Welcome! I am a fellow Canadian. I went on a "loose" low carb regimen back in February. with great results. These forums are a great resource.Hi everyone. I'm so glad I found this forum.
I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes on July 6th from a random blood test. Had no symptoms. Surprise!
Luckily I was one week into trying a new diet and exercise program so was already in a mindset to make changes.
I've cut out sugar and most carbs, and am trying new foods like cauliflower rice (not bad). I swim and do laps every second day at the community pool.
I'm on Metformin, Sitagliptin, and Jardiance. My blood sugar was 14-20 mmol at first, but is now between 6-7.5.
I have an education course later today. I'm feeling pretty good! *waves*
Do you know what your HbA1c was on diagnosis? That’s a big bunch of meds you’ve been put on, hopefully with low carbing you’ll manage to reduce those.
@neithskye
Hello Neithskye and welcome to the ForumHere is the Basic Information we give to new members and I hope you will find it useful. Ask questions if you need to and someone will help.
Hi @neithskye, Welcome ! Sounds like you have hit the ground running and your levels show successful you are. Please enjoy the education course and let us all know how it was and if you have any queries ? You will notice the vast array of forums and threads. Any good Canadian jokes for the Joke forum ? Best Wishes.
It does sound like a big cocktail of pills you've got. Are there any plans to review these when your bloods return to a more acceptable number.
Glenn
Strange things can cause a spike. I've seen advice to wash your hands before you do a blood test, as minute traces of sugar or glucose can cause a false high reading. As you go through the forum posts (the T2 forum is very good) you will see lots of reasons for temporary high readings. Stay positive!I don't know what HBA1c is. All I know is that my blood test said I had a 16 mmol.
I don't eat many carbs anymore. I'd say 60 or less a day. Strangely even with all these meds every week or so my blood sugar spikes and I don't know why. Yesterday it was 11.2 mmol when it'd been in the 6-7 range for days. It's weird.
Strange things can cause a spike. I've seen advice to wash your hands before you do a blood test, as minute traces of sugar or glucose can cause a false high reading. As you go through the forum posts (the T2 forum is very good) you will see lots of reasons for temporary high readings. Stay positive!
Your liver might be trying to help out by dumping sugar, up to what your normal levels used to be. It might think you need a liverdump to get you started in the morning, or it thinks it's keeping you from going hypo. It'll get used to lower numbers in time. I was fasting yesterday and physically active, so my liver kept dumping glucose until I had about 3 grams of carbs. Then it calmed down and my numbers went down rather than up too. It's a confused little organ that's just trying to help.Thank you. Strangely I spike after I haven't eaten anything for several hours. I thought it was supposed to be the opposite - lower readings before meals and higher readings after. My readings are lower after I eat. But I was only diagnosed on July 6th so maybe it takes longer to stabilize. If I can't figure something out in 30 seconds I get very frustrated!
Welcome to the forum @neithskye. If your blood glucose reading was 16mmol/L that would be an Hba1c (IFCC) of 104.4 which is quite high.I don't know what HBA1c is. All I know is that my blood test said I had a 16 ml.
Your liver might be trying to help out by dumping sugar, up to what your normal levels used to be. It might think you need a liverdump to get you started in the morning, or it thinks it's keeping you from going hypo. It'll get used to lower numbers in time. I was fasting yesterday and physically active, so my liver kept dumping glucose until I had about 3 grams of carbs. Then it calmed down and my numbers went down rather than up too. It's a confused little organ that's just trying to help.
Welcome to the forum
Welcome to the forum @neithskye. If your blood glucose reading was 16mmol/L that would be an Hba1c (IFCC) of 104.4 which is quite high.
In the UK HbA1c readings of below 42 are non-diabetic, 42-47 is pre-diabetic, and 48 and above is diabetic.
That's quite the difference in a relatively short time. He'll need time to catch up.Aw. Poor little guy.
Thank you for the explanation. When I first started tracking on July 6th my numbers were in the teens, and I spiked once at 20.1. Now I test regularly between 6-8, and my spikes are 9-10. Getting better. I had my liver's best friend the gallbladder removed 27 years ago when I was 20, so perhaps it's still mad at me.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?