She's on metformin for the diabetes, an anti-depressant, blood pressure med, baby aspirin, and vitamins, as well as oxygen almost around the clock. When not eating she's in bed. Her diet's pretty good thanks to a high-protein, sugar-free shake mix, but my father gives in to her demands for goodies such as fruit, bread, & potato chips. Don't know if that's enough to create cravings; her fasting blood sugar level is between 136 and 160 lately. She forgets what just happened and often argues after a full meal that no one gave her anything to eat. Could it be part of the dementia - has anyone else experienced this?
There is a big tendency to not control diabetes very closely and just let people eat what they want, but be careful with that; if there is pain from neuropathy or poor wound healing, that could result in really poor quality of life. Sometimes it is absolutely the right thing to do, but other times it could worsen vision, lead to limb
pain or even limb loss and might need to be curbed.
Before they got my mom on Januvia, she would stash sugar packets to eat, and we could never convince her to actually check the blood sugar first. High or low I think felt about the same to her, maybe because insulin resistance means glucose is not getting into your cells where it's needed? It's tough stuff and can be a vicious cycle because weight gain makes insulin resistance worse, which makes excess appetite worse, and on and on. Add pain and inactivity to that mess and...well, it's a mess.
My Mom has to have cookies after every single meal and sometimes in between.
I was on prednisone once, and my blood sugars were sky-high, no matter what I ate or didn't eat. My doctor increased by insulin dose for the duration of that med. If my fasting blood sugar were routinely over 110 now I would work with my doctor to control it, through drugs and diet and exercise. In 20 years if I have dementia and my fasting blood sugar is 160, so what? Please, please, no one try to make me eat "right" at that point!
You asked for ideas. Those are mine.