P
Well done on your HbA1c. That is a nice drop.
I agree with @bulkbiker
You need the full breakdown of your cholesterol before making any decisions. Your 6.1 is the total of the good and the not so good. If the good is high, the total will also be high. Do ask for theses details - HDL/LDL/Triglycerides. I also have to ask if you fasted for this test. If you didn't fast your triglycerides will have been higher than normal and this will also have affected the total.
I like the phrase "They like diabetics to be about 4"This is a number plucked out of the air with no scientific basis. It is the HDL and triglycerides that matter most.
You can ask for a print out of your test results - they are all important and this includes not only glucose and cholesterol but also liver and kidney functions. You need these for future reference so you can keep an eye on whether you are improving or deteriorating. A doctor or nurse will brush them off with a "they are fine" but that is their opinion. Yours may be different. If you are in England your surgery should have put test results on line, so you could also ask how to register for this facility. The surgery receptionist can help with the print out and on-line registration.
I know exactly what you mean. All of my diabetes related results are good but my cholesterol is 7.2 (HDL 2.7, trigs 0.5, LDL...well....sigh. I have read all of the advice on this forum (thanks Bulkbiker) and have made a decision that for now at least, I won't go on statins. I don't give a monkeys whether they approve or not and I certainly won't be pressured into making excuses every time I see them or trying to fudge the figures. Yes, I would love to get the LDL down (but total under 4????, as if!!!) but if it ain't going down whilst I am following a text book (fairly low carb of 60 a day and an ounce of cheese a day and running 5 miles a day), well then that must be MY physiological make up.
In January 2018 after a blood test,non fasting, my HbA1C was 54 and cholesterol 7.51 and was told well done and bye, you don't need to be seen anymore!
Well said, could not agree more, pleased to here others feel this way regards threshold numbers, totally agree regards numbers plucked out of the air no scientific basis, to my knowledge as acknowledged by Ada and World health Geneva, cut off thresholds for A1C and finger real blood testing, too are Arbitrary, at whim random choice by so called experts, sitting around a table, as I understand if not mistaken, without clinical or medical support for the Final cut off figure decided upon. I think it may be called big business or something like that, who knows more medications if you don't hit the air numbers??? doubt and confusion continues sadly.
Mallorca.
That is complete rubbish! With an HbA1c of 54 you should be on 6 monthly reviews at the very least, possibly even 3 monthly if your HbA1c hadn't dropped at all. This is all part of the care plan recommended by NICE that should be followed by all surgeries. You may well not see a doctor (I never have) but you should be seeing a nurse. You should consider calling in and asking exactly what is going on .... not just for the diabetes, but also for the cholesterol and the statin checks. My advice is chase it up!
What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. So, if you believe high cholesterol is good, and you enjoy life, so what.So the guy I saw today's LDLc is 5.9, down from 6.9 on a good diet, his right carotid is 90% blocked, BP 180/90, and he smokes. He's pretty skinny and doesn't have diabetes. And he doesn't want to take statins, but he agreed to take BP pills. Who's gonna sell him some life insurance? Health insurance? Disabilility insurance? the make statins for a reason, and when you Google "reason for statins" this guy's picture came up.
And before you stroke out of the inning stock up on diapers and a wheelchair!What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. So, if you believe high cholesterol is good, and you enjoy life, so what.
And if you're wrong, and it does kill you, at least you had a good innings.
Live and let live.
(And if you die, you only have a few moments to say oops)
And before you stroke out of the inning stock up on diapers and a wheelchair!
I am one of those low carb 'hyper-responders' faced with high LDL but not low HDL or high Trigs. So, 'what should I be concerned about?', 'what should I focus on?' and 'what should I do?' are all questions that I also have.
My current doctor is an old school "LDL=bad" type guy who places great reliance on statins. So, where to turn in the face of the contradictory evidence?
This video from Dr Ken Sikaris at the Low Carb Down Under conference provided a good perspective on the state of current LDL research that I found helpful.
I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes two years ago. Since then I have been mostly on a LCHF diet and have shed over four and a half stone. However, my HBA1c has still been up and down, and my daily readings have been rising over the last six months, in August I was averaging about 7, last month I was averaging18, occasionally rising to 25. Then a diabetic friend told me how badly he had been affected by statins and I realised that my fluctuating reading coincided with the doctor prescribing me statins. A week ago I stopped taking the statins and my blood readings have been dropping each day, I have gone from 27.8 last week to 13.7 tonight. I have arranged to have a new HBA1c done next week but I will definitely NOT be taking the statins again.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?