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Finally become Type 2

sugarmog

Well-Known Member
Messages
110
After many years of being considered glucose intolerant/pre diabetic, it would appear that, based on my most recent HbA1c test, I have now moved marginally into a full Type 2 diagnosis. However, it is not as clear cut as it seems as the test covered a period of about 4 weeks where due to unrelated medical conditions I was under severe stress which was elevating my blood sugar to unusually high levels and therefore skewing the test result. I have been self testing for about 6 weeks, and as the othe symptoms have been brought under control there has been a noticeable drop in my sugar levels.

However, I have decided that whatever the eventual outcome it is probably best both in the short and long term to consider myself diabetic and act accordingly. So I will probably be asking for quite a bit of advice in the near future.

My first question is about exercise. My job usually keeps me fairly active (although not at the moment) but deliberate exercise such as an hours walk noticably reduces my glucose level. However, is this exercise encouraging the insulin in my body to help convert glucose to energy in the normal way, or is it just causing the glucose to be disposed of in another way?

Many thanks in advance.
 
Hi Sugarmog and welcome to the forum Some experienced members will read your post soon and will give you their opinions and personal experiences on your question about exercise.

Since you are newly diagnosed you would benefit from some general information about looking after your diabetes. You are right to treat yourself as diabetic as, if you are pre-diabetic, you still need to take care of yourself to prevent yourself progressing into full diabetes. This basic information written for new members should help you to get started. Ask as many questions as you like as there is always someone who will help.

 
sugarmog said:
After many years of being considered glucose intolerant/pre diabetic, it would appear that, based on my most recent HbA1c test, I have now moved marginally into a full Type 2 diagnosis.

Yay! Welcome to the club...


I'm not sure that anyone knows for sure...

Exercise doesn't seem to have any immediate impact on my BG (I run for 40mins to an hour 5 days a week), although I think I see a benefit several hours afterwards (I don't see such big carbo spikes, and consequently my BG is lower).

This fits with the observations of this study, that suggests that the major benefit of exercise is to increase insulin sensitvity of cells:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 957090020X

Another benefit could be that exercise depletes the glycogen reserves in your liver (although not completely unless you are an extreme endurance athlete), which means that it is less likely to "liver dump" on you later in the day. I'm not sure if the act of replenishing the glycogen from glucose in your blood has any benefit either.

Robert Lustig (in his "Sugar: The Bitter Truth" video) suggests that exercise makes the body's citric acid cycle run faster, detoxifying the bi-products of fructose consumption in the liver, preventing fatty liver deposits and therby increasing the insulin sensitivity of the liver.
 
Thanks for the reply. I too notice a long term benefit to the exercise. I tend to go for an hour long walk before supper and my blood glucose level remains pretty much normal after eating. (about 5.1 before meal, mid sixes two hours after, as opposed to high sevens low eights if I don't walk)
 
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