Muffins222
Member
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If you are having hypos then your dose of Gliclazide is too high. Do you test your blood glucose levels or do you just feel like it's a hypo?
What’s your dose of gliclizide? It may need reducing if you are having hypos. Feeding the hypos is what is putting the weight on. I was on max dose gliclizide and steadily lost 10st on it but I had to keep reducing it (with the input from my GP) as I lost the weight until I eventually was able to ditch it completely. Talk to your doctor about getting the dosage right for you, the only time I would hypo on it was if I did a lot of exercise or maybe didn’t eat much after taking it.
if you do hypo don’t go crazy with foods to get it back up. I used to test and if I was below 4 I have a couple of jelly babies or a very small glass of juice and then after 15 minutes test again if I was 5 I wouldn’t eat anything else, if I was below 5 I would have half a slice of burgen bread and then test again in 15 minutes - that would usually do it for me. People often panic and go overboard correcting then end up too high
I’m on 20mg gliclazide, started on 80mg & had to keep reducing it because of the hypos (doctor said not to eat up to it), been on it 11 months & not put any weight on
Can you speak to your doctor or DSN & explain to them, they may suggest reducing the dose, I still eat low carb, but have to eat some carbs or I still hypo
Hope you get sorted
I used Low Carb diet to reduce my gliclazide dose from 320 mg /day to 40mg/day. I no longer hypo. I have lost several stones weight due to my diet change, and I am neither losing or gaining weight.
The old way of dealing with excess blood glucose was to use insulin or a sulfonylurea med like Gliclazide to increase blood insulin, and this would force the excess glucose into storage as far. So as the numbers went down. the weight went up. So we used to diet to reduce the end product rather than treat the main cause.
There are some new meds around that deal with the excess by excreting it or blocking it from being absorbed through the gut. These have different side effects, and none of them are innocent. They each have drawbacks.
The simplest and arguably safest way of reducing blood glucose is to stop it in the first place by making diet changes. If you scan through the Success Stories section of the Forum, you can see what diets work well.
The 80mg tablet is scored across the middle, and is designed to be easy to break into 2 so you can halve your dose if you choose. This is what I did, and I have an emergency bottle almost full of half tabs left over from my downward path to less scary blood levels.
A Glic hypo is not as severe as an insulin induced hypo since this med is limited in what it can do, and the effect reduces fairly quickly as it is filtered out by the kidneys. Your liver should step in with emergency rations of stored glucose which is one of its designed functions.
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