Hi all, I am new here. I have not got Diabetes. Well i have not been diagnosed. I have testing my BG levels and although most are in 5.2 to 6.8 range, my morning ones are sometimes 7.6. I have about 3st to lose. I started low carb diet 5wks ago and have lost 11lbs so i am on the right track. If i keep this up and get as much weight off as possible will my levels go down? I have read that a reading of 7.6 is classed as diabetic but is that the case if it is just random? I dont want to go to Dr yet as she will only say lose wight so I am gonna try to get rid of much as I can first. I also do 30 mins on exercise bike 3/4 times a wk. Am i doing something wrong?
Hi all, I am new here. I have not got Diabetes. Well i have not been diagnosed. I have testing my BG levels and although most are in 5.2 to 6.8 range, my morning ones are sometimes 7.6. I have about 3st to lose. I started low carb diet 5wks ago and have lost 11lbs so i am on the right track. If i keep this up and get as much weight off as possible will my levels go down? I have read that a reading of 7.6 is classed as diabetic but is that the case if it is just random? I dont want to go to Dr yet as she will only say lose wight so I am gonna try to get rid of much as I can first. I also do 30 mins on exercise bike 3/4 times a wk. Am i doing something wrong?
Thanks for all the replies. I dont want to go to doctor until i have lost the weight, I know i have had a few at 7.6/7.8 over the last 5 wks but i have also had more in the 5.2/6.8 range. It has made me wake up to the fact that i may be pre-diabetic and that has driven me on with the lchf diet. I am doing ok with it at the moment and have taken to checking the carbs on everything!! I used to sit and eat a punnet of grapes instead of having my fave choc or crisps... how wrong was that!! struggling to get my head round the fact that i can have bacon, eggs, tom and mushrooms instead of cereal and lose weight. i just hope that if i lose the weight the levels will come down.
Hi @Cazbob .. and welcome
As @Bluetit1802 has said, the only way that you can know whether or not you are diabetic (or pre-diabetic) is through an HbA1c test .. this is an an average of your blood sugar levels over a three month periob .. it is not possible to reach a diagnosis from a single (or a small number of) readings. You should talk to your Doc or practice nurse about this.
Having said that, your fasting blood sugar result is a little on the high side, so you may be correct in assuming a diagnosis of diabetes. Whatever the outcome, though, you have certainly made a good move coming here. Since joining this forum, the folks here have given me so much info, advice and support that I am now much more confident about the journey ahead. So ask your questions and be assured that you will receive the answers that you need. It can all seem uphill to start with but, in my experience, it gets easier .. very quickly.
There is a lot of conflicting and sometimes confusing information around .. but the key point to take on board is that managing and controlling your diabetes (or pre-diabetes) through exercise, diet and testing your blood glucose seems to be the best way forward for many people. For me, committing to an LCHF (Low Carb High Fat) lifestyle and testing 3-5 times a day seems to be working and you'll find that there is a wealth of info, relevant advice and positive support about LCHF on the forum ..
I see that @Guzzler has already tagged @ daisy1 for you and I suggest that you read up on the valuable material that she will soon be sending you. You also say that you are following LCHF so I think that you might find the discussion on the Low Carb Diet forum helpful .. together with the following Diet Doctor websites, which will give you all the info that you need about carb levels and about what and what not to eat ...
Low Carb Intro and Information and Low Carbs in 60 Seconds
It's good that you are testing and I'm sure that with your LCHF lifestyle change will soon bring your levels and your weight down. I recommend that you test before meals and then again two hours after you started to eat. You will soon develop your own testing pattern which will enable you to monitor trends over time and to spot any foods that cause your blood sugar to "spike" or fall ouside the normal ranges. The ranges that you are looking for are ..
# Before meals: 4 to 7 mmol/l
# 2 hours after meals: under 8.5 mmol/l
I've been testing 3-5 times a day since I was diagnosed in February, which means that I now know what my BG levels are .. and I can now manage them
Hope this helps
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