Hi Jo,
You’re not saying too much at all, this is actually very very helpful! I haven’t had any support from the GPs in the 4 years I’ve been diagnosed and coming to these forums is the only help I can really get. I’ll try and be brief with my reply:
- you’re right, confirming IR won’t deviate me from my plan of sticking to low carb, high protein but it will help me to know I’m working on the right root cause.
- I’m attempting to build muscle mass which is taking time and go for regular walks. I try and incorporate a ten min walk at least after my biggest meal which is usually dinner.
- The skin changes I have is Acanthosis nigricans. Ever so slightly around my neck and only under one underarm.
- I do have fungal acne but have noticed it become significantly better since changing my diet
- Someone suggested getting a CGM and I think I might do that for one month so that I can see how the foods in my plan impact my sugar and insulin levels so that I’m eating the right foods
- Yes my hba1c has always been normal although I question normal. What I find is with GPs is that even if a level is at the highest end of the accepted range, to them that is ‘normal’ therefore no further action is needed but to someone else it might seem like it is close to being of concern (does that make sense?) I certainly found this with my PCOS and had to fight tooth and nail for my diagnosis
- My mum is also Type 2 which gives me more of a reason to be careful so that it can be reversed now than to buy myself problems later
Sorry I wasn't around yesterday: we're on hols and I was running around a couple of zoo's. The AN is something that can crop up in people with elevated blood glucose, and it might resolve as you keep control. (My GP showed me how to cut the little warts that go with it sometimes, off, myself!) As for your HbA1c, do you have actual numbers? The thing is, a LOT of practices never even mention it when someone is in the prediabetic range, as they don't start any active treatments until someone crosses over into the diabetic range. Before that time they just sit back and wait for things to progress, rather than believing their patient isn't 100% destined to be a raging diabetic if they just get a little help before it's too late. So if you know what range you're in, those being normal (under 42 mmol/mol), prediabetic (between 42 mmol/mol and 48 mmol/mol) and diabetic (48 and up), you can guesstimate where you're at. And yes, sometimes the levels seem a bit arbitrary. Some people get symptoms of IR when they're in the prediabetic range for instance, others have no symptoms while they're basically consisting out of sugar water. If you get fungii/yeast/bacterial infections easily, there's sugar present for those things to feast and multiply on. In your sweat, your urine etc. So cutting carbs would go a long way in keeping those issues at bay, as you've already noticed.
Taking myself as an example: Back when I was diagnosed I was quite thoroughly in the diabetic range. I ate normal, carby meals that were in line with the EatWell plate, so "should" have been fine. They most decidedly weren't. I went low carb and got my numbers back down into the normal range, hitting something like 34 or 36 mmol/mol for about seven years. Then my mom passed last year, everything went to hell in a handbasket, and my last HbA1c was 40. Higher than I'd like it to be, and here and there I did get a little symptomatic with weight gain, nocturia and skin problems, but still, in the normal range. Thing is, if I never got a diabetes diagnosis way back when, with the way I eat, I still wouldn't get one now. No-one'd even mention the high-ish end of normal. But I assure you, I am quite diabetic still, I just won't get a HbA1c that'll back that up. Do not put chocolate cake in front of me because I will get a spike that would make some people here freak out. (And rightfully so). If you're on a low carb diet, there is no way the doc can tell, going from blood test results, whether or not you're insulin resistant, prediabetic, diabetic, or not diabetic at all. Though an oral gluose tolerance test would catch insulin resistance and/or diabetes, I don't think, off the top of my head, any of the other tests would be useful at all... They all measure your body's reaction to carbs, and you're not having those. Can't measure what isn't there. So, if you do go for a CGM, keep it alongside a food diary. So you know what dips and rises correspond with what meals. Most GP's haven't got a clue about how carbs affect a diabetic, but it will make things rather clear for you. So it might not be official, but any information you have is welcome, I think?
Anyway... Keep asking questions, keep being your own advocate. A GP has a LOT of conditions to be aware of, but that also, sadly, does mean they can't specialise in the bulk of them. Just go from the assumption that they
do want to help, they literally do not know how, more often than not. And that's where we have to suss things out ourselves.
Jo