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Discussion from the 'blue' diabetes forum
A user replied to me about me not seeing warnings about permanent eye damage from reducing BGs too fast in Type 2's by cutting carbs too quickly:
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You haven't read much then, Type 1's are also told to bring levels down slowly
My story, eye test at the opticians a few months into 2016, nothing wrong and not even a change in lenses required, November 2016 diagnosed with Type 1, brought hba1c down too quickly due to hypo's through the night and not waking, lowered carbs too quickly etc, December 2016 at the opticians because I knew something wasn't right despite a lot of members on here telling me it was "normal" and would settle down, they picked something up and I was referred to ophthalmology, I was diagnosed with Diabetic Macular Oedema (fluid behind the eyes) and started on eyelea injections a week or so later (yes eye injections) and required numerous of these, the only thing they and my diabetic consultant can put it down to is lowering things too fast, then 2018 diagnosed with proliferative retinopathy in both eyes despite in my consultants words too tight control, again they put it down to the earlier quick reduction
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My response:
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Thanks for that.
I understand the need for Type 1's to avoid hypos, but had not before seen anybody specifically mention permanent eye damage in the context of a Type 1 (or a Type 2 except in here) moving from high BG to normal ranges too quickly. Let's exclude hypos from this since that is danger of death rather than the comparatively less severe one of eye damage, though some - possibly even me might prefer to be dead than completely blind.
I wonder how common this eye damage is because I know 2 people who dropped their BGs very fast from pretty high (HbA1C over 100) to normal range BG inside of 2 weeks and they were saying vision distortion was only temporary until body had adjusted to normal range BGs, Sorry but don't know their actual post-prandial BGs when they were diagnosed, but they immediately bought BG meters and went Keto (not just Low carb), so BGs would have dropped like a stone, except not down into the hypo range.
Not sure if you and these two were lucky, or if you and @L######### were unlucky. However I will mention this potential problem in the 'red' forum.
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A user replied to me about me not seeing warnings about permanent eye damage from reducing BGs too fast in Type 2's by cutting carbs too quickly:
***************************************************************
You haven't read much then, Type 1's are also told to bring levels down slowly
My story, eye test at the opticians a few months into 2016, nothing wrong and not even a change in lenses required, November 2016 diagnosed with Type 1, brought hba1c down too quickly due to hypo's through the night and not waking, lowered carbs too quickly etc, December 2016 at the opticians because I knew something wasn't right despite a lot of members on here telling me it was "normal" and would settle down, they picked something up and I was referred to ophthalmology, I was diagnosed with Diabetic Macular Oedema (fluid behind the eyes) and started on eyelea injections a week or so later (yes eye injections) and required numerous of these, the only thing they and my diabetic consultant can put it down to is lowering things too fast, then 2018 diagnosed with proliferative retinopathy in both eyes despite in my consultants words too tight control, again they put it down to the earlier quick reduction
***********************************************************************
My response:
*************************************************************************
Thanks for that.
I understand the need for Type 1's to avoid hypos, but had not before seen anybody specifically mention permanent eye damage in the context of a Type 1 (or a Type 2 except in here) moving from high BG to normal ranges too quickly. Let's exclude hypos from this since that is danger of death rather than the comparatively less severe one of eye damage, though some - possibly even me might prefer to be dead than completely blind.
I wonder how common this eye damage is because I know 2 people who dropped their BGs very fast from pretty high (HbA1C over 100) to normal range BG inside of 2 weeks and they were saying vision distortion was only temporary until body had adjusted to normal range BGs, Sorry but don't know their actual post-prandial BGs when they were diagnosed, but they immediately bought BG meters and went Keto (not just Low carb), so BGs would have dropped like a stone, except not down into the hypo range.
Not sure if you and these two were lucky, or if you and @L######### were unlucky. However I will mention this potential problem in the 'red' forum.
*********************************************************************