Veronica Wright
Member
- Messages
- 18
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Insulin
That's very high - I assume you are American, most of the English speaking world uses mmol/L - Americans are the exception using mg/dL. To convert to mmol/L you'd divide by 18, 434 = 24.1 mmol/L, 304 = 16.8 mmol/L.
I assume they've checked you for hidden infections (including dental ones) as they can push numbers up higher.
Have you had a GAD antibody test? There are people who are misdiagnosed as Type 2 who really have LADA (latent autoimmune diabetes in adults) which is like Type 1 in that they will eventually will need insulin and it is autoimmune (slower moving than Type 1). Initially they look like Type 2 but eventually their 'honeymoon' comes to an end and insulin is required. Many doctors consider LADA to be a form of Type 1. Many LADAs continue to eat low carb. Medications that some Type 2s take are ineffective for LADA and some of those meds shorten the honeymoon period. There are some people with LADA on the forums and information on this website. I raise this possibility because it should be checked when a Type 2 suddenly starts getting high numbers. (Many doctors don't check GAD antibodies when they diagnose Type 2.)
Thank you! Right - my meter is out of sync here; started converting in my posts to make my stats comprehensible

I appreciate this great advice -- I should look into this GAD antibody test to check on a type 1 diagnosis vs. type 2, it could be likely definitely. Thank you again for all this info, so helpful!