a one-time Metformin will help?
Can metformin be used as one-off without maintaining blood concentration?
I am not insulin resistant
Thanks. Insulin resistance is the main cause of T2 or where it starts from, but that is not the only cause. It could be beta cell damage, less insulin production and insulin production signaling (DPP & incretin signaling). I did HOMA-IR and im optimal range with fasting insulin at 3.Metformin prevents the liver from releasing stored glucose, it does very little to reduce the glucose already in your blood. And as you have eaten an indulgent high carb meal it's extremely unlikely that your liver will be releasing any glucose.
Had to look up Acarbose, I'd never come across it before, it seems to work by preventing the breakdown of carbs into sugar. That could possibly work?
I wouldn't think so
Type 2 is insulin resistance?
If you're not resistant to your insulin and your glucose levels are high then you probably have some other form of diabetes
and im optimal range with fasting insulin at 3.
Thanks. Insulin resistance is the main cause of T2 or where it starts from, but that is not the only cause. It could be beta cell damage, less insulin production and insulin production signaling (DPP & incretin signaling). I did HOMA-IR and im optimal range with fasting insulin at 3.
Im talking of fasting insulin at 3, don't remember HOMA-IR but it was optimal.I thought optimal was less than 1 = insulin sensitive
above 1.9 = early insulin resistance
above 2.0 = significant insulin resistance
https://thebloodcode.com/homa-ir-know/#:~:text=Less than 1.0 means you,2.9 indicates significant insulin resistance.
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