You were prescribed meds because you had T2D and an obvious heart issue. There is no benefit to coming off the meds unless you have or had actively engaged in addressing those issues by important lifestyle changes. Are you on a low carb high fat diet? Are you intermittent fasting? If not why not? If you are still on the same carb diet that caused your issues you need to get back to your doctor quickly.Diagnosed type 2 in early march.
Doctor prescribed matmorphin which definitely do not agree with me. Changed to a slow release version. Also glikazide. I had a heart attack 3 years ago and am on a variety of other meds. But...I've spit my dummy out and stopped all meds an feel great! Does anyone have any tips how to stsy feeling great and foods to help?
I drive 1000miles a week and coming off meds has helped my concentration and tiredness levels. I may be fooling myself but i honestly do feel better.
Cheers. Paul
Hi Paul,Diagnosed type 2 in early march.
Doctor prescribed matmorphin which definitely do not agree with me. Changed to a slow release version. Also glikazide. I had a heart attack 3 years ago and am on a variety of other meds. But...I've spit my dummy out and stopped all meds an feel great! Does anyone have any tips how to stsy feeling great and foods to help?
I drive 1000miles a week and coming off meds has helped my concentration and tiredness levels. I may be fooling myself but i honestly do feel better.
Cheers. Paul
Ok thanks everyone. I'm going to go back on everything and make an appointment with my doctor to see what.if any i can come off slowly.Hi Paul,
There's a difference between carefully re-evaluating your medication and just chucking it out altogether. My mom was on a lot of different drugs, and she didn't quite know what everything was for. Turned out a few were to counter side-effects of a drug she didn't actually need anymore, and hadn't for years. That's the kind of thing you find out when you make an appointment with your pharmacy, and you carefully go over the entire load you're on. Could be some stuff you're on may make you a little less clear headed, and you do need it, so.... You can look for alternative with less side-effects. Just an idea. I know I dropped my meds (Gliclazide, Metformin and Simvastatin) in agreement with my doc, when blood tests showed my bloodsugars and cholesterol were perfectly fine on the low carb, high fat diet. I had to make a permanent lifestyle change not to need those drugs anymore though. If I hadn't, they'd be the things keeping me alive, and my quality of life worth it.
Don't chuck everything if you're not making any dietary changes. Get tested regularly to mark any progress or trouble rising. Make sure your medical team knows what you're up to, and why you're taking these measures. I hate taking more pills than I absolutely have to myself, so I know where you're coming from. I mean, I just had to take meds I was told would only need 3 months and ended up on them for half a year, and they gave my migraines every single day, plus 10 additional kilo's I really didn't want to add after some magnificent weight loss. Not to mention joint pain, eyesight getting worse, what have you. Sometimes we have to do stuff we don't like, to get back to good though. And you don't want to keel over either, just want to regain quality of life, right? So... Make informed descisions, and go from there.
Good luck!
Jo
Hi, im really stuck with the food things. Didn't get much information from the doctors. So ive cut out all sugars , sweet stuff , fatty foods, but strangely still eating wholemeal bread. I think i needa whole new diet. As i stated I'm out on the road ish every day and especially in winter I'd like hot food for dinner. I can't believe how hard it is. I haven't lost any weight at all. I'm 100 kilos. But i suppose the bread is the cause.Hi Paul
Since you drivefor a living you need to be extra careful with managing your routines. If you decide to give up sugar and starches (bread, potatoes, rice and pasta, anything flour or grain based like cereals you will be able to reduce BG and get better concentration. HOWEVER you must have that discussion with your doctor first.
If afterwards you need help with food suggestions come right back here. All best wishes.
Diagnosed type 2 in early march.
Doctor prescribed matmorphin which definitely do not agree with me. Changed to a slow release version. Also glikazide. I had a heart attack 3 years ago and am on a variety of other meds. But...I've spit my dummy out and stopped all meds an feel great! Does anyone have any tips how to stsy feeling great and foods to help?
I drive 1000miles a week and coming off meds has helped my concentration and tiredness levels. I may be fooling myself but i honestly do feel better.
Cheers. Paul
Hey again Paul,Hi, im really stuck with the food things. Didn't get much information from the doctors. So ive cut out all sugars , sweet stuff , fatty foods, but strangely still eating wholemeal bread. I think i needa whole new diet. As i stated I'm out on the road ish every day and especially in winter I'd like hot food for dinner. I can't believe how hard it is. I haven't lost any weight at all. I'm 100 kilos. But i suppose the bread is the cause.
Thanks. Paul
Im reading and Learning lots more than from my doctor. Its fascinating but terrifying.Hey again Paul,
Good news: Fat's back on the menu. I just had some eggs with bacon, cheese and salami. My cholesterol is fine, my bloodsugars too. The problem for T2's really is the carbs. So bread, pasta, spuds, underground veggies, fruit, rice... That still leaves a whole lot of other stuff. Like eggs, cheese, butter, clotted cream, meat, fish, above-ground veggies, berries (any kind basically, as they're the lowest-carb fruits available, besides starfruit), nuts, mayo, olives, extra dark chocolate (85% and up).... If you miss rice, try replacing with cauliflower rice, it's remarcably versatile. For me, I mostly stick with salads (with tuna, capers, olives and mayo, sometimes as a treat some asparagus thrown in, or pickles), eggs (Boiled, scrambled, sunny side up, omelettes, with good stuff added.... So that could be cinnamon, erythritol sweetener, and a couple of berries and grated coconut, with a tiny little drizzle of heavy cream. Or make it into a sort of pizza with the toppings, or just plain scrambled with bacon, cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, cheese...?). And then of course in the evening veggies with, again, bacon and/or cheese to make it more filling, and meat or fish. These things will get your bloodsugars down. BUT, and this is a really, really big but, don't do this if you don't have a meter and continue with the gliclazide. Glic can make you hypo, and if you go low carb it WILL make you crash and burn. No maybe's. And especially since you're driving, that's not something you want to have happening. Don't just experiment if it could get yourself, a passenger or people on the street killed.
Just some stuff to mull over. Remember, white or brown carbs, wholeweat or processed, it doesn't really mater all that much: every carb has to be processed sooner or later, so whatever the colour, they're generally not good. I picked diet over gliclazide, and I never looked back. But that's not for everyone. My best friend swears he can't live without bread and rice and spuds, and keeps telling me he doesn't know how I do it. I shut him up with "I'd rather keep my feet". T2 runs in his family and I do believe it is only a matter of time before he'll have to pick a side, judging by his ever growing gut and man-boobs, indicating he's becoming insulin resistant. Will it be The Dark, Carby side, or the Low Carb Jedi's? I have a feeling he'll fall to the dark side, honestly. He loves food more than his health, and that's his choice. Like I said, it's not for everyone. Pills are a valid option. But when it comes to staving off progression and complications, diet seems more effective in the long run. You don't have to decide anything overnight. just read, learn, and see what works for you.
Good luck,
Jo
It is both, indeed... But you'll get the hang of it, and make your choices accordingly. Honestly, T2 is the least of my worries. It's the one condition I have a say in. The rheumatism, migraines and hypothyroid are a little tougher to crack. I never thought T2'd end up being the "easy" one.Im reading and Learning lots more than from my doctor. Its fascinating but terrifying.
Cheers
My mum has rheumatoid arthritis. Its a cruel thing. Good luckIt is both, indeed... But you'll get the hang of it, and make your choices accordingly. Honestly, T2 is the least of my worries. It's the one condition I have a say in. The rheumatism, migraines and hypothyroid are a little tougher to crack. I never thought T2'd end up being the "easy" one.You'll learn. Give yourself time.
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