Thanks. No no medicationWell done you, @Ian090 . As you are not medicated I can only look at your blood glucose readings with great admiration.
(If you were on medication some of those would be a worry, they are so low!) (I am assuming it might have been a meter reading issue? Who knows?!)
I look forward to seeing your next HBA1c, which will surely reflect such great reductions in blood glucose.
The water is a fair point. But I'm through now 4 weeksHi @Ian090 - when I cut out carbs, essentially going keto, I had a similar rate of initial weight loss in the first few weeks. When your intake is absent of carbs it also retains less water.
That is pretty much in line with my own experience. It was the clothes I noticed first, within a week or so really. Amongst other things, I had to buy a succession of belts. I found that the early weight loss didn't continue at the same rate, but did and does continue steadily. I lose more in the winter than in the summer, don't know why. You might find also that you reach a short-term plateau (or two) where weight loss stops, then restarts.I was diagnosed Type 2 16th of December 22. HB1 of 49 then 52 on second test. So borderline but still above
I immediately cut out obvious carbs bread, rice, potatoes etc Also sugar desserts
The add wrinkle in my story was on the 20th I left for a 2 weeks cruise of the Carribbean over the holidays
On that cruise I drank some alcohol & nibbles of cakes. However it was well down on what I would have eaten. I ate mainly protein & salads. I also went to the gym on a number of occasions
Coming back I went full Keto and also burning around 1000 cals on my Peloton daily. I'm a big guy but exercise quite a bit
The results are my weight from the 16th of December was 136kgs doctors scales and today a month later it's 122.5. My glucose blood home tester is giving me results of 4.2 to 4.6. I've been also in low 3and twice in 2s
I've checked on other scales & they give me the same result. Also old clothes that were too tight suddenly fit
Is this normal as it seems very dramatic to me
Thanks for the replyThat is pretty much in line with my own experience. It was the clothes I noticed first, within a week or so really. Amongst other things, I had to buy a succession of belts. I found that the early weight loss didn't continue at the same rate, but did and does continue steadily. I lose more in the winter than in the summer, don't know why. You might find also that you reach a short-term plateau (or two) where weight loss stops, then restarts.
You are probably in ketosis - which just means you're burning fat. That's usually detected from ketones in your urine. You can check for this yourself by using keto sticks obtainable from the chemist - also some meters will check ketones if you use ketone rather than glucose strips.
Your low readings could be a meter issue. Have you thought about doing a period using a Libre CGM? It should show you how your blood glucose changes through the day and night, and gives you information you can't/won't get from fingerprick readings - such as what happens while you're asleep.
I spent the ten years before retirement largely away from home most of the week, living and eating in hotels and restaurants - I recognise the pattern. Add in following the official high carb "healthy eating" guidelines and you have the problem.Thanks for the reply
I'm sure the meter is correct as I correlation it with my wife's reading at the time and with another test strip for me. I'm burning through them at a fast rate!
I was only borderline on diagnosis and before that 3 months of H1B was always low on the results.
I'm being tested again at the end of March so I'll ask some questions about if something has thrown me out
The truth is I needed to lose weight and my job which involves weekly international travel, hotels & mega carby food was killing me
The first step for me was accepting the diagnosis as difficult as that is and then taking control and not letting the disease define my life. Hopefully I can keep it up
Before the diagnosis I was skipping lunch and eating very late. This was I suspect giving me spikes and lows.I spent the ten years before retirement largely away from home most of the week, living and eating in hotels and restaurants - I recognise the pattern. Add in following the official high carb "healthy eating" guidelines and you have the problem.
If you've been symptom-free so far you've a good chance to keep it that way. I had a range of nasty symptoms when my BGs were 44/45, so plenty of personal incentive to keep them low.
If I hadn't done the Libre trial I would never have realised that my BG was occasionally dropping into the low threes overnight. The current view is that T2s don't have hypos (low threes is definite hypo territory) but there are more than a few accounts on here of T2s reporting just such levels. It looks like these often wouldn't have become apparent without the Libre, and without the free trials I certainly wouldn't have thought it worthwhile.
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