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Hi, can someone help me please? My HbA1c is 38, so from my understanding I am not quite pre-diabetic, however my fasting blood sugar is 7.0mmol which indicates diabetes?!? Am I doing something wrong? Many thanks in advance.
Hi and welcome.. not really sure what you mean by "doing something wrong".Hi, can someone help me please? My HbA1c is 38, so from my understanding I am not quite pre-diabetic, however my fasting blood sugar is 7.0mmol which indicates diabetes?!? Am I doing something wrong? Many thanks in advance.
Thanks for the reply. Since I found out my HbA1c was 38, I’ve cut out all carbs, sugar etc but tested FBS yesterday and it was 6.3 and today 7.0. I thought by being “good” the FBS would be lower?Hi and welcome.. not really sure what you mean by "doing something wrong".
There can be lots of reasons for high early morning blood sugar.. how often have you seen the 7 or is it a one-off reading that you have taken?
I don’t think you are cutting out carbs and sugar, and if that’s typical it’s not overly extreme either. Toast and cookies are not low carb /no sugar items.
With an hb1ac of 38 they seem a little high but to be fair that food would’ve sent mine much higher. You don’t appear to be diabetic or veg prediabetic but maybe have some small degree of insulin resistance (impaired fasting glucose). In which case lowering carbs should help things but might not change overnight. It certainly won’t hurt to be more moderate with them.
Was the 6.3 immediately before the toast? You need a reading just before eating as well as the ones after so you can see what change the food makes. 2mmol rise is the most you should want, less is better.
Apologies, my mistake. For the past week I haven’t had and carbs/sugar. Then when I had the 6.0 & 6.3 I had the toast and cookie to see what that did.I don’t think you are cutting out carbs and sugar, and if that’s typical it’s not overly extreme either. Toast and cookies are not low carb /no sugar items.
With an hb1ac of 38 they seem a little high but to be fair that food would’ve sent mine much higher. You don’t appear to be diabetic or veg prediabetic but maybe have some small degree of insulin resistance (impaired fasting glucose). In which case lowering carbs should help things but might not change overnight. It certainly won’t hurt to be more moderate with them.
Was the 6.3 immediately before the toast? You need a reading just before eating as well as the ones after so you can see what change the food makes. 2mmol rise is the most you should want, less is better.
Thank you so much. This I understand. Any lunch ideas as I’m strugglingMy opinion is that you are probably not diabetic but you can never be certain that you are not showing some signs. None of the readings are over any limit and although the toast and cookies come a little close I would argue that if you are going to eat a meal consisting of only carbohydrates then that's what you would expect to happen.
The Hba1c is the reading to trust and yours is fine.
I only had the toast and cookie to testThank you so much. This I understand. Any lunch ideas as I’m struggling
Thank you!Your HbA1c may appear to be lower, but you should bear in mind that this reading is THE AVERAGE reading of your Blood Glucose levels over the 12 weeks that preceeded the sample being taken. In other words it is the mean average of all the HIGH'S and LOW'S (Which also includes all the Morning BOOSTS due to the 'Dawn Phenomena').
Your Random Samples taken using your home self-monitoring B/G meter, taken both before a meal and 2 hours later are only a short part of what would make up the HbA1c final result, though these samples are still very useful as they indicate how well or otherwise we have delt with the glucose rise from what we had just eaten. Knowing this (It's often refered to as SPIKES) and this knowledge helps us Type 2's to greately take command and control of our own diabetes by what we choose to eat or drink.
Hope this simple explanation helps and makes things a little less confusing.
Thank you thank you. The advice is brilliant. Now the next question is my cholesterol is 0.1 away from being high, so I need to avoid fat?At the cost of oversimplification I would say your numbers are no reason to panic but definitely a good idea to start making some changes. Numbers fluctuate a lot and getting lost in detail at this stage may not be necessary in my view. Following below may help while you get your head around all these measurements.
A) Cutting bad carbs (processed/ refined flour stuff) and sugar to almost zero
B) limiting quantities of so-called-good-carbs to smaller portions and reasonable sizes
C) if cutting carbs is leaving you hungry or weak- increase a bit on protein and “good fats”. Don’t be scared of good fats.
D). Avoid all so called “low fat” nonsense
E). Limit fruits to one serving per day and vary them over tine to get variety
F). Exercise regularly. Doesn’t have to be super rigorous but pushing yourself and regularity are important- 5 days a week would be great
With your numbers the above should be good in my opinion while you monitor your numbers, without obsessing about every individual number and slowly you will understand how to interpret the numbers. I used to initially measure at random times and get worried or elated. Best approach is (even though many may not agree) - take one wake up reading and after 2 hours of eating a meal. I wouldn’t recommend “every” meal either. Maybe the heavier meal of the day, which has the higher carbs.
Check against these. If consistently you are getting High numbers you need to think a bit more. For now I would say panicking is unwarranted while actively making sustainable changes would be great
Good luck
Thank you thank you. The advice is brilliant. Now the next question is my cholesterol is 0.1 away from being high, so I need to avoid fat?
NoThank you thank you. The advice is brilliant. Now the next question is my cholesterol is 0.1 away from being high, so I need to avoid fat?
Or if you want lots then here you go!Brevity thy name is @bulkbiker
My weekend just got better. Thanks again!!You are welcome. Cholesterol is complicated and i am definitely no expert and the UK scale is even more confusing. In my opinion)and again everyone may not agree) making the changes I mentioned above also helps cholesterol. In fact after i moved to full fat / good fat and started using them rather generously to make up for carbs, my cholesterol numbers improved significantly. So I personally would not worry about using good fats reasonably while following all the above steps. Fats are demonized too much. The real bad stuff is trans fats which is used in many processed foods. That and some “fad oils” (sunflower oil etc.) i would totally avoid. I would stick to traditional good fats and use them reasonably. Others may differ...
Thank you.Or if you want lots then here you go!
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/cholesterol-and-statins.156985/
But I prefer the simple answer..