Catkysydney
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 112
HI and welcome
I'll tag in @daisy1 for the intro to how a lot of us have changed our eating patterns to help control or errant blood sugars. Some of us have even come off all medication. I'm guessing you are eating a fairly high carbohydrate diet if you are going high after food so it may be worth cutting back on starchy foods like bread, potatoes, rice, pasta to see if that helps.
Sounds like you are measuring blood sugars.. do you take a reading before eating and then 2 hours after to see the effect of various foods? If you go very high after eating rice it may be best to avoid it.Thank you very much for your kind reply !! I feel so much better to have members around me to share the knowledge and experience...
My doctor told me to eat rice.. maybe he wants to measure how the medicine work(?)
I look forward to meet more nice and helpful members.
Thank you again !
Hi Catkysydney and welcome!
First let me tag in @daisy1 as is tradition for newbies for her very useful info post.
With regards to your post meal readings, can you give some examples of meals where you are noticing the high readings. We may be able to help you tweak your diet to stop those high readings.
Edit: @bulkbiker just beat me there!
Welcome to the forum @Catkysydney. I wouldn't know about Januvia, but I expect someone will. You will get a lot of good advice and support on here. Ask any questions you want.
There are some other Australians on the forum.
Hi. Did you try Metformin SR the Slow Release version; it's much kinder than the plain version? Januvia is Sitagliptin. It works by suppressing an enzyme that normally turns the pancreas off a certain time after a meal. It therefore tends to reduce post-meal spikes by allowing more insulin to be available but that's all. Reducing the carbs is essential but you can have fats and proteins instead. BTW you don't have to have three regular meals a day (where did that come from?) and rice is not good for us as it's a carb. Januvia should start working within a day or so.
Sounds like you are measuring blood sugars.. do you take a reading before eating and then 2 hours after to see the effect of various foods? If you go very high after eating rice it may be best to avoid it.
If you have low blood sugar then a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes is fairly unusual.. do you actually have your levels to hand and maybe your last HbA1c?Thank you very much, @bulkbiker, for your kind reply !!
I am measuring my blood glucose. Yes, before eating and 2hour after eating. Then I found it was high after dinner, other times are OK.
I tend to have a low blood glucose before, so I was recommended to carry chocolate with me.. I will discuss with my doctor about rice.
Thank you very much !
Very valuable !
If you have low blood sugar then a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes is fairly unusual.. do you actually have your levels to hand and maybe your last HbA1c?
I'll tag in @Brunneria and @Lamont D to ask their opinion on your OGTT results...Thank you very much for your reply, @bulkbiker !
Yes, I had a problem of low blood glucose from high school..
when I had 4 hour glucose tolerance test, the results were like this ( last month )
Fasting. 5.1
1hr. 14.1. ( high )
2hr. 13.1
2.5hr. 10.2
3hr. 5.3
3.5hr. 3.6
4hr. 3.2 ( low )
Then I was diagnosed with type 2 Diabetes.
I had another food problem, I have lactose intolerance, gluten intolerance and I do not have enzyme for fat/oil... so I am having a low FODMAP diet.
I am not overweight, I have been skinny for long time.., my diabetes is a kind of mystery...
Thank you for your reply !
Hi and welcome @Catkysydney
Looking at your test results, you clearly go low at the end of the test. This is a symptom of reactive hypoglycaemia, which may occur alongside or independent of type 2 diabetes.
Obviously none of us here on the forum can give you a diagnosis, or advise you on medication, since we are not qualified medical professionals. However, i would encourage you to have a read up about Reactive Hypoglycaemia.
There is a good intro on the subject in Wikipedia, and this section on this forum discusses RH.
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/category/reactive-hypoglycemia.70/
Most medical advice for RH is to treat the hypo symptoms - basically eat carbs all the time and keep blood glucose up.
However, many of us here on the forum find that reducing carbs stops the blood glucose from rising to high and then dropping sharply. So we reduce carbs, and prevent the hypos from happening in the first place.
Have a read and a bit of a research, and see if it resonates with you. If so, maybe discuss it with your doc.
And you can ask anything you like here.
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