Metformin

Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
I was first prescribed Metformin 50mg twice a day early in December. I was diagnosed with Type 2 six years ago and managed with diet and exercise until recently. I'm 76. I find I am feeling nauseated a lot of the time and have lost my appetite. I know these are shown as side effects on the sheet accompanying Metformin tablets, but will my body adapt to Metformin, or will I always feel like this?
 

Bluetit1802

Legend
Messages
25,216
Type of diabetes
Type 2 (in remission!)
Treatment type
Diet only
Hi and welcome,

I have always been diet only, but from what others say on the forum it is normally temporary and should go away in a couple of weeks. If it doesn't there is a slow release version (SR) that is kinder on the tummy. You could ask your doctor about it. Metformin is an appetite suppressant, so that will explain why you have lost yours.

Is there anything else we can help you with? Do ask questions and have a good read round.
 

jenrose

Well-Known Member
Messages
290
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
Dislikes
very cold and very hot weather
I had to go on the slow release Metformin because I had really bad effect especially when it was put up to 3 a day. I lost a lot weight but being on the borderline of being underweight 1/2 a stone was a lot to loose but now I am okay on the slow release just one a day so hope that keeps the blood sugar down enough that this does not have to be increased.
 

daisyduck

Well-Known Member
Messages
988
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Diet only
I was first prescribed Metformin 50mg twice a day early in December. I was diagnosed with Type 2 six years ago and managed with diet and exercise until recently. I'm 76. I find I am feeling nauseated a lot of the time and have lost my appetite. I know these are shown as side effects on the sheet accompanying Metformin tablets, but will my body adapt to Metformin, or will I always feel like this?

Exactly the same thing happened to me. I was told it would wear off and it didn't. I felt permanently nauseous and got to the point where I had to dash to the loo to avoid accidents, I persevered for 11 weeks and then just stopped one morning. I was on the point of taking the pill and was actually sick... thought ..that's enough.. and just dropped them in the bin.
The LCHF diet keeps my BG levels at 48 which the surgery are happy with so they haven't pushed me to take anything else.
 

Daibell

Master
Messages
12,642
Type of diabetes
LADA
Treatment type
Insulin
Hi. I started with the SR version but had the metallic taste side effect for 6 months but no nausea. Since the 6 months many years ago everything is normal.
 

Ems78

Member
Messages
21
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Mine settled after a couple of months, really sick to start with I'm on 2 x 500mg twice a day
 

Pinkorchid

Well-Known Member
Messages
2,927
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Diet only
I take 500mg of the SR version once a day any more than that and I totally loose my appetite but I have never had any nausea while taking them
 

Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
Exactly the same thing happened to me. I was told it would wear off and it didn't. I felt permanently nauseous and got to the point where I had to dash to the loo to avoid accidents, I persevered for 11 weeks and then just stopped one morning. I was on the point of taking the pill and was actually sick... thought ..that's enough.. and just dropped them in the bin.
The LCHF diet keeps my BG levels at 48 which the surgery are happy with so they haven't pushed me to take anything else.
Thanks a lot. I am on the LCHF diet too. I will persevere with Metformin for a bit longer, I have never actually been sick, just feel nauseated a lot of the time, so not quite so bad as you. Thanks for your help.
 
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Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
Hi and welcome,

I have always been diet only, but from what others say on the forum it is normally temporary and should go away in a couple of weeks. If it doesn't there is a slow release version (SR) that is kinder on the tummy. You could ask your doctor about it. Metformin is an appetite suppressant, so that will explain why you have lost yours.

Is there anything else we can help you with? Do ask questions and have a good read round.
Thank you so much. If I am still feeling nauseated by the end of this week (I have been on Metformin for 7 weeks) I will make an appointment to see my "diabetic" GP. to ask about the slow release version. I didn't realised Metformin is an appetite supressant! Thank you so much for the help and information.
 
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Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
I had to go on the slow release Metformin because I had really bad effect especially when it was put up to 3 a day. I lost a lot weight but being on the borderline of being underweight 1/2 a stone was a lot to loose but now I am okay on the slow release just one a day so hope that keeps the blood sugar down enough that this does not have to be increased.
Thank you. someone else suggested the slow release Metformin, so I will definitely ask about it. I originally lost 3 stone through diet and exercise after I was diagnosed, but have slowly put back 1 & half stone during the past year due to less exercise because of arthritic knee. now I'm on the LCHF diet I have begun to lose weight gradually, or perhaps it is partlydue to lack of appetite. But thank you, the slow release sounds as if it could be the abswer or me.f
 

Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
Hi. I started with the SR version but had the metallic taste side effect for 6 months but no nausea. Since the 6 months many years ago everything is normal.
Thanks a lot. SR Metformin seems the best bet. Its really interesting to hear other people's reaction and know I'm not imagining things. My husband has been really concerned as I have always enjoyed my food, and he can't quite believe I am eating so slowly and unable to eat some of the things I used to like. Thank God for the forum! and espescially you kind people who have come back to me.
 

Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
Hi and welcome,

I have always been diet only, but from what others say on the forum it is normally temporary and should go away in a couple of weeks. If it doesn't there is a slow release version (SR) that is kinder on the tummy. You could ask your doctor about it. Metformin is an appetite suppressant, so that will explain why you have lost yours.

Is there anything else we can help you with? Do ask questions and have a good read round.
Mine settled after a couple of months, really sick to start with I'm on 2 x 500mg twice a day
Thanks. Perhaps I need to giveit another couple of weeks before asking about the slow release Metformin.
 

Helen15960

Member
Messages
8
I take 500mg of the SR version once a day any more than that and I totally loose my appetite but I have never had any nausea while taking them
That is useful to know if I do go on to the SR Metformin. I have been told it is an appetite supressant (which sin't on the fact sheet) so I suppose we have to put up with loss of appetite!
 

JohnEGreen

Master
Messages
13,188
Type of diabetes
Other
Treatment type
Diet only
Dislikes
Tripe and Onions
FYI

"Goat's rue, French lilac, Italian fitch, and professor weed are all names for the same plant: Galega officinalis. This perennial herb, 3 feet tall and with purple, blue, or white flowers, was used in folk medicine to treat diabetes starting in the Middle Ages, maybe earlier. Though it gave rise to metformin, one of the most popular diabetes medications in the world, G. officinalis is now widely considered poisonous. In the early 20th century, researchers isolated a compound from G. officinalis called guanidine, which could lower blood glucose levels in animals but was also toxic. Chemists found that they could make the compound more tolerable by bonding two guanidines together, forming a biguanide. Metformin is one such biguanide, first synthesized in 1929 and then clinically developed in the late 1950s by the French physician Jean Sterne, who gave it its first trade name, Glucophage ("glucose eater")."

http://www.diabetesforecast.org/2010/dec/the-origins-of-metformin.html
 

Bluetit1802

Legend
Messages
25,216
Type of diabetes
Type 2 (in remission!)
Treatment type
Diet only
Metformin has long been recognised as an appetite suppressant and is sometimes given to non-diabetics as an aid to weight loss. Hence it appears to have more benefit for diabetics that are over weight.