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- 4,041
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Discovered some odd things – such as alcohol lowering my blood glucose,
No, it doesn't. I have had (only) one or two opportunities to test what a lot of alcohol does - I seem at worst to drop to the low fours and stay there. The main impact has been not seeing expected rises from carbs if a few glasses of Amarone go along with it. We have (maybe had) an excellent local osteria and every so often they do/did a set menu special night. First time I took a carb holiday and ate everything. Tested extensively, and came out after two hours with a BG at 5.1, lower than pre-meal. It does make me wonder about the mediterranean diet, which invariably combines wine with food.That's probably because it inhibits the liver's glycogen production which is a response to the glucagon produced by your pancreas when your bg is low. Does it actually make you hypo though? It's not supposed to....
Edited to add. And yes that hba1c reduction is a totally awesome result.
Congratulations Kenny. I agree with you that the info, advice and support of folknon this forum has transformed all our lives but you did all the hard work. Brilliant,As of today, I am in remission. I’ve not had an HbA1c in diabetic levels since January 2020 and have now had a clear full year with normal range readings. Today’s was 36 mmol/mol.
I’ve had “diabetic” problems since at least 2010 – oedema, kidney problems (producing no urine) , burning/tingling feet, cuts not healing, blistering, gout, and more. I was told that because my HbA1c readings were in the normal or pre-diabetic range, these problems were not caused by diabetes, and I was not diabetic. At the time I was exercising a lot, and eating “healthily” (that is, unhealthily, with lots of carbs and fruit), and my blood glucose kept rising.
Diagnosis in December 2019 was something of a relief and I switched to a low carb/high fat diet straight away. I’d had good results from Atkins in the past so I knew it worked for me. I’ve kept to around 20g carbs/day, and have been in ketosis for most of the time. Discovered some odd things – such as alcohol lowering my blood glucose, and some symptoms (eg night sweats) appearing only after my BG came back to normal levels. Looks like I don’t tolerate raised glucose well at all.
All the worst symptoms have gone and I only have a mild tingling in my toes sometimes, the last remnants of the burning feet. Still have episodes of acute dawn phenomenon.
This has been achieved entirely by diet and during the lockdowns. I haven’t exercised much at all, and I haven’t ever been hungry. I’m also steadily losing weight – about four kilos every six months. My waist is down about 5 inches and I’ve even lost an inch or so off my wrist circumference.
Am I pleased? You bet I am. I could not and would not have done it without the support, advice and example of this forum and the people using it. My thanks to everyone.
Now thats an idea worth pursuing!. It does make me wonder about the mediterranean diet, which invariably combines wine with food.
There is definitely hope of a potential reversal. I have had 2 issues in life with nerve endings. The first was a freak accident where I severed my ulna nerve in my wrist. This took a few years to get full range of motion and for the shooting pains (growth and repair) to resolve. The second issue was with diabetic peripheral neuropathy, both in fingers and toes (I additionally had shooting pains in the legs).@KennyA Nice to hear you are out of this, congratulations! Do you still have tingling in your toes? I also have it and wonder how long it might take to disappear.
Hi, welcome to the forum. The tingling has almost entirely gone now - I am conscious of it sometimes, but it's not painful and is more of a warm feeling, if that makes any sense. It started around 2014/5, well before "official diagnosis" and the pain was severe enough to prevent sleep etc. I will have been low carbing for two years in December, and I saw a reduction in pain etc very quickly - within weeks, if I remember correctly. The only points I'd make are that:@KennyA Nice to hear you are out of this, congratulations! Do you still have tingling in your toes? I also have it and wonder how long it might take to disappear.
It will heal quicker because of your sugar levels, and you probably had enough energy to cause it in the first place! Always look on the bright side.Unfortunately low-carb seems to have no effect on a torn achilles....
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