D
Deleted member 99312
Guest
I just spoke to a GP at my surgery today over the phone - not my regular GP as she wasn't available.
I asked if I could be prescribed some test strips to help diagnose an issue I'm having and he refused.
The situation is this. I recently had a blood test which identified that my B12 was low. I wasn't told how low, I was just told by the GP receptionist it was low, and I needed to have another blood test to follow this up. I have been on Metformin for 5 years and I know this is known to cause low B12 with long-term use, so I took it upon myself to immediately cease use of it, just in case it was to blame. I know correlation isn't causation, but I've never had low B12 before, and crucially, I eat loads of stuff which has B12 in it, ie. meat, fish, cheese, natural yogurt etc. so I should be eating plenty to get adequate amounts from my diet - unless that is, that something is interfering with it. Given that low B12 can have very serious irreversible consequences, it seemed prudent to stop taking Metformin, for now.
It was also identified that my vitamin D levels are low, so I was prescribed vitamin D supplements, 50000 UI to be taken once a week, for 6 weeks.
A few days after stopping the Metformin, I found I had a VERY dry mouth in the morning. Now, I have had a dry mouth regularly while ON Metformin as well, but never THIS dry. So putting 2+2 together, stopping the Metformin looks like the culprit. However, in the past I have a few times tested my blood sugar when my mouth was dry, and it has NOT been high. And there has been no other obvious cause, like the room being too hot or dry, or me not drinking enough. But that does not mean that THIS time it isn't because my blood sugar ISN'T high. (I did read that high levels of vit D can cause a dry mouth too, BUT, I got the very dry mouth before I started on the supplements, as I deliberately waited till the weekend to start it as I thought that would make it easier to keep the schedule and remember.)
So if you've just stopped taking Metformin and then your mouth gets drier than it ever has been, what is the likely cause? You don't need to be House M.D. to figure it out, do you? So it follows that it makes sense to test yourself at the time, to see if your blood sugar is high. I asked the GP this today. He said no, this doesn't make sense. He also said I am 'not diabetic' because my hba1c is fine. Yes! It is fine because I eat a VERY low carb diet because otherwise my blood sugars go crazy high. I told him this. It cut no ice. He said I should come into the surgery for another hba1c test. I said but doesn't it make sense to test it at the time, rather than at the surgery when it might have gone down? He basically said it DOESN'T MATTER if your blood sugars are very high regularly, so long as your hba1c is okay. I realised it was pointless arguing the point further with him because, not to put too fine a point on it, the man is an idiot. This fool would evidently stand by and watch me develop complications, go blind etc. and then shrug and go, oh well that's because diabetes is a progressive disease. Well yes, it is when you have stupid GPs who LET their patients get worse while they stand by and watch! Does it really make sense to save £15 on test strips now, just to end up costing the NHS thousands LATER when I develop serious problems? He also said it only matters if your sugars go too LOW, it doesn't matter if they go too HIGH (so long as the hba1c is okay). His over-reliance on the severely limited hba1c measure is arguably negligent imo. He is supposed to be a doctor but I seem to have a greater understanding of the basics of diabetes than he does.
I have now ordered some at my own expense which I resent (I don't have two pennies to rub together basically) because I think there was a clear case for them prescribing them. And I will have to do my own 'detective work' to figure out what's going on. My guess is my blood sugar is well into double figures for my mouth to be this dry. And I also guess that this particular GP wouldn't care about that at all. Even though WE KNOW that spending long periods over 7.8 can and does do damage to your organs.
tl;dr - Doctors are supposed to be on our side but it's a lottery whether you get one who gives a toss, or who knows what they're doing.
I asked if I could be prescribed some test strips to help diagnose an issue I'm having and he refused.
The situation is this. I recently had a blood test which identified that my B12 was low. I wasn't told how low, I was just told by the GP receptionist it was low, and I needed to have another blood test to follow this up. I have been on Metformin for 5 years and I know this is known to cause low B12 with long-term use, so I took it upon myself to immediately cease use of it, just in case it was to blame. I know correlation isn't causation, but I've never had low B12 before, and crucially, I eat loads of stuff which has B12 in it, ie. meat, fish, cheese, natural yogurt etc. so I should be eating plenty to get adequate amounts from my diet - unless that is, that something is interfering with it. Given that low B12 can have very serious irreversible consequences, it seemed prudent to stop taking Metformin, for now.
It was also identified that my vitamin D levels are low, so I was prescribed vitamin D supplements, 50000 UI to be taken once a week, for 6 weeks.
A few days after stopping the Metformin, I found I had a VERY dry mouth in the morning. Now, I have had a dry mouth regularly while ON Metformin as well, but never THIS dry. So putting 2+2 together, stopping the Metformin looks like the culprit. However, in the past I have a few times tested my blood sugar when my mouth was dry, and it has NOT been high. And there has been no other obvious cause, like the room being too hot or dry, or me not drinking enough. But that does not mean that THIS time it isn't because my blood sugar ISN'T high. (I did read that high levels of vit D can cause a dry mouth too, BUT, I got the very dry mouth before I started on the supplements, as I deliberately waited till the weekend to start it as I thought that would make it easier to keep the schedule and remember.)
So if you've just stopped taking Metformin and then your mouth gets drier than it ever has been, what is the likely cause? You don't need to be House M.D. to figure it out, do you? So it follows that it makes sense to test yourself at the time, to see if your blood sugar is high. I asked the GP this today. He said no, this doesn't make sense. He also said I am 'not diabetic' because my hba1c is fine. Yes! It is fine because I eat a VERY low carb diet because otherwise my blood sugars go crazy high. I told him this. It cut no ice. He said I should come into the surgery for another hba1c test. I said but doesn't it make sense to test it at the time, rather than at the surgery when it might have gone down? He basically said it DOESN'T MATTER if your blood sugars are very high regularly, so long as your hba1c is okay. I realised it was pointless arguing the point further with him because, not to put too fine a point on it, the man is an idiot. This fool would evidently stand by and watch me develop complications, go blind etc. and then shrug and go, oh well that's because diabetes is a progressive disease. Well yes, it is when you have stupid GPs who LET their patients get worse while they stand by and watch! Does it really make sense to save £15 on test strips now, just to end up costing the NHS thousands LATER when I develop serious problems? He also said it only matters if your sugars go too LOW, it doesn't matter if they go too HIGH (so long as the hba1c is okay). His over-reliance on the severely limited hba1c measure is arguably negligent imo. He is supposed to be a doctor but I seem to have a greater understanding of the basics of diabetes than he does.
I have now ordered some at my own expense which I resent (I don't have two pennies to rub together basically) because I think there was a clear case for them prescribing them. And I will have to do my own 'detective work' to figure out what's going on. My guess is my blood sugar is well into double figures for my mouth to be this dry. And I also guess that this particular GP wouldn't care about that at all. Even though WE KNOW that spending long periods over 7.8 can and does do damage to your organs.
tl;dr - Doctors are supposed to be on our side but it's a lottery whether you get one who gives a toss, or who knows what they're doing.