Confused roughly glucose level?

I was told that I am not diabetic a1c test was 5.7 and fast blood sugar was 80. I am curious on why my sugar level drops down to the mid 30's and jumps adjectives the way up to over 300. I do have pernicious anemia is that why? Please respond.
Answers:     Not ample info, really. The A1C is only a little above normal, but the lows and high are weird. I've never heard of pernicious anemia. My suspicion is that you are in the precipitate stage of type two diabetes. Google "hyperinsulinemia" and "metabolic syndrome" and see if you have any of the traits associated with those conditions. If you do, you're on your way to becoming type two diabetic.
Down to med 30's is pathological and not reactive hypoglycemia. There is no way your body would allow your glucose to get down that low without pathological hormone level like an insulinoma. The high glucose is also suspect. You provide no details on how those were analyzed and beneath what circumstances you got those numbers. Where they your own testing with meters or through laboratory carrying out tests?
5.7% A1C corresponds to an eAG of 117 mg/dl average for those three months. Glycohemoglobins can wrong in patients with hemolytic anemia's such as with exceptional hemoglobin's. It all depends on the clinical circumstances on how to proceed. Your doctor is better able to answer that question.
These are the symptoms of Pernicious Anemia:

Too little vitamin B12 gradually cause nervous system (neurological) problems. The neurological effects may be seen before anemia is diagnosed.

Bleeding gums
Diarrhea
Fatigue
of wide tendon reflexes
Loss of appetite
Pallor
Personality or memory changes
d heart rate
Shortness of breath
Sore mouth
Tingling and numbness of hand and feet
eady gait, especially in the dark

Nothing suggests that it affects Glucose level.

The Somogyi effect is a result of have extra insulin the body before bedtime, either from not having a bedtime snack, or from long-acting insulins. The Somogyi effect occur mainly in type 1 diabetes.

It is similar to the dawn phenomenon surrounded by that both lead to high morning blood glucose readings as a result of a hormone release that cause the liver to release glucose into the blood. The difference is that dawn phenomenon is not caused by hypoglycemia, but by a random release of the triggering hormones.
ael Somogyi, Ph.D., be a Hungarian biochemist, who is credited with discovering the chain of events that results in bounce back morning hyperglycemia

For an indepth look at the Somogyi effect, read more...


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