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Diabetes Type2 Reversed in 3 months

Great story - thanks for writing it up. My experience is similar - I'm only sorry I waited 4 years before rejecting the nhs approach and went low carb. I have lost over 2 stone and now consider myself in remission.
 
Some of us, myself included make it too complicated , when it really is not..............

Cut out starchy carbs and sugars, sugars are self explanatory starchy carbs again simple ...spuds rice , pasta flour bread
,pastry etc.................


Cut out fruit, yep all of it , just for now, you can try berries and reintroduce stuff when you have control.....


Eat pretty much any meat and veg (peas and carrots can be a problem as are parsnips and swede etc)


Test 2 hours after every meal , meters can be had for free and some docs will give strips on
prescription...

The simplest way is just do normal meals but leave out the bad stuff, for example sunday lunch today as normal but leave the spuds off just have extra cauli and broccoli...... (now I have control I now allow myself a yorkshire pud and a couple of small spuds but still stay under my 40g day carb limit)

Use myfitnesspal if not sure of carbs


LCHF for the last 4 months, results of latest test this week


HbA1c = 44 down from 64
48 is considered the cut off point , so I am no longer in the diabetic range


Total Cholesterol = 5.4 down from 5.9


HDL (good cholesterol) = 1.5.... anything above 1 is good


TC:HDL Ratio = 3.6 ......the lower the better anything above 6 is bad


BP = 128/80 down from 140/90+
Weight = 111kg (down from 123kg)
 
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Hi Jojo

Thanks for the response.

I think you have answered your own question....try to eat low carb when possible. I had to give up bread, rice, pasta, potatoes, cakes and biscuits. A change of emphasis..... completely ignore recipes and recommendations from all amateurs and professionals (they nearly killed me). It is what you don't eat that matters...If it is not in your mouth it cannot harm you. Anything less than total surrender took it's toll. No trying, I had to do it (at times I could murder for a slice of bread). I found 6-12-6 meal times made a deep impression into my readings and I swapped my main meal to mid-day for real benefit. My early morning reading was a killer and so dependent on what had been eaten the night before. Now I have 2 slices of processed cheese (or BabyBel) or 2 slices of cooked meat. I found that the 200 gram type packets divided up nicely. The real clue, I think, is in looking at food labels before putting them in the trolley and put back anything that has more than .5 grams per 100 grams. Bacon and beef fits the bill followed by ham then chicken but watch for any extras like honey roasted or barbequed in the title. Spartan is the watchword. I am not being self righteous, this was the only way I could get results which are now predictable, for me.

To show how sensitive some things have been in raising the blood sugar level I limit myself to just half a carrot at lunch time but if I have this at night then my next morning reading goes up. Other veg at lunch time requires vigilance. If I have canned pulses (not sweetcorn ) then 4 forkfuls is my limit. In the past I would have had half a can of pulses and snacked on the other half while cooking. This is how my shopping bill came down from £60 weekly to £15. I cook for my wife and she eats freely, which does not bother me, but I just might lick the spoon!

Typical meals. Breakfast, Half a grapefruit, 2 rashers of bacon microwaved and 1 egg with 1 plum tomato from a can.
Black coffee.
Lunch, 50g of beef or chicken (or 75grams of steamed fish) with 4 forkfuls of pulses and 2 spoonfuls of chopped
tomatoes from a can. I incorporate broccoli , brussel sprouts or spinach for the fibre.Tea or coffee.
Evening meal, 2 slices cooked beef, ham or cheese (5og total) with 2 baby tomatoes. I only drink water after
4.00pm.
If I must snack between meals then it is1 slice of cooked meat or cheese ( or 1 Babybe)l with 1 tomato, either mid morning or mid- afternoon...not both times. Absolutely nothing after 6.00pm. If I cheat and I do admit to trying then the meter tells the truth and I
cannot blame the meter.

Kindest regards

Philip

As an aid to willpower I tell myself that diabetes is life threatening.....no dipping of a toe in water. This worked for me as I have always been weak-willed. No hero here. It is now 8.00pm and I feel hungry already with the rest of the night ahead. A sip of water, a guess at what my next reading will be and thoughts about an eagerly awaited first cup of coffee does the trick.

