Thank you, of course I will be happy to be your nurse. I will update my post once I have the lipids breakdown. I have to be honest though, I got carried away so ate lots of meat/cheese during the past three months. Learning as I go I suppose. I appreciate your reply.Congrats, I loved reading your post and I would LOVE to have you as my nurse at any time because of your positive attitude, honesty, and brains.
I don't think 6.8 is all that high. And I certainly don't think treatment decisions should be based on total cholesterol unless it is super high (and even then, you still need the breakdown.)
So I hope you can relax a little until you get the breakdown. When you do, I think it will be easy for you to address whichever one or two lipid types are abnormal.
It may be that lipids take longer to show improvement than A1c does. I don't know.
As you say, there will be a genetic factor in play in your case.
I'm just so impressed by your story and I know it will change your own practice with regard to patients with BG regulation issues and maybe also help your family members if they are willing to make changes.
Daily low dose aspirin may be more appropriate if you do opt for a drug to assist with lipid management, but as you know it carries some risk of GI bleeding. Always a trade off, these things.
Hello, glad to hear from you. Excellent job on your A1c!
When we embark on a radical change of diet it can skew our Lipids for a while, this can also happen when we lose weight. This will soon go back to 'normal for you'.
Dietary cholesterol accounts for just 15% of total body cholesterol so even if you could eliminate all cholesterol from your diet your body would just make more to account for the shortfall. Cholesterol is vital for life, it makes up 30% of every cell wall in the body except for two specific cells which do not require it.
Ivor Cummins has an excellent lecture on YouTube called 'The Cholesterol Conundrum' I can highly recommend viewing it. For shorter presentations view Prof. Ken Sikaris (Associate Professor Pathology) on the same subject.
Thank you. Unfortunately, I haven't lost a lot of weight (a stone in the past 3months). I hoping to loose a bit more. Thanks for the explanation and links, will definetely listen to them soon. I just hope the numbers will be better on the next 3months check.
I think your body will settle into a state of steady weight loss as you continue with LCHF. It's early days at the moment and I think you will be pleased with your results at 6 and 9 months. It can take time to fine tune eating and exercise habits.Thank you. Unfortunately, I haven't lost a lot of weight (a stone in the past 3months). I hoping to loose a bit more. Thanks for the explanation and links, will definetely listen to them soon. I just hope the numbers will be better on the next 3months check.
Another thing that comes to mind is the little bit of carbs in meat and cheese... the latter would be higher I think?I did not lose much weight, either, but another little factoid for you is that statins can actually raise blood glucose levels in some people. Keep up the great work and keep eating that meat and cheese!
Another thing that comes to mind is the little bit of carbs in meat and cheese... the latter would be higher I think?
Yes, a bit obsessed by it actually. I forgot to mention that I have been doing 16/8 fasting so I only eat after 12noon. I also, try and eat my last meal around 6pm. So some days its actually 18/6 fasting depending on my work pattern. So, I test my BG's at 6am, when breaking the fast and before bed. My BG's have been good ranging from 4 - 6mmols. I use Ontrack app my average for the month on there was 4.9mmols.Well done, that is a admizing drop in such a short time, do you test your own BG?
Have you lost a lot of weight?
Thank you. Unfortunately, I haven't lost a lot of weight (a stone in the past 3months). I hoping to loose a bit more. Thanks for the explanation and links, will definetely listen to them soon. I just hope the numbers will be better on the next 3months check.
No .. meat and cheese are great no/low carb foods.. Meat has no carbs (apart from some residual in liver) and most cheese is very low. Please don't mislead people. The information (in the UK at least ) is freely available on food packaging or supermarket websites.Another thing that comes to mind is the little bit of carbs in meat and cheese... the latter would be higher I think?
Brilliant results well done for getting such great control.my HbA1c is now 39, from the initial diagnosis of 110 in Feb
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