Hi @Kyleigh and welcome to the forum. I have never had ketones present with T2 but I'm confused about which type of diabetes you were told 10 weeks ago and now. Was it T2 then and T1 now? Do you happen to know what your HbA1c blood test result was? If you have any other info you can provide, that would help us be able to answer your question better. I will tag in @daisy1 who has some info for people new to the forum, regardless of which type of diabetes they have.Hi I was diagnosed diabetic 10 weeks ago and told type 2 a week ago. I was just wondering if any one has had ketones present with type 2
Thanks x
10 weeks ago on diagnosis I was told type 1 and my hba1c was 101 my retest 4 weeks ago it was 72. My gad anti body test came back last week normal so I was told type 2.Hi @Kyleigh and welcome to the forum. I have never had ketones present with T2 but I'm confused about which type of diabetes you were told 10 weeks ago and now. Was it T2 then and T1 now? Do you happen to know what your HbA1c blood test result was? If you have any other info you can provide, that would help us be able to answer your question better. I will tag in @daisy1 who has some info for people new to the forum, regardless of which type of diabetes they have.
My sugars were high as well 30.6 and it was questioned for 9 weeks until the results came back xI had ketones when I was diagnosed with T2 whilst in hospital for another condition- they did question if I was T1 because of them and very high bs of 28 but after tests consultant said it was it was rare but can happen in a T2 with high bs
I have to be low carb as the hospital put me on novomix which I'm struggling with. The clinic are changing the insulin next week so I can hopefully be more in control of it all xYou can get ketones with type 2 but its not so common as with T1
High sugars and insufficient insulin production can cause you to be positive for ketones and to suffer the v dangerous condition of DKA.
As someone else mentioned a diet that is v low in carbs can put the body into nutritional ketosis which means you would also show positive for ketones but it is different to DKA.
The trick is knowing which situation you are in if you register positive for ketones on a blood / urine test
Mixed insulin can make it harder to reduce BGs and weight in T2. It's common for diabetes nurses and doctors to prescribe it though. Those who are more up to date with current practice will give one or both (if needed) of a long acting (basal) insulin and a short acting (bolus) insulin for mealtimes, along with the safety info the patient needs, and regular contact to ensure things are going well.I have to be low carb as the hospital put me on novomix which I'm struggling with. The clinic are changing the insulin next week so I can hopefully be more in control of it all x