GREEKDIABETES
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Indigestion and bloating aren't generally signs of diabetes, fatigue can be but fatigue can be a side effect of many different conditions - your Hba1c suggests you are not diabetic, and neither do those symptoms you've mentioned.Hello, my name is Nick and i am from Greece. For more than 10 years i suffer from fatigue, indigestion and bloating that comes and goes. All my symptoms suggest that i have insulin problems but the HbA1c is 5.4% and the glucose tests around 99 mg/dl. Also i am around 84 kg and i am 184cm.
I am confused because the blood tests tell the doctors that i have no diabetes but the symptoms tell me that i have diabetes.
I disagree. High bgs damage nerves including the large vagus nerve which regulates digestion. Excess thirst and urination are usually indicators of advanced diabetes.Indigestion and bloating aren't generally signs of diabetes, fatigue can be but fatigue can be a side effect of many different conditions - your Hba1c suggests you are not diabetic, and neither do those symptoms you've mentioned.
Fatigue, indigestion and bloating are signs of something, but I wouldn't have thought it'd be diabetes.
Do you have excessive thirst and need to urinate a lot? - those are more the signs of diabetes.
5.4% is not a bad result at all (I would be very pleased with it!) but it is at the top end of normal. You might like to read up about "normal" blood glucose levels here:Hello, my name is Nick and i am from Greece. For more than 10 years i suffer from fatigue, indigestion and bloating that comes and goes. All my symptoms suggest that i have insulin problems but the HbA1c is 5.4% and the glucose tests around 99 mg/dl. Also i am around 84 kg and i am 184cm.
When i drink coffee in the morning(around 150mg caffeine) my digestion restarts and i am hungry and i digest food just fine. If i eat without coffee i can't digest a single banana. It seems that coffee on empty stomach gives a signal to my pancreas to produce insulin and without coffee it does not produce.
I am confused because the blood tests tell the doctors that i have no diabetes but the symptoms tell me that i have diabetes.
I disagree. High bgs damage nerves including the large vagus nerve which regulates digestion. Excess thirst and urination are usually indicators of advanced diabetes.
You may well be right. However I do think cutting carbs would be worth trying. In my experience of chronic digestive problems, finding out the cause is very difficult, assuming that the obvious suspects such as coeliac disease have been ruled out. I ended up having two endoscopies, an unpleasant procedure and not without risk, to no avail. IBS cannot be diagnosed in the same way as chicken pox, and even when it is thought to be the culprit - what then?That may be the case, but given that the bloating and indigestion has been going on for 10 years or so I'd have thought that if it was diabetes related there would've been other symptoms by this point - including a higher hba1c - course I could be wrong
Cutting carbs may well help, but it would be worth trying to find out what it actually is, it could be IBS or some food intolerance rather than diabetes.
I know nothing about Greek doctors (assuming the OP is in Greece) but UK GPs are programmed to decide that no-one really has diabetes until/unless they are drinking buckets and peeing for England. If the OP does have some glucose intolerance, better that they find out for themselves.Please go back to your Doctor who appears to have already decided it is not diabetes.
Hello, my name is Nick and i am from Greece. For more than 10 years i suffer from fatigue, indigestion and bloating that comes and goes. All my symptoms suggest that i have insulin problems but the HbA1c is 5.4% and the glucose tests around 99 mg/dl. Also i am around 84 kg and i am 184cm.
When i drink coffee in the morning(around 150mg caffeine) my digestion restarts and i am hungry and i digest food just fine. If i eat without coffee i can't digest a single banana. It seems that coffee on empty stomach gives a signal to my pancreas to produce insulin and without coffee it does not produce.
I am confused because the blood tests tell the doctors that i have no diabetes but the symptoms tell me that i have diabetes.
Gosh, is 5.4% really a 'high' normal? It seems pretty good to me...Not eveything is caused by Diabetes. Even gastroparesis can be idiopathic and happens to non Diabetics.
A high normal A1c and the absence of other classic symptoms just means that Pre D and T2 can be crossed off the list of possible causes (for now - in pencil).
The OP should investigate further. Perhaps an exclusion diet might throw up some clues but without further tests no one can lay blame at a particular door.
Gosh, is 5.4% really a 'high' normal? It seems pretty good to me...
On her site she suggests that an A1c from 4.6%(=31) to 5.4% (=36) is normal. She warns that the risk of heart attack and stroke rises sharply from 5.4% upwards. This is bad news for me, as do what I may, I can't get my A1c below 38 (=5.6%). You can read all about it here:Apparently, there is a question hanging over the parameters and how they were set too high. Ruhl has a bit on it in her book. I have the book but havn't read it yet but this is on her site.
Anyone trying to follow FODMAP and LC at the same time has their work cut out.There is an article about gut problems in New Scientist for 15th September which might help. It is the FODMAP diet, symptoms of indigestion and chronic fatigue indicate the problem it is supposed to alleviate.
It is also considered non-diabetic by the NHS. IMO this is tragic, as many people are fooled into thinking that once they have lowered their bgs to a non-diabetic level eg 5.9% (=41) they are home and dry, whereas according to Jenny Ruhl and many research studies, at 5.5% (=37) we are already at risk. I believe this, as with my highest A1c at 41 (5.9%) I have already accumulated numerous health problems I am convinced are diabetic complications.Gosh, is 5.4% really a 'high' normal? It seems pretty good to me...
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