Great weight loss and lowering of Hba1c. You need to talk to your GP/DN rather than us.Hi there,
some of you may have seen I am on a weight loss / lower carb journey. I am not perfect, and haven’t gone Keto, just substantial drop in what I used to have. Have the occasional bad day
at the start of my journey my hba1c was 78. In June following the addition of Dapagliflozin and weight loss I was at 46. So it could be the extra drugs, or the weight loss or both that helped
Since then I have lost a further 9.5kg and finger prick tests are averaging 5.5 or lower. I don’t measure significantly often though
I am going to speak to the doctor on Monday and ask for a repeat hba1c and if it is lower ask to come off the drugs in reverse order they were added to my regimen. Then ideally 3 monthly reviews and weight loss until I reach a plateau whether no or some drugs
is this a sensible approach or is there a better way to know when to drop them. Is the risk of my body gets better that I will drive myself into hypo risk?
I know some of not all of the drugs I have do help weight loss also so do worry if not careful I’ll stop losing weight
Oh I will, but I appreciate people’s opinions too. mainly around how their drug reduction came about, how they dealt with doctors and what the impact off not dropping drugs areGreat weight loss and lowering of Hba1c. You need to talk to your GP/DN rather than us.
Thanks for that, the reducing and monitoring was my plan. Sounds like I am on the right track thereLow Carb, unless you are eating a lot more calories than before = lower weight in almost all cases.
Thousands of us T2D's have lost weight on LCHF without conscious reduction in calories. Indeed I just swapped carbs for fats and so initially increased my Calories yet still lost weight - even though I was not aiming for that!
Weight loss is separate from T2D or normal Blood Glucose.
Metformin supposedly helps reduce appetite, but so does being fat adapted from Low Carb.
However do be careful in coming off medication. It needs to be done by reducing and monitoring each time, definitely not all at once!
Oh I will, but I appreciate people’s opinions too. mainly around how their drug reduction came about, how they dealt with doctors and what the impact off not dropping drugs are
I haven’t always found the doctors always best at this unfortunately apart from telling me it’s progressive, I will end up on insulin and healthy carbs are the way to go.... so, having to push my own treatment plan
The most recently added and the one drug that did give me nasty side effects (although only once) is the Dapagliflozin so am thinking that might be the first candidate for removal. Although it would be nice to no longer inject I think that would be the next plan followed by reducing the metformin although not so worried about that one to be fairYes, you should reduce meds as your weight and BS become 'normal'. Do this in conjunction with your GP/DN advice. Your profile says you have Bydureon which should only be needed to reduce excess weight so that might be the first candidate?
In my case between diet , exercise, and losing over 50 lbs the meds, Glipizide, was causing me to go hypo. I explained it to my doctor that there was not any way I could take the medicine. We agreed that it would be worth a try, This just a suggestion, but providing him/her with a chart showing your daily readings might help. If your numbers are on the lowish side it might help convince your doctor. Getting off the meds is always great, but it is also a learning process. You are flying solo, you do not have any meds controlling things, so you need to be careful with your diet and learn how your body reacts to food without them.De-prescribing is very hard for most doctors to do as it goes against everything they have been taught.
I took my own decision and stopped medication whilst continuing to monitor blood sugar levels closely. I only told HCP's when they credited the meds for lowering my HbA1c. They were perturbed to say the least!
Discuss it with them (if you can get an appt) but remember at the end of the day it's your choice what you put in your body.
Hi there,Hi there,
some of you may have seen I am on a weight loss / lower carb journey. I am not perfect, and haven’t gone Keto, just substantial drop in what I used to have. Have the occasional bad day
at the start of my journey my hba1c was 78. In June following the addition of Dapagliflozin and weight loss I was at 46. So it could be the extra drugs, or the weight loss or both that helped
Since then I have lost a further 9.5kg and finger prick tests are averaging 5.5 or lower. I don’t measure significantly often though
I am going to speak to the doctor on Monday and ask for a repeat hba1c and if it is lower ask to come off the drugs in reverse order they were added to my regimen. Then ideally 3 monthly reviews and weight loss until I reach a plateau whether no or some drugs
is this a sensible approach or is there a better way to know when to drop them. Is the risk of my body gets better that I will drive myself into hypo risk?
I know some of not all of the drugs I have do help weight loss also so do worry if not careful I’ll stop losing weight
That's great advice. Talk to people who have no idea about diabetes, reversing diabetes. I have had a major disagreement with mineGreat weight loss and lowering of Hba1c. You need to talk to your GP/DN rather than us.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?