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If their sugar is 200 on a regular basis, they need to talk to their doctor about changing their diet or medication. If this happens only once in a while, changes in diet or exercise can help lower their levels.

2007-02-16 21:57:50 · answer #1 · answered by ♥ terry g ♥ 7 · 0 0

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2016-05-17 18:37:39 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

200 is high but not life threating.My step father sugar is expected to be no lower then 80 and no higher then 180.Just ask the person whos reading is 200 what the doctor said to do.I have no idea if this person is on pills or insulin or a controled diet.If it`s a controled diet then the diet is not being controled well and the person needs to see the doctor for another diabetic plan.

2007-02-16 13:16:57 · answer #3 · answered by darlene100568 5 · 0 0

According to recent studies conducted by the Pritikin Longevity Center, diabetes starts from too much fat in the diet and insufficient exercise, not malfunction of the pancreas as previously thought. The pancreas continues to produce insulin when you have diabetes but the body becomes insulin resistant. Research has shown that over 90% of diabetes cases can be CURED with diet and exercise. That means that you don't have to have limbs removed due to diabetes-induced gangrene. You don't have to go blind or suffer cardiovascular abnormalities because of diabetes. You can actually REVERSE these conditions with diet (nutrition, not weight loss) and exercise, and the removal of parasites and candida.

Watch the 8-minute non-profit video http://www.rawfor30days.com/view.html , about diabetes diet.

Best of luck.

2007-02-19 17:53:46 · answer #4 · answered by Dorothy and Toto 5 · 0 0

If your sugar is 200.. you need to refer to your insulin coverage dose. You need to administer as many units as your body needs to get your blood sugar within a normal range. For a diabetic.. 100-150 is a great range. Normal blood sugar is 70-110.

2007-02-16 14:30:03 · answer #5 · answered by AnswerMe 1 · 0 0

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2016-05-03 12:12:43 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

some times taking an EXTRA DOSEAGE OF YOUR REGULAR DIABETIC MEDS DOES THE TRICK SOME TIMES IF YOU ARE ON A SLIDING SCALE OF INSULIN THAT WILL BRING YOU SUGAR DOWN the other thing that you can do is avoid starchy food until your glucose level goes down another healthy thing to do is clean house or go for a walk meaning you need to sweat and burn enery to also bring down your bloog glucose level good luck

2007-02-16 13:21:24 · answer #7 · answered by yosi22 3 · 0 0

200 isnt severe but that person should see an Endocrynologist and be put on a program consisting of diet, oral meds, excercise and/or possibly insulin.

2007-02-16 17:16:34 · answer #8 · answered by Dick G 2 · 0 0

Exercise and a better diet. Speak to your endocrinologist about high BS readings and see if a meds adjustment is in order. And then more exercise.

2007-02-16 13:13:46 · answer #9 · answered by bakfanlin 6 · 1 1

Diabetes mellitus is impaired insulin secretion and variable degrees of peripheral insulin resistance leading to hyperglycemia. Early symptoms are related to hyperglycemia and include polydipsia, polyphagia, and polyuria. Later complications include vascular disease, peripheral neuropathy, and predisposition to infection. Diagnosis is by measuring plasma glucose. Treatment is diet, exercise, and drugs that reduce glucose levels, including insulin and oral antihyperglycemic drugs. Prognosis varies with degree of glucose control.
ABCs for good Diabetes Care.
(1) Get your Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) test done at least twice a year. (Target: Below 7).
(2) Albuminuria. Get your urine micro-albumin test done atleast twice a year. (Target: Below 30).
(3) Aspirin Check with your doctor if you need to take aspirin daily.
(4) Blood pressure. Get your blood pressure checked every visit. (Target: Below 130/80 mm Hg)
(5) Cholesterol- Get your LDL (bad cholesterol) levels checked at least once a year. (Target: Below 100 mg/dL). Triglycerides. (Target: Less than 150 mg/dL) Serum Cholesterol (Target: Less than 200 mg/dL) HDL (good cholesterol) (Target: More than 50 mg/dL). Eat a low-cholesterol, low-fat diet. This kind of diet includes cottage cheese, fat-free milk, fish (not canned in oil), vegetables, poultry, egg whites, and polyunsaturated oils and margarines (corn, safflower, canola, and soybean oils). Avoid foods with excess fat in them such as meat (especially liver and fatty meat), egg yolks, whole milk, cream, butter, shortening, lard, pastries, cakes, cookies, gravy, peanut butter, chocolate, olives, potato chips, coconut, cheese (other than cottage cheese), coconut oil, palm oil, and fried foods.
(6) Diabetes Education. Know about diabetes & get updated regularly.
(7) Eye exam. Get your eyes examined regularly, get checked at least once a year.
(8) Teeth. Get your teeth examined by a Dentist and get tartar (plaque) removed once in a year.
(9) Foot care. Check your feet daily . Request your doctor to check them every visit. Get an extensive foot examination done once in a year.
(10) Glucose (Sugar) test. Control your blood glucose & do self-monitoring as & when required. (Target: Fasting blood sugar 60-100 mg/dL; Postprandial blood sugar 2 hours after food-Less than 140 mg/dL)
(11) Health life style. Exercise regularly & stay healthy.
(12) Identify special medical needs. Voice your health concerns to your doctor . Follow your doctor’s advice.
Please see the web pages for more details on Diabetes Mellitus Type 2.

2007-02-16 13:37:28 · answer #10 · answered by gangadharan nair 7 · 0 2

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