The diabetes screening and the normal opticianl testing are looking for totally different things, but if you are reducing your blood glucose levels at the moment it would not be a good idea to have your eyes tested, not until you reach a stable, lower level, as the change in blood glucose is almost bound to affect your eyes. If you find that your can't focus to read then some cheap reading glasses will probably do the trick until things settle down, as expensive 'proper' glasses might very well be useless in a few weeks.
If you are slim or have lost weight recently then there are other possible types of diabetes rather than T2. Do come back here as more questions arise
Hi Daibel Interested to know what other possible types it could be?
Hi and welcome, you have found a great place for info, friendship, support and motivation.Hi all. Thought I'd sign up and say hello. It's a bit of a surprise how this has all happened for me.
Long story short(ish)
History of kidney stones and more recently was booked in for laser treatment. Pre op tests detected high levels of glucose in urine. First blood test came back with a number of 54.
Had to have the laser again so pre op tests flagged it up again. My local gp sent me for a second round of tests and this time the result was 59. I'm now booked in to see a diabetic nurse next week. Not sure what to expect tbh. I bought a glucose testing kit (SD Codefree?) and my first reading today was 19.6 which I gather is high.
Anyway just wanted to say hi and I look forward to digesting and offering my own help when I can. Any other details anyone wants to know feel free to ask.
For the record I'm a 41 year old male.
Sometimes adults who become diabetic are misdiagnosed as T2 when they are actually T1 - Theresa May was one. She was diagnosed T2 after losing weight, then after meds failed to lower bgs was rediagnosed as T1 after further tests.
Well NHS advice is that T2 is progressive, and inevitably leads to increasing medication. But that might be due to their advice to continue eating carbs.Thanks for all replies so far. It's a lot to take in but I guess my biggest question is about progression of it all.
Say for example I only needed a diet change. Would this after x amount of time not keep it low enough and then would I need tablets as well? If this was the case then would tablets only work for so long before I'd possibly need injections? Again in x amount of years.
Or is it more black and white that I'd need a diet change and medication to control and if I stopped either or both my levels would rise up again and potentially keep rising?
I agree with this. Advised to base my diet on starchy carbs and low fat. I was on Novarapid and Lantus insulin - injecting after everything I ate. Diabetes complications worsening Changed to low carb - result was improved blood sugars, diabetes in remission and all the diabetes complications reversed. I am absolutely sure that diabetes would return if I started eating starchy carbs and sugar again. But as I absolutely love this way of eating there is actually no chance of this happening. What also seems to be happening is that my good blood sugars are improving further - which bodes well for the future.Well NHS advice is that T2 is progressive, and inevitably leads to increasing medication. But that might be due to their advice to continue eating carbs.
More doctors and hcps are saying that reducing carbs can control T2 without medication and it does not have to be progressive.
I think so, or T1.5 / LADA. There is a Forum further down dedicated to that. However, one of the signs of T1 is often (but not always) unexplained weight loss. Given that there are far more T2s than T1s, I'd assume T2 til further evidence.Basically if I changed diet and had meds and my BG didn't alter, that could indicate type 1?
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