To justify this Spartan existence my nocturnal reading was 4.9 yesterday was 5.3 while before starting on this adventure my readings were higher than 10. I have stopped testing during the day for the past month as all readings were below 6. At the end of this week I shall stop testing completely. I may test just once a month for a couple of months.
 
Please can you tell me what you use to treat gout? I am really interested., thanjs
 
Welcome to the club, I reversed my diabetes in about four months, just through diet and exercise, just under a year ago.
I am sticking to it as I have no intention to go back to how I was previously.
 
@gardel0 thank you for your inspiring tales, and congratulations! Your story (and others on here) has given me hope - 10 days in the world of a diabetic seems dismal at times, especially some of the 'information' online! Some real doom n gloom stories and I know I need to get in control - having lost one leg to cancer when 19 I'm not about to lose another to diabetes
I'm getting on track with LCHF now and had an awesome dinner tonight!

Thanks again, your story is sending me to bed happier than I've been since diagnosed.
 
Great story - thanks for writing it up. My experience is similar - I'm only sorry I waited 4 years before rejecting the nhs approach and went low carb. I have lost over 2 stone and now consider myself in remission.
Does being in remission mean that you have stopped taking metformin?
I am trying hard to cut sugar intake and going lowcarb. Should I be taking metformin?
 
I kept taking Metformin while doing LCHF but it got to the point where I kept going below 4 just by running inside to answer the phone so that is when I stopped taking all my medication and at that point my Hb was down to 44 which is pre diabetic. If you are thinking of stopping your medication it is best discussed with your Dr first. How have your numbers been lately.
 
I never could tolerate Metformin, but ( I know there has been disagreements about this ) you are not ever supposed to get dangerous hypos from it if you are not taking other meds that stimulate insulin response.

I've read a lot recently where Metformin is a great anti inflammatory and in mice its increased their life span.
 
Thanks for the reply. I am on holiday for a couple of months in Florida and hope to surprise my doctor on my return.think I will keep taking tablets till my return. Don't have a Meyer.
 
I would just like to add that the diet doesn't have to be misery either. Our breakfasts rotate between bacon, egg, low carb sausage (Black Farmer's daughter or similar) with mushrooms and a tomato, fried in lard, smoked salmon and scrambled eggs, smoked haddock and poached eggs, lunch, any meat / fish with plenty of above ground veg (Brussels, cabbage, cauliflower, spinach) nearly always cooked in butter or served with a creamy cheese sauce (try microwaving Seriously Strong cheese spread with a tablespoon or two of double cream). Evening time any meat / fish/ cheese / eggs with as much green salad as you like and home made Mayo. We avoid all pulses / legumes, have very little canned anything, good fresh food, moderate protein, plenty of green veg (easily manage 5 a day) and plenty of healthy fat (that's olive oil, butter, lard, dripping) no 'industrial oils', no margarine, and our food is delicious and satisfying. There are plenty of excellent low carb recipe websites, your food doesn't have to be boring or unpalatable, quite the reverse!
 
Thank you. Very helpful.
 
Hi have you looked at the Banting LCHF approach.
This is covered in "The real meal revolution" book by Tim Noakes, on Anazon if you have a kindle you can download a sample of the book which explains why carbohydrates are a problem for people who are insulin resistant or diabetic. There is also a website (realmealrevolution.com) I haven't signed up on it but if you poke around on it you can find the Green, Orange and Red lists of foods that you can, sometime can and can not eat. There are also a few free recipes that you can view.
I was diagnosed in April 2015 following fasting tests and then an HBA1C test. Weight 92kg, BMI 32. female age 52, high BP since my 30s. Gradual weight gain for last 10 years although not eating HF or sweets etc.
I chose not to start taking meds like metformin or statins (although GP very keen for me to take statins) instead I agreed to have 3 monthly blood tests and checkups and try to manage by diet and exercise plus the nurse gave me a BG monitor.
I initially looked at the NHS advice booklets and websites I was given and then looked on sites like this and cut out all sugar based foods and some high carb foods like pasta and bread and by end of October had lost 1 stone with moderate exercise.
I then started Banting LCHF properly following the Green list (although I haven't been able to exercise much since October except walking as have a frozen shoulder). I cut out all foods in the Red list and very rarely eat from the Orange list. I have now lost another stone easily including xmas being in the way. And it's where it counts too, around my waist! I am no longer hungry as am eating more veg and fat. My recent HBA1C test was 39 and my diabetes nurse was really impressed, my HDL cholesterol has improved (even eating more fats) and my BP is coming down. My nurse said more results like this and she'd be happy to say I'm in remission. I'm 79kg now BMI 28 and hopefully weight and BMI will continue to go down. I will stay LCHF from now one as its a change of lifestyle not a diet and my husband has been very supportive ditching the potatoes etc and even he doesn't miss them that much!
 
