or other simple carbs for treating LBS.). I apparently required injectable glucagon several times as a child and needed injectable glucagon only twice as an adult, both more than 15 years ago . More recently I needed my husband to give me Baqsimi after eating a difficult to dose for, high fat meal. The experience was terrifying so I don’t go anywhere without it now.
    • 3 days, 11 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you have a non-expired glucagon prescription?
      I actually have 2 non-expired prescriptions. One for Baqsimi and one for Gvoke. I have not filled either of them because they’re $500-600 each.
    • 3 days, 12 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Does your insurance cover injectable glucagon, nasal glucagon, or both?
      My Medicare Part D essentially doesn't cover glucagon when any form is nearly $500!
    • 4 days, 2 hours ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      Do you have a non-expired glucagon prescription?
      Same here. Been as low as 19 (struggling with a vacuum cleaner bag and refused to let it win) but was still able to swallow food. I did used the “red needle” as my husband refers to it once when I went low but was scheduled for surgery and couldn’t eat or drink anything. Only once in 26 years. Fortunate.
    • 4 days, 21 hours ago
      Karen Newe likes your comment at
      Share some of your favorite T1D-related books in the comments:
      Marcus Aurelius Meditations for the benefits of stoicism. Dante’s Inferno for the nine levels of diabetic hell. Kristen Lavransdatter for the benefits of suffering. And best of all, Cervantes Don Quixote for the absurdity of tilting at so many worthless windmills of frenzied diabetic activity.
    • 5 days, 10 hours ago
      Natalie Daley likes your comment at
      Share some of your favorite T1D-related books in the comments:
      Marcus Aurelius Meditations for the benefits of stoicism. Dante’s Inferno for the nine levels of diabetic hell. Kristen Lavransdatter for the benefits of suffering. And best of all, Cervantes Don Quixote for the absurdity of tilting at so many worthless windmills of frenzied diabetic activity.
    • 5 days, 11 hours ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Share some of your favorite T1D-related books in the comments:
      Marcus Aurelius Meditations for the benefits of stoicism. Dante’s Inferno for the nine levels of diabetic hell. Kristen Lavransdatter for the benefits of suffering. And best of all, Cervantes Don Quixote for the absurdity of tilting at so many worthless windmills of frenzied diabetic activity.
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    Have you ever experienced elevated body temperatures as a side effect of high blood glucose levels?

    Home > LC Polls > Have you ever experienced elevated body temperatures as a side effect of high blood glucose levels?
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    Sarah Howard

    Sarah Howard has worked in the diabetes research field ever since she was diagnosed with T1D while in college in May 2013. Since then, she has worked for various diabetes organizations, focusing on research, advocacy, and community-building efforts for people with T1D and their loved ones. Sarah is currently the Senior Marketing Manager at T1D Exchange.

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    27 Comments

    1. Sharon Gerdik

      Not to my knowledge

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. rick phillips

      I sweat like a damn in July in the sun.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. rick phillips

        That’s a pig. In July. Lol

        6
        5 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Mick Martin

      I don’t know! Taking my temperature is the last thing on my mind if my blood glucose levels are high.

      4
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. connie ker

      I get cold when I am low, especially in cold weather! Hot and Cold can affect blood sugars when they rise out of range or fall out of range. Immediate corrections help.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. AnitaS

      No, but I am drenched in sweat if my sugar goes especially low. Luckily with a cgm I don’t believe that has ever happened.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. CandyM

      I don’t notice a temp change with high blood sugars but when I am very low I get extremely hot and then as the glucose level rises, I often get so cold I shake. I usually need a heating pad to recover my temp after those kind of lows.

      2
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. KCR

      I really don’t know–I have never considered this before today!

      2
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Becky Hertz

      I don’t know. I’ve never noticed.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Janis Senungetuk

      Yes, but only when my bg level is past 500 on my meter and that fortunately very rarely happens.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Lynn Smith

      I start feeling hot at about 160. If it goes up to 200, then I don’t feel hot anymore.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Christina Trudo

      said “no” but the real answer should be “I don’t know.”

      2
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Mig Vascos

      I said “other” because I’m not sure if the question refers just to a hot feeling or actually to a fever. My face feels hot if my sugar is high past 250 for a long period of time, but with the CGM that rarely happens any longer.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Angela Naccari

      I have experienced elevated body temp with a very low blood sugar however@

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Kim Murphy

      My body temperature doesn’t actually increase on a thermometer, however I do feel really hot, nauseous and lethargic when blood glucose is high.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Sherolyn Newell

      I have never noticed feeling hot for a high level. Like multiple others, I will break out into a sweat for too low. That’s only if I dip below 50 though, so, luckily, hardly ever.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. LizB

      I’m not sure. Using a pump & CGM I rarely get very high numbers anymore. I haven’t noticed feeling hotter on the rare occasions it does get over 180-200.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Jodi Greenfield

      Just the opposite is true with me. If I’m fighting off an infection or running a fever, my blood sugars tend to get HIGH.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. BARRY HUNSINGER

      I don’t know because I have never checked.

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. ConnieT1D62

      To my knowledge, not as a direct side effect of elevated BG levels. However, if I am sick with a flu or cold virus, or perhaps due to a systemic infection of some sort my temp may or may not elevate due to the inflammatory effect of my body fighting off a foreign invader.

      Like others have mentioned, my internal body temp does a roller coaster swing from perfuse sweating to bone chill cold with shivers during and after a severe episode of hypoglycemia. It never occurred to me to take a body temperature in the aftermath of rebounding from low to high.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Patricia Dalrymple

      Like others, when low I get warm. This past couple of years what I have noticed with highs are extreme indigestion. A couple of times I have worried about heart attack but there is only discomfort around my throat, like I need to burp but it won’t come out. Then, as my sugar gets back under control, it goes away. I definitely feel lousy when my sugar goes high.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. Thomas Cline

      This is a chicken and egg question (although evolutionarily it is clear that the egg came first — but this is just a figure of speach). Whenever someone is sick enough to have a fever (or even is asymptomatic while their immune system fights a virus about which one isn’t even aware), cortisone levels increase causing increased insulin resistance and driving blood sugar higher. Although I know this to be a medical fact (and consistent with experience), how would one prove in any particular case that the fever “caused” the high blood sugar, rather than vice versa, especially when insulin sensitivity can change so capriciously anyway?

      1
      5 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Sadie Robinson

        When my levels are low I break out in a sweat. When high I have a pain in left arm until levels start coming down.

        5 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. Britni

      I said “other” because I’ve never thought to check my temperature when my blood sugar’s high. I do often feel warm or get sweaty when my blood sugar’s either high or low, though. And I think I have a harder time cooling down and catching my breath when my blood sugar’s high.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. Molly Jones

      I chose other because I don’t know.
      My temperature often feels off, but I don’t check it and it is most always normal at hospital.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. LL

      I don’t know. I might just start documenting this and see.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. NAK Marshall

      Not from highs but I have from extreme lows.

      5 years ago Log in to Reply

    Have you ever experienced elevated body temperatures as a side effect of high blood glucose levels? Cancel reply

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