Dennis
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 2,506
- Location
- West Sussex
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Non-insulin injectable medication (incretin mimetics)
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- People who join web forums to be agressive and cause trouble
Hi Anna,purpleanna said:What is byetta, what does it do? At the mo I'm on 2000 mg of metformin sr, 6mg of Amayrl and 14ml of lantus insulin and still getting highs of 19.9 2 hours after breakfast and waking with 11
Byetta is a new class of diabetes medication known as an incretin mimetic. It is not a type of insulin, but does have to be injected. It treats diabetes in 5 ways:
- it increases insulin production by the pancreas in response to eating meals, resulting in the release of a higher, more appropriate amount of insulin that helps lower the rise in blood sugar from eating
- it suppresses pancreatic release of glucagon in response to eating, which helps stop the liver from overproducing sugar when it is unneeded
- it slows down gastric emptying and so reduces the rate at which meal-derived glucose appears in the bloodstream
- it reduces appetite, resulting in most people using Byetta slowly losing weight, with generally the greatest weight loss in people who are the most overweight at the beginning of treatment
- it reduces liver fat content. Fat accumulation in the liver is strongly related with several metabolic disorders, in particular low HDL cholesterol and high triglycerides, present in patients with type 2 diabetes.
It has only been available in the UK for just over a year so is still pretty new and, unfortunately, many GPs seem to be unaware of it. As a result, it seems to be more widely prescribed by diabetes consultants than GPs. It is a more expensive treatment than many of the others (although I believe that some insulins cost more), so there has also been a problem getting some PCTs to fund it, but this now seems to be less of a problem.