I have just been diagnosed 3 days ago with type 2 ,my sugar level was at 28.6 .
Just one point. Here in U.K one generally has two HbA1c tests before a firm diagnosis of T2 is given. In my case, my A1c was very high so there was little doubt but I was still tested one month later to confirm.Welcome! You have come to the right place.
The previous posters are giving great advice.
You may have noticed that @Rachox talked about getting "HbA1c down to a non-diabetic level."
Over the medium-term (months, rather than weeks or days) this is the statistic to monitor. The HbA1c is a measure of the average blood glucose over the previous 8 to 12 weeks. If you haven't been given that information, make sure to ask you doctor what your HbA1c was, at diagnosis.
They should test it again in a few months, typically three months for a newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetic. You are looking for a downward trend toward the non-diabetic range, if possible. Many of us on this forum have achieved this, either with diet only or in your case diet+Metformin.
More information here: http://www.diabetes.co.uk/what-is-hba1c.html.
You said you have dropped "all sugar" and just eating low-carb. I am sure you know this already, but "sugar" is not the whole story. Carbohydrates lurk in lots of common foods, including those we normally consider to be "healthy."
When I was first diagnosed, I was scared and depressed. After a few weeks however, I realized that the key thing is self-education. Type 2 diabetes is largely "self-treated." Your doctors can prescribe drugs/devices and give advice, but it's really almost 99 percent up to you!
Indeed I had two HbA1c tests 8 days apart, my GP won’t diagnose on one result incase there’s an error. In those 8 days my HbA1c rose from 67 to 70!Just one point. Here in U.K one generally has two HbA1c tests before a firm diagnosis of T2 is given. In my case, my A1c was very high so there was little doubt but I was still tested one month later to confirm.
Hi i test before breakfast and 2 hours after .Hello and welcome,
Some very good advice already. All I want to add is that 3 days is far too soon to see good results. All you need to look for is a downward trend over weeks. This isn't a sprint, it takes time. Metformin is no miracle drug - diet is the key. Get that right and your levels will drop. Set yourself a target that is realistic for you at the moment. Once you reach that target you can lower it.
May I ask exactly when do you do your tests? You say you are stuck on 16 at 2 hours after breakfast. Is this the only time you check?
Just one point. Here in U.K one generally has two HbA1c tests before a firm diagnosis of T2 is given. In my case, my A1c was very high so there was little doubt but I was still tested one month later to confirm.
There has been one case of lab error misdiagnosis that I have read about on the forum.Excellent point. Here in America, when I was diagnosed I had an astronomical score on the fasting blood glucose test, during a regular annual medical (I had not been fasting, but the spike was large enough to cause concern I guess). At that point my doctor ran the A1C, only once. His reasoning was that I had two (different) tests that both indicated full-blown diabetes.
One of the more desperate things I did after diagnosis was to question whether there could have been a "mixup in the lab" or something, which is when the doctor provided the above explanation.
On diagnosis, everyone should have at least two tests, considering how life-changing the diagnosis is, and the consequences of an erroneous diagnosis!
(Mind you, I have not yet come across a case of false diagnosis i.e. someone being told they were in the diabetic range, later revealed to be an error. But I haven't been on this forum for very long.)
There has been one case of lab error misdiagnosis that I have read about on the forum.
Hi i test before breakfast and 2 hours after .
There has been one case of lab error misdiagnosis that I have read about on the forum.
Yes, and possibly two. The first one was miles out!
Rare but has happened enough to merit the second confirm test to be mandatory. My second A1c was after one month because between tests I moved to a new Practice. When T2 was mentioned by a locum after my first A1c I laughed in his face and bet him £1 that the test result was an error. One month later and Boy!was I wrong. Note to self: Must give that Locum the pound I owe him.Scary.
And of course, if you have a bad diagnosis and start treatment (by diet, drugs, whatever) it will then be too late to get a reliable result months later. Because, if the later test shows your A1C in the normal range, that is taken as evidence of successful treatment even if the treatment was unnecessary.
I think it must be very rare though.
(At diagnosis: I was particularly concerned about this. One good reason: I had absolutely no symptoms, but of course that is not unusual. One bad reason: back then I thought that "only fat people get diabetes." Finally, the typical psychological reason: Denial. It was just so crazy, unexpected, wild.)
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