supergirthuk
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 67
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
Hi Scimama, when testing my blood should I dispose of and replace the lancet each time I use the lancet device? Which begs the question should I consider a permanent lancet if I am the only person that will use it? ThanksHi @supergirthuk
If you are buying your own meter and tsp strips as many T2 have to then many choose the SD code free as the test strips are the cheapest we can find (many companies will give you a free meter but their test strips are expensive)
http://homehealth-uk.com/product-category/blood-glucose/blood-glucose-monitor/
As for a low carb diet and energy levels if you increase your fat intake (healthy fats such as nuts, avocado, cheese, cream, full -fat yogurts with no added sugar etc) then you will be surprised at how much energy you do have and how full you feel.
You may take a few days or so to adjust - thats normal. It took me a long long time to get my head around the full fat bit - I have been told my entire life that fat was bad and carbs are good - or so the NHS, media etc would have us believe. Once you get your head around eating fat then your body quickly adjusts and many people find they lose weight.
Don't worry about making mistakes - we are all humans, best advice is to get a meter and test how your body reacts to different foods.
Hiya fumancu,Hi... my hubby was diagnosed in 2009, has never gone onto meds but is diet controlled and doing great. His bloods are always in the 5-6 range and his eyes, feet, etc have shown no change. He doesn't tell the doc anything.
I dare say it will be a struggle at the start but so long as I listen to my body and protect the more vulnerable parts of my body whilst exercising than I feel I can do this.
It's my sedatory lifestyle that has put me in this position and the fact that when I did go from 24 1/2 stone to 15 stone the doctor would not help me with the excess skin I was left with all over my body.
I felt well but looked horrific and was repulsed by how I looked due to this so it crept back on.
Realistically, I have no one to blame but myself but thems the breaks I suppose and I've got to accept that.
Hi Scimama, when testing my blood should I dispose of and replace the lancet each time I use the lancet device? Which begs the question should I consider a permanent lancet if I am the only person that will use it? Thanks
Did your Doc tell you why they couldn't support and assistance with your excess skin? Was it because they wanted to ensure the poundage stayed off, before embarking upon surgical processes? I have heard of that. Do you have other health conditions making major surgery an increased risk?
Hi AndBreathe and Brunneria,
The doctor said that I could not get what would be deemed as cosmetic surgery on the NHS. This was back in 2007/2008 and there was a lot less support/sympathy for people suffering with excess skin as there is these days.
I found it totally demoralizing to have done the hard work and lost the weight only to have been left in the predicament of I would have had to have had major surgery all over my body to rectify the problem. It didn't help at the time when I was reading of young women, who hadn't even finished fully developing, were getting breast surgery on the NHS.
Anyway, I suppose in someway having been in that situation previously I know what to expect when I lose all my weight again and hopefully I will have come to terms with having to live the excess skin as living with all the weight on is no longer an option I have.
Hi Scimama,Hi @supergirthuk you should use a fresh lancet each time, however many people on the forums report that they use the same lancet a few times before changing it. Obviously the more you use it the blunter it gets and the risk for infection is increased.
I change mine at least once a day. I don't know enough about permanent lancets to be able to comment on them.
I change my pricker lancet when I open a new pot of test strips - so once every 50 tests.
The wee pot makes a beautifully convenient sealed disposal container for both the strips and the pricker.
I think there are also other approaches to consider when it comes to excess skin. I don't necessarily mean choosing the best undergarments, although that certainly helps, I'm thinking more - if you did try approaching the medics again for help with excess skin - of focusing on things like, some of the heat rashes you may experience in skin folds, and the like.
Of course, such things would have to exist in the first place, but sadly, they can happen. So, timing might be important; to approach in summer, rather than wintertime? To give yourself a bit of time at target weight, to be able to say with some confidence the weight isn't going back on (as unfortunately it did before).
Perhaps spend a bit of time researching what works, and how you are impacted before going to see your GP, as he is the gatekeeper to all other services.
Hi Clivethedrive, your results and weight loss are fantastic, I've just told my partner who is over 20 stone at the moment and had high blood pressure too. I hope I can get my blood glucose levels down too, this site is so inspiration with people like yourself on here. It just proves what can be doneHi supergirthuk,welcome to the forum,when i first joined the forum..i was 17st 8 lbs and my bs's were 26.8 mmols, blood pressure 190/110 had neropathy in both feet felt like walking on glass, but by following lchf and the advice from posters here, my bs is now regularly in the 4.5 mmols and my bp 120/55
This is over 17 months much hard work ...but it's been worth it now weigh 12st 9lbs
Neropathy totaly gone now
This forum is literally a life saver
Hi Supergirthuk, welcome to the best forum ever. I was only diagnosed Type 2 last month and given the leaflet about your heart health and various prescriptions too. I came across this site after getting home and trying to find out a bit more about what I could and couldn't eat and I am so grateful I found it. The people are so helpful, they answer any questions even if you consider them stupidI started Metformin (1x500mg daily) yesterday but every youtube vid I see saying a lot about low carb diet being the way to go instead of drugs.
Concerned that I may be going down the wrong path in prioritising blood glucose control instead of the actual cause of the diesase which insulin resistance.
I have not seen the dietician or had the Diabetic team contact me yet but have seen the nurse who seems to be taking her time about things.
Any help or advice is gratefully received.
Many thanks.
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