Well done on your weight loss! I don’t think a rise of 1 is significant, as the numbers are only reported as whole numbers your 40 could well be 40.4 rounded down while your 41 could be 40.5 rounded up. If you are finger prick testing at home and you haven’t noticed any change I wouldn’t be worried.
Even after over a year I still test between 4 -7 times a day, but that’s just me, I like to put my readings into the MySugr app so I can see any trends and know straight away if things are taking a turn for the worse.
there is this thing about proteins , that eaten in excess they can actually be converted into sugar by ones liver... so the general rule is to only eat around 0.8 grams of proteins pro kg lean body weight, so if your lean weight is maybe 75 kg your fine amount of daily proteins would be in the range between 70-80 grams of daily proteins in total .. a bit more if doing a lot of weight lifting and other kinds of body building
my own HbA1c has also raised a bit... as long as it is in the area of forty and lower , I wouldn´t worry too much of that... just keep on doing your great job and keep your nose in the track
Thank you for that, I wasn't aware that numbers were rounded up and down so that helps. I was pretty low carb (due to endometriosis) pre diagnosis, but never lost any weight, so it's thanks to the Metformin as I've only tweaked my diet to remove potatoes, rice (only used to have a spoonful at most) and any obvious sugars (not that I added sugar to anything or had anything with sugar in it as wheat has been out for about 20 years which means cakes, biscuits etc have been out for years - also no cheese for years as endo doesn't like that either). So the weight loss I feel is due to the Metformin for which I'm grateful as it didn't matter what I did I couldn't lose weight at all.
Your HbA1c's are amazing, hopefully I'll get down to the 30's too. Can't think what else I can do to improve long range results, I joke often that if I cut anything else out of my diet or down that there won't be anything left to eat.
As Rachox says, its a tiny increase and could just be a natural variance in the turnover time of your red blood cells. I don't know what hormone treatment you are on but it seems likely that anything which causes weight gain is likely to be implicated in continuing insulin resistance. Hormone treatments tend to work by making the body think its pregnant and we all know how resistant to insulin diabetic women can get when pregnant.
The stress produced by monthly pain can't help either?
Hopefully all this will cease and desist when your cyle stops but in the meantime you have done well to have a healthy HBA1c.
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