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4 months diagnosed

pete1140

Member
Messages
9
Location
Cleethorpes
Type of diabetes
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
Dislikes
nothing really
Hi
I was diagnosed 4 months ago when my bg was 11.4 and now although gone down to 8.6 am on metformon 500mg
am strugling to get to grips with my need to change my lifestyle, so have come on here for inspriation and hopefully will get that much needed 'kick up the backside' I need to get going again
so any advice etc will be gladly welcomed

thanks

Pete
 
Hi Pete and welcome to the forum This isn't actually a "kick up the backside", but this information may help you. Ask as many questions as you like as there is usually someone here to answer.

 
Re: 4 months diagnose

Hi Pete

I think you mean you HbA1c was 11.4 now down to 8.6? If so that is almost exactly the same as I had on that timescale. I was really fanatical about diet and exercise to start with (I was fit anyway) but could not get my HbA1c below 8.1 - and I was on 2000mg of metformin by that time!! I think firstly your 3 point reduction in HbA1c on only 500mg of Metformin sounds like a really good start. I don't know what you are doing with diet and exercise etc but I found it is regularity of exercise that is most important so do something every day even if just a walk. It's a metabolic disorder so stimulate your metabolism.

Once I had exhausted everything I could possibly do in my regime (my BG even went up overnight if I ate nothing the night before!!) I was quite despondant and frustrated until I realised that the Metformin had done what it could, and I was just a bit short of insulin. My GP, who resisted at first, then put me on a tiny dose of Gliclazide, 30mg to stimulate insulin from my pancreas and literally within 2 days my BG levels went to pretty much normal (for a diabetic) and have been ever since - still slightly declining. Hb A1C is now 5.8. I have to actually eat more to be safe, so have somewhat relaxed the saintly diet. :clap:but always keep an eye on it.

I eventually adopted a dog partly to force me to walk two hours every day and that has a far bigger general effect than a couple of high impact badminton games per week. I do think that two 30 min walks would probably be sufficient for me.

You must get a meter and start testing to know exactly what affects you and what to do but the best message is not to be too impatient - you are doing well. With moderate lifestyle changes you may be able to knock another 2 points off you HbA1c, do those, test the effect and then you will know your baseline worst case. It's possible you are like me and just need a bit of help with insulin production.
 
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