I was on an injectable called Victoza which is Liraglutide, so definitely worth asking.I thought Rybelsus was only available to people who had been on an injectable semaglutide, whereas Trulicity is dulaglutide - related, but not identical. Still, worth asking the question!
@BarbaraG would it help to consider just what eating low carb would mean?
I found medication for type 2 made me very unwell, so eating low carb is the best option for me. It works really well, and with meals such as chops, steak, fish, to look forward to, and a bit of home baking once in a while, I really can't complain at all.
@BarbaraG - I've never ended up trying them, so can't comment on taste, but when I was researching suitable dairy options for my low carb diet then a number of reduced lactose products were lower carb than their regular versions. I seem to remember Lactofree Whole Milk was around half the carbs of regular whole milk, so if it's something you consume in quantity it could be worth a look.You're right, it has to be sustainable. Things like Greek yogurt and full fat milk might reduce the carbs slightly.
Yep, that’s what I use.You're right, it has to be sustainable. Things like Greek yogurt and full fat milk might reduce the carbs slightly.
It’s worth pointing out that sometimes no matter how low carb someone with T2 eats they may still need medication, there is no shame in needing any medication, we are all different and manage our diabetes differently, it has to be what works long term for you, not anyone else
Depending on just how low carb your diet is it’s worth bringing your attention and that of your prescribing nurse to the small but real risk of euglycemic dka with the sglt2 medications and low carb/keto diets. The usual advice is not to prescribe those medications for those on the lower end of low carb as a result.I was perfectly happy on metformin and Trulicity. I was well on the way to controlling my BG on those, after getting off that pigging statin, without adding empagliflozin - but then Trulicity became unavailable.
If I have to replace Trulicity with empagliflozin, then I guess I do. I just started to believe maybe I could do better.
Please do not feel that replacing the medication with another is a failure in any way. There is actually no 'right way' to deal with being a type 2. What is the best for one person is not the best for another. Whatever way you deal with it needs to be sustainable on both a physical and emotional basis. There is no shame in taking medication. What would be a shame is if you didn't take the necessary steps to manage your levels and ended up with more severe consequences. That would be sad.If I have to replace Trulicity with empagliflozin, then I guess I do. I just started to believe maybe I could do better.
OK, potted history. T2 over 25 years, on metformin most of that time, other drugs off and on (depending on the state of my diet and weight, basically - I have issues with binge and compulsive eating, I am never going to be thin). Have been happily on Trulicity for 5 years. Last year HbA1C was 56, and I started on a statin (reluctantly) because my QRisk had nudged from just under 10% to just over 10%. This year my HbA1C was 71!!
The nurse prescribed empagliflozin, which I was (and still am) very reluctant to take. Instead, I intensified my healthier eating (which I had only just started when I saw her) to low carb and upped the exercise. Got some Libre Freestyle sensors, and after a few days, stopped taking the statin.
That original A1C of 71, according to the calculator on this site, is roughly equivalent to an average BG of 11. After a few days with the sensor I was seeing an average BG of 9.5 and predicted A1C of 59. Over the next few weeks, as I low carbed and exercised, they came steadily down, so by the end of January we were looking at average BG of 7.5. It was saying predicted A1C of 52, but that’s taking in the whole of my data, if you just went from the average BG it would be something like 46, so I was well happy.
But then disaster struck as I was unable to get my prescription for Trulicity filled. The last dose I had was on 31st January. And my BG has been steadily rising - my 7 day average has just hit 9.6 :-( which would roughly translate to A1C of 59 again. This despite low carbing, exercising virtually daily (both strength and cardio) and having lost 11lb already.
The half life of Trulicity in the body is 5 days, so by now there should only be about 10% of the usual post-injection dose in my body. So you would think that it can’t get much worse…… It just feels that after weeks of effort, I am back to where I started. I know I’m not quite, because my BG’s are not (yet) as high as they were in the 3 months leading up to that HbA1C being taken. And that was with Trulicity, whereas now I am without. And once the Trulicity is out of my body, the ongoing low carb/exercise/weight loss SHOULD start to bring BG’s down again. I guess my question - to myself, really - is how long do I give it?
Maybe I should take the empagliflozin - perhaps a a temporary measure, while I get over the hump, as it were. I’d really rather not, though. Frequency of urine from high BG is bad enough, I don’t fancy having to pee ALL the time.
The other thing is - my weight loss has slowed to a crawl the last couple of weeks. Trulicity is associated with weight loss - I did lose weight when I started on it. So it’s not surprising that stopping it has stalled me. Hopefully that too is temporary.
The only change I think I could possible make would be to go lower carb, verging into keto. But I honestly don’t think I can sustain that long term, it’s just too limiting. I’m enjoying my food at the moment, and it’s stickable with, for me. I don’t want to start yo-yoing again.
looking at it calmly - I think it makes sense to wait until I’ve been off Trulicity a full month, before deciding anything. By then, surely, I should start to see the trend reversing. If it doesn’t…. then maybe I will have to take the empagliflozin after all. Or maybe I’ll nip down to the pharmacy and ask them to give me the paper prescription for the Trulicity, and ring round other pharmacies, see if I can get it elsewhere.
Hi @BarbaraGlooking at it calmly - I think it makes sense to wait until I’ve been off Trulicity a full month, before deciding anything. By then, surely, I should start to see the trend reversing
Hi @BarbaraG
I think in fairness to @Resurgam post, I rather agreed with the point.
We all risk assess in our own way, sometimes it's a worry about a med or about it's impact on our lives.
I saw the post as suggesting an overview of the benefits of being able to come off the meds & just what it would take...if that was possible
And re-reading your post, it seems to read as if that's what you yourself are hoping for ?
Any medication must have an impact & even once we stop taking it, leaves some residual effect in our bodies for a while.
That settling of the body post trulicity, where perhaps the washing out of a medication 'could' clear the view, and show that low carbing 'MIGHT' offer a workable solution...is how I read it .
Not as a criticism.
No medication, is definitely not Guaranteed,
but perhaps the secret desire that all of us wish for.
As for taking meds, of course it's the best way if that's what works & is needed for people to manage an illness or condition.
No shame in that at all.
Not on insulin or such like here.
But I do have asthma, and my sprays are a very effective treatment for it...
so I happily take those meds for that very reason...they work ...for me.
Good luck getting your script filled elsewhere or finding your body actually does settle down to a point that the way you're currently eating does actually offers an improvement alone.
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?