Hi
I would like a breakdown of a typical days meals. I too had come to the conclusion that eating in the evening is a no-no but am struggling with menus. I like the tip about checking the carbs on the packets! Val
 
Hi
Great to read your story. I too had come to the conclusion that eating in the evening is a no-no. Good tip about the packets, and the side effect of saving money on the weekly shop is a nice thought. I would be grateful for more details of a typical days meals.
 
You really need a testing meter as you need to know that what your doing is right.you really don't need to do different meals just cut portion sizes and try not to snack between meals.make more of fruit and vegetables .
Do you now what you are talking about?
 

Well done, good to hear that simple steps like avoiding carbs is a great way of controlling BG.

However, and this is tongue in cheek, from a psychological point of view, "life was hardly worth living" is where the problems start. Life is worth living, so much so, that like you, I avoid all of the things you mention. What I have found interesting is that it's no big deal after a few weeks, probably because I felt so much better, being in charge of my life without too many pills.
I have three type II diabetic relatives (in both of my parent's families) and I have tried to get them to try to lower their carbs but my suggestions are met with comments like "I couldn't possibly go without spuds". I think they could, never mind, rant over.

Great results, good on yer.
 
and started to eliminate from my shopping basket anything that had sugars from carbohydrates at .5 per 100 grams
Great post gardel0 - I'm currently on a similar journey, but please clarify carbs/100g - do you mean 0.5g or 5g/100g? - even tinned plum tomatoes have about 3g/100g.......
 
Does being in remission mean that you have stopped taking metformin?
I am trying hard to cut sugar intake and going lowcarb. Should I be taking metformin?

I have cut down from 3 to 2 a day. I didn't want to stop completely before my hba1c - which has now just arrived - 34! (This is about 5.2mm/l). Last year it was 47. My diabetic nurse is consulting with my GP to see if I should cut down - she was surprised by this result as it is in the low end of normal.

I will wait to see what they say. I did stop taking it for a few weeks while closely monitoring - my results remained low - but I also read a few articles which thought metformin was actually good for you - eg this one reckons a study shows it can slow ageing and fight cancer.l - so now I'm not sure whether to keep taking it or not!

http://www.forbes.com/sites/melanie...low-aging-boost-cancer-recovery/#5502c63243a6
 
Well Metformin didn't stop me getting a bladder tumour - diagnosed in April 2014!
There are supposedly other cardiovascular benefits if you are fat/obese, but at 10st 4lb I don't fit the 'normal' diabetic profile......
I've been popping 2 x 500mg a day (along with 4 x 80mg Gliclazide) for the past 10+ years - a constant battle following GP's NHS dietary advise - until I discovered about low carb diets in early November last year.
So I started low carbing much against my GP's and his nominated Diabetic 'specialist' advice - which was to max out on Metformin (after 3 days they made me nauseous) and failing that going onto insulin, but I apparently didn't need that just yet.....
My HbA1c results graph (below) show the dramatic fall from 57 mmol/mol to my current 46 mmol/mol in a few months.
The 'specialist thought the 57mmol/mol reading was OK - nothing to worry about - just keep poppin' more of the pills!



Starting this week I'll be stopping the Metformin and reducing the Gliclazide dose - after proving a week ago that the Metformin didn't do anything - and that the Gliclazide gives me 3 am hypo's.
Go for it - just keep testing!
 
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