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Calling All Type 2’s

Although an enlarged prostate which affects more than 50% of men over 60 would not be the cause.
Thankfully, not.
However women, esp after children (again, thankfully not! ) do have a whole host of plumbing issues of their own...
 
Oh ****. If you don’t mind me saying.

I just wish there was a screening process in place. But my wife tends to take a bodyswerve around anything like that so screening checks at an earlier age would only be good for those that volunteer?

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There is no condition of pre-diabetes, so no diagnosis is used.

.

It is easy to see why one might be confused over Prediabetes diagnosis as here is a line from the Diabetes.co.uk website:

“If you are diagnosed with prediabetes, your doctor should clearly set out the steps you need to take to lower your risk of developing type 2 diabetes.”

And then also below in the video.

 
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I had a BUPA company medical the year before which queried my BG level but I had a retest with my GP and was told I was OK.

About a year on I suddenly lost half a stone, was sleepy and weeing all the time, and my partner (bless her) hauled me off to Lloyds Pharmacy for a finger prick which (I think) was about 19.4 mmol/L. GP appointment and the rest is history.

So one year previously I am probably pre-diabetic (or just about) then bang.

A high stress job, and addiction to sweets and comforting carbohydrates, and a top weight of 14 and a half stone are likely to have pushed my pancreas over the edge pretty sharply.
 
For me it was the fact I had a lot of thirst issues and persistent weight issues that followed me through my life. I used to wear 58 inch waist trousers for work only around 5 years ago and now I am back to 48 inches so that says a lot. What got me diagnosed? A severe case of thrush that I got before holiday two years back and a dire case of thrombosed hemorrhoids which persists still but is getting better. So I could have been insulin resistant since I was a kid because I ballooned despite not actually eating more than any other kid but I was VERY active as a teenager.

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You are not the first person that has mentioned stress as a factor. And I am sure it has been a factor with me. I now work from home in a stress free setting and that possibly helps too.
 
Do you think it could have been picked up earlier?

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Do you think it could have been picked up earlier?

Oh totally so, probably should have been picked up all those years back when I could never shed the weight for love nor money and I was drinking like a fish too. Makes me glad to know NOW that I have the condition so I can get on the keto train and feel at my best.
 

Hi,

Looking back, my symptoms were fully apparent in 1992 although I had no idea then that they were related to T2 diabetes. I just thought that I was suffering the onset of old age together with stress which was most noticeable in shortness of breath and inability to concentrate as I had previously. Then I wasn't diagnosed for 10 years which was my fault for not seeking medical advice. Eventually I was forced to and was then diagnosed.

After that I was referred to a dietician who basically advised eating a 'balanced' diet but this just seemed to exacerbate my condition. Over the next 4 years I was prescribed increasing doses of gliclazide and ultimately told that I would probably have to take insulin.

I then found this website. Researching what others were doing gave me the hope that following a LCHF diet was my answer and I followed this. After just 4 weeks or so, my levels started falling and with experimentation I found what foods I could tolerate and what others I couldn't. As a result I've dropped my medication to the minimum and feel 'normal'. I eat some 50 carbs per day which has been my intake for the last 6 years or so with the result that my levels remain consistently below 6.

My biggest regrets are that I did not recognise the early symptoms and equally that I didn't get onto the LCHF diet immediately.

Just hope that you do better than me.

Steve
 
How far back can you go where the earliest symptoms are recognisable to you now?
I was borderline for years with all of the symptoms, had a lots of tests done in that time.

I was told I was T2 when I was in the emergency dept of the base hospital when I was having a AFib episode. I was more interested on getting my heart rate down from 170 bpm and getting the SP02 back into the 90% from < 60%.

My GP had not got around to telling me I was T2 when I was there with the AFib and before the paramedics came. It was in the notes she over with me.
 
Well hopefully I have caught them earlier than I otherwise might have. I agree with you that better or more appropriate dietary advice at an earlier stage would surely have helped me enormously.
 
Do you mind if I ask what the early symptoms were?
 
 
Well hopefully I have caught them earlier than I otherwise might have. I agree with you that better or more appropriate dietary advice at an earlier stage would surely have helped me enormously.
I had always had the odd moment of feeling funny but put in down to low blood pressure some ten years ago i had a operation and was not recovering very well from the anesthetic the nurse asked had i taken my medication that day and I told her I wasn't on any. Two years ago i was diagnosed and this only came about because I was not recovering from a bout of thrush. I am 56 and feel that I may have had this condition for mmm any a year as I since found out that I could have been predisposed to diabetes due to having hepatitis as a child, as they think there may be a link
 
I noticed about 18 months before being diagnosed that i was losing weight, was constantly hungry,thirsty and had a terrible itch
 
Thanks. I am surprised how different every situation has been. I have to admit I was expecting more commonality.
 
I noticed about 18 months before being diagnosed that i was losing weight, was constantly hungry,thirsty and had a terrible itch
I notice itchiness is a common ailment. And that applied to me too. Thanks.
 
Thanks. Those match mine more closely.
I remember telling my GP at the time that I felt like **** most of the time as well. That's when he started to test me for diabetes.
 
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