@bulkbiker I always wondered who on earth those chaps were.I could be Dr Jason Fung standing next to a chubby guy in a grey polo shirt... who knows?
I haven't ever used a Libre. I have actually bought a Reader and some sensors but haven't yet got my nerve up to attach the thing. I think I need a husband to help! I do keep a careful record of my fbgs. My GP likes them. Post prandial numbers are impossible to be sure of, as I explained. I could construct a table of readings for 2 hours pp but they would be fictional. The real rise would come later due to the gastroparesis. I get the highest rises in the late afternoon / evening, often even if I have not eaten anything. Yes, 6 is a low post p reading, but not if it comes after a virtually carb-free meal and my bg stays at 6 til bedtime.Are you being too strict with these numbers? To me they look 100% normal, and many on here would kill for them. What was the average when you last used a Libre? I am surprised you don't keep data on a spread sheet so you can average your readings. I know all my averages of FBG, before each meal, and after each meal at different times, plus bedtimes.
But the guy in the grey polo shirt isn't chubby lol.The only problem with all of this of course is that this is an internet forum.. we only have each others words to go on.
Alexandra could be a 6 foot 5 inch 30 stone bloke with Type 2 and an HbA1c of 120... but we don't know that.
Nor do we know whether others are correct in their diagnosis or that their doctors are correct either.
I could be Dr Jason Fung standing next to a chubby guy in a grey polo shirt... who knows?
@JohnEGreen thanks! I didn't realise "Rather not say" was an option. I'm using that for now, but ....@Alexandra100 Just a thought but there is the options of other or rather not say in the profile choices and after all this forum I thought was open to all diabetic or non diabetic your perception of your own status is entirely your own affair and cannot be dictated to you. Please don't go..
@zand thanks very much. It was that thread that got me into trouble.I hope you don't go. I enjoy your posts. The thread you started about the T1 honeymoon period is excellent and I believe that now it has grown a few pages will be a great resource for newbie T1s as several T1s have written about their own experiences with carbs, protein, insulin info etc. I have taken on board some of their points to help me with my own T2 control too. One of the best threads ever as it shows how diverse we all are.
Thought it might have been@zand thanks very much. It was that thread that got me into trouble.
Shame. It's a good thread.@zand thanks very much. It was that thread that got me into trouble.
But prediabetes is classed as having a HBA1C between 42-48mmol/L right?
Thanks! I think I'll wait till I've had one or two goes with a Libre. That may possibly throw up some readings to back up my request. She has already refused me a c-peptide test.Shame. It's a good thread.
See if your GP will authorise an anti body blood test. That'll give you a better indication.
I'm intrigued by the reliance on an HbA1c being used to identify whether one is non diabetic, pre-diabetic or diabetic.
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According to this I'm presently in the pre-diabetic range (last HbA1c was 46) and have in the past been very close to normal (been as low as 42). In my dreams! I only have to look at what happens when I have one slice of bread or even a couple of eggs. Like most things in life, it's never that straight forward.
. . . . . . . That which we call a rose. By any other name would smell as sweet.
With an HbA1c of 40, does that mean I’m not diabetic any more? I wish... I knew all that turmeric and kale would cure me eventually!Well it is a good job I am not a healthcare professional, merely a forum user with diabetes who can not possibly diagnose such a disease. You are what you are diagnosed. I am not stating solely that HBA1C is an indicator of diabetes, but it's a tool used towards diagnosis. I am a type 1 diabetic who has been in the prediabtic zone before, having been as low as 41mmol/L. Unfortunately I will never be relieved of my diabeticness
Well it is a good job I am not a healthcare professional, merely a forum user with diabetes who can not possibly diagnose such a disease. You are what you are diagnosed. I am not stating solely that HBA1C is an indicator of diabetes, but it's a tool used towards diagnosis. I am a type 1 diabetic who has been in the prediabtic zone before, having been as low as 41mmol/L. Unfortunately I will never be relieved of my diabeticness
Which is why, following @Alexandra100 criticising my avatar status, I changed it from Type 2 to "Type 2 (in remission)" rather than "I have reversed my type 2". And as remission and reversal can only be achieved without the use of medication, it will not happen to type 1s, even with low HbA1cs.
Which is why, following @Alexandra100 criticising my avatar status, I changed it from Type 2 to "Type 2 (in remission)" rather than "I have reversed my type 2". And as remission and reversal can only be achieved without the use of medication, it will not happen to type 1s, even with low HbA1cs.
@Bluetit1802 in order to keep my A1c down to 38 I have to eat less than 20g carbs daily. I am living with numerous health problems that I identify as diabetic complications (no other cause has ever been suggested, up to now they have all been seen as separate random idiopathic conditions). I am thin as a rake. I test my bg 10 or more times a day. To say, "I do not have diabetes" although strictly true would not give a true idea of my situation. If I could say I was "pre-pre-diabetic" that would probably be best, but there are only a few options available and that is not one of them.
If my memory serves, your doctor now considers you to be non-diabetic, but your description says T2, which is strictly speaking not correct?
When I found out about my A1c of 41 I could have gone on, with the NHS dietician's blessing, eating the ultra healthy Mediterranean diet I had eaten for years, and by the next test I would have been at 42 or higher and so in the Pre-diabetes category. As it is, I heeded the warning and, like you, did what I could to reverse that. That doesn't make me non-diabetic or normal in my relationship with carbs.
I'm going to bed a happy pre diabetic tonight with a HBa1C of 46With an HbA1c of 40, does that mean I’m not diabetic any more? I wish... I knew all that turmeric and kale would cure me eventually!
Would it not just make you in remission due to your strict diet? I don't think Diabetes every goes away, but due to eating low carb food is keeping it at bay.@Bluetit1802 in order to keep my A1c down to 38 I have to eat less than 20g carbs daily. I am living with numerous health problems that I identify as diabetic complications (no other cause has ever been suggested, up to now they have all been seen as separate random idiopathic conditions). I am thin as a rake. I test my bg 10 or more times a day. To say, "I do not have diabetes" although strictly true would not give a true idea of my situation. If I could say I was "pre-pre-diabetic" that would probably be best, but there are only a few options available and that is not one of them.
If my memory serves, your doctor now considers you to be non-diabetic, but your description says T2, which is strictly speaking not correct?
When I found out about my A1c of 41 I could have gone on, with the NHS dietician's blessing, eating the ultra healthy Mediterranean diet I had eaten for years, and by the next test I would have been at 42 or higher and so in the Pre-diabetes category. As it is, I heeded the warning and, like you, did what I could to reverse that. That doesn't make me non-diabetic or normal in my relationship with carbs.
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