Trying to control carbs to X grams per day is trying to over-control your body. There is no way to accurately estimate the carbohydrate contained in any meal and even less accuate information on what type of carbs are in each food as nutritional information on the packaging and the internet is mostly very unreliable and nearly always conflicting. What works for me is without going to some extreme or weird diet to try and reduce my total carb intake to near zero which is of course impossible and then find out what works for me by testing before and after meals.
One question for Dougie22, if you decide to ditch the Ramipril would your blood pressure creep up slowly unless you go on a salt free diet? I always thought that once on Ramipril, then you are suppose to be on it for life, the same with Metformin.
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One question for Dougie22, if you decide to ditch the Ramipril would your blood pressure creep up slowly unless you go on a salt free diet? I always thought that once on Ramipril, then you are suppose to be on it for life, the same with Metformin.
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@Dougie22, some of the obvious reasons for high bp are being overweight, inactivity, smoking and stress but some people are predisposed to having high bp (just the same as they are with cholesterol) due to family history.
Also there are other reasons why a bp med may be prescribed when bp levels are below normal, when my diabetic retinopathy was active I was prescribed the drug Ramipril (this despite my bp being below 140/80), the reason being that my gp and Ophthalmologist wanted my bp below 130/70 to keep the pressure off my eyes so put me on a low dose of the drug.
Patients who have a declining kidney function or who may be at risk are often prescribed a Ace-Inhibitor, but losing weight will reduce bp levels as will increasing the amount of exercise you do. Well done on yout HbA1c.
Update..... Visited my doctor this morning and we had a really good discussion on progress. We jointly decided to leave the Ramipril at 5mg per day and reduce the Metformin from 2000mg to 1000mg per day for now. I think that if I had really pushed him, he might have stopped the Metformin and reduced the Ramipril to 2.5mg, but I was happy with the changes made for now. I feel I have to get my weight down to get my BP below 80, with a view to eventually ditching the Ramipril altogether and that I need to see what, if any, change the reduced Metformin makes to my BG readings (I read somewhere that you can get 85% of the 2000mg benefit at 1000mg). Unfortunately this doctor is leaving the practice in August which is a real shame as I feel we've got to a good understanding of each other. Oh well! So, feeling much happier and motivated now. Thank you all again for your comments and support.
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