That was an amazing turnaround in such a short space of time especially considering how high his bloods were. To what do you put it down to? I find it hard to believe it went from 24mmol/L to non diabetic in such a short space of time. There must be a bit of magic going on in his metabolism. Great to hear.My husband (James) halved his Metformin within a fortnight of being diagnosed, going from twice a day to morning only. (Finger tip blood tests had gone from a staggeringly high 24mmol/L on diagnosis to normal, non-diabetic within this time.)
Three months later he reduced the morning dose and a couple of months after that he gave up altogether. At no stage did this reduction have any affect on his blood sugars - despite what his doctor said would happen. His HbA1c's continued to fall and the most recent one was 30mmol/mol. I believe that Metformin is an irrelevance, it's diet that makes the difference - understanding what carbs are and where they are hiding and then reducing to the absolute minimum is what brings sugar levels down - so no muesli!
Good luck,
Sally
Oh it's just my current average. I'm not settling for it at all. Onwards and upwards (well downwards).hi, well done on your progress, metformin is as drugs go a very safe drug and theres (in my opinion) no rush to cut them out, better to cut out the museli (very carby) again my opinion, why settle for an average of 6.9? when you can get a lower one but changing a few further things, any medication changes should really be done with your doctors knowledge (if not blessing)
Oh it's just my current average. I'm not settling for it at all. Onwards and upwards (well downwards).
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