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Hi, another newbie to diabetes and this site

caz72me

Member
Messages
15
Location
United Kingdom
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Just popping on to say Hi, will probably have stacks of questions as time goes on. Was diagnosed about 2 weeks ago with type 2 diabetes. Seen Diabetes nurse yesterday and spent over an hour with her, she was great and I have been prescribed Gliclazide 80mg once a day for the next month to try and pick me up a little as have had extreme tiredness and very low immune system (I have caught everything in the last 6 weeks and the bugs have lingered so so long) they will review my meds at my next appointment which is at the beginning of March. Not sure what to expect but am looking at my diet and am hoping to have some energy back soon to start an exercise routine. Have also been trying for a baby for over 2 years with no success so not too pleased to be on meds which mean I have to avoid pregnancy, but hoping I will be swapped to something which won't interfere with this next month and we can carry on with our efforts :D

Am looking forward to checking out some good recipes as that will be my biggest hurdle. I have allergies to onions, peppers and nuts so limits me a little and I don't eat fish or much meat so not a good starting point really.

Looking forward to getting to know people in the same situation

bye for now :)



Caroline
 
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by caz72me</i>
<br /> Seen Diabetes nurse yesterday and spent over an hour with her, she was great and I have been prescribed Gliclazide 80mg once a day for the next month to try and pick me up a little as have had extreme tiredness and very low immune system (I have caught everything in the last 6 weeks and the bugs have lingered so so long) they will review my meds at my next appointment which is at the beginning of March. Not sure what to expect but am looking at my diet and am hoping to have some energy back soon to start an exercise routine. Have also been trying for a baby for over 2 years with no success so not too pleased to be on meds which mean I have to avoid pregnancy, but hoping I will be swapped to something which won't interfere with this next month and we can carry on with our efforts :D

<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">

Caroline,

Gliclazide isn't a "pick me up", it's a sulfonurea which will stimulate your pancreas to produce more insulin to allow your body to use the glucose which is currently not being used for energy because your body can't convert it.... for the reason that either a. you aren't producing enough insulin to do the conversion, or b. you are severely insulin resistant.

The extreme tiredness is due to the high blood sugars you've been suffering (as is the low immune resistance). Your body has literally been starving.

Diet and exercise will indeed help you to use the glucose your body is producing as will weight loss if you are overweight. You haven't said you are and you may well not be. I'm not going to get too far into the technicalities of it all, but you do need to know them to combat this condition. Baby steps is the way to learn.

For starters, for a very basic overview of diabetes, I suggest you check out http://www.diabetes-support.org.uk/explanation.html
 
Thanks for the welcome both :)

Luckally I had quite a bit of knowledge about diabetes before being diagnosed, I am one in a succession of family members to get it and also I work in a hospital so know quite a bit about treatments, the drugs used and about the facts of it all from working with patients with diabetes... although to be honest its not til you are diagnosed that you realise everything and I'm sure I still have alot to learn and loads of questions to ask.

'Patti' sorry to use the term 'pick me up' just the way I personally describe what the nurse said to me about it, her description about putting on this med were not 'pick me up' but to accelerate my treatment so that I got immediate results and therefore have some energy to fight this viruses and of course get back into exercise which I havn't been able to do much of with feeling so tired and ill from all the viruses that have been lingering, and I even had the flu jab last autumn as I work at a hospital. To me that description means I will hopefully stop feeling so tired and knackered lol, and although I know the drug is not a 'stimulant' I just feel the term for feeling better to me is definately a ''pick me up' lol :D

Anyway hope you all have a great Friday ... roll on the weekend, its suppose to be a sunny one 8)

Caroline
 
Before I was diagnosed and started treatment, I was so knackered all the time. I'd be falling asleep at 7pm every evening after work.

You should start feeling better fairly soon anyway

Welcome to the forum

Ash :)

HBa1C 6.3 T2
 
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by caz72me</i>
<br />Thanks for the welcome both :)

Luckally I had quite a bit of knowledge about diabetes before being diagnosed, I am one in a succession of family members to get it and also I work in a hospital so know quite a bit about treatments, the drugs used and about the facts of it all from working with patients with diabetes... although to be honest its not til you are diagnosed that you realise everything and I'm sure I still have alot to learn and loads of questions to ask.

'Patti' sorry to use the term 'pick me up' just the way I personally describe what the nurse said to me about it, her description about putting on this med were not 'pick me up' but to accelerate my treatment so that I got immediate results and therefore have some energy to fight this viruses and of course get back into exercise which I havn't been able to do much of with feeling so tired and ill from all the viruses that have been lingering, and I even had the flu jab last autumn as I work at a hospital. To me that description means I will hopefully stop feeling so tired and knackered lol, and although I know the drug is not a 'stimulant' I just feel the term for feeling better to me is definately a ''pick me up' lol :D

Anyway hope you all have a great Friday ... roll on the weekend, its suppose to be a sunny one 8)

Caroline
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">

Caroline, if you are severely insulin resistant then Gliclazide, whilst wearing out your pancreas will do little to help you. Ask about Metformin which works in a completely different way to make you more sensitive to the insulin you do produce. There are othe aspects to Metformin but for the time being just understand that it will help. All aspects are positive for T2s


Patti
On Levemir/Novorapid. Last hba1c 5.3
 
HI, ive been type 2 for 17 years, im 35 and have a beautiful girl whose nearly 5.i tried for her for 3 years before getting pregnant and was extremely careful during my pregnancy and apart from an 8.10lb baby born at 36 weeks we sailed through it.Hope that gives you abit more hope, where you from?
 
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