mikegreen40
Newbie
- Messages
- 4
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Hi and welcome. I will tag @daisy1 as she has some newbie info that you may be interested in. It includes some basics on how to control diabetes with diet, including reducing carbohydrates. Many of us have achieved great results this way.As an academic I have always prided myself on my memory. I know that It is impossible to remember everything. However, I have been newly diagnosed and everything I read about this disease makes me even more concerned. As I have been working on controlling my blood sugar. With each new drug it gets even better. I have become more concerned about memory lapses that I have had. Its not so much things like that are apart of my profession as a professor of history, philosophy and political science. Its little things like forgetting that I have eaten or things that have occurred in my private life. It is the one thing that I am fearing the most is memory loss. Perhaps it is also because my grandfather just died a few weeks ago with dementia. I am 40 years younger than that. Should I be concerned about memory lapses. I can take the blood testing and all the new regulatory issues with diet and etc. But my memory is just to hard to take at 47. Anyone have any thoughts on this.
Hi and welcome. I will tag @daisy1 as she has some newbie info that you may be interested in. It includes some basics on how to control diabetes with diet, including reducing carbohydrates. Many of us have achieved great results this way.
It is possible that your medications have side effects that affect memory?
I used to have a problem with remembering my metformin with lunch while at work, so I posted about it here. People suggested various things, including putting the pills in a container inside my lunchbox. Then I figured out I could have them with breakfast and dinner, so I timed all my other pills around those times too. I keep my pills on my dresser next to the things I use when I get dressed, it's a great reminder. Another handy place is in the kitchen next to the coffee or in the cutlery drawer.Hi @mikegreen40. I share your worries, which I know isn't a lot of help, but my memory is no where near as good or sharp as it once was. I don't know if this is Diabetes related, or just due to age (55). My ability to make decisions quickly, or do mental arithmetic quickly hasn't changed, but I do wish I could remember to take my **** Metformin with meals more often.
Hi @mikegreen40. I share your worries, which I know isn't a lot of help, but my memory is no where near as good or sharp as it once was. I don't know if this is Diabetes related, or just due to age (55). My ability to make decisions quickly, or do mental arithmetic quickly hasn't changed, but I do wish I could remember to take my **** Metformin with meals more often.
Well our grey matter does decline with time. Prolonged high BGs can damage small blood vessels in the brain and could explain memory loss. A more realistic cause is just high BGs which do cause a "brain fog". I have been diabetic for many years now and have noticed I have lost that "zing" I had. I think every diabetic would admit to that. I hope you get to the root of your problem and if worried see your doctor.As an academic I have always prided myself on my memory. I know that It is impossible to remember everything. However, I have been newly diagnosed and everything I read about this disease makes me even more concerned. As I have been working on controlling my blood sugar. With each new drug it gets even better. I have become more concerned about memory lapses that I have had. Its not so much things like that are apart of my profession as a professor of history, philosophy and political science. Its little things like forgetting that I have eaten or things that have occurred in my private life. It is the one thing that I am fearing the most is memory loss. Perhaps it is also because my grandfather just died a few weeks ago with dementia. I am 40 years younger than that. Should I be concerned about memory lapses. I can take the blood testing and all the new regulatory issues with diet and etc. But my memory is just to hard to take at 47. Anyone have any thoughts on this.
Mike, I sustained memory problems after an induced coma and being mechanically ventilated for a month in ICU. Sometimes I have went to do things like making dinner only to realise I've already made and eaten it. I'm not so worried about it now but sounds like your concentration is being diverted into worries (especially after a death of a family member and this is a natural thing so I would tend to try to worry less about the lapses and more on organizing more effectively. Take care.Oh the new to taking pills took me months to get use to . I had already been taking meds for other problems. But I am now on 3 drugs. It is problem. When I was first diagnosed, my Dr. told me to take about an hour before a meal. Now that is awful. I got nausea and did not wan to eat at all. Then they told me take the pill before you eat. And all has been fine. I have been trying to lose weight. That I can deal with. But its the necessity now to take tons of things with me wherever I go. The test kit, the bar, the glucose tablets for emergencies,. . . . The meds, l. . . That is something that takes getting use to as well. All of this I understand. But it is the small lapses of memory that make me worried. I have been told that this can happen if you drop quickly. I have had this happen. And I really don't like this. But Its the little things. Just recently, I got mad at my wife for finishing a snack and did not realize that I was the one who had finished. I never remember finishing the snack. That is the kind of thing I worry about. I am working on getting it under control. I hope you do to. Once we can get it there. that is great. Think about this, I am a historian, and insulin was not invented until the 1920s. Imagine what it would have been like before this??? and Metformin has only been around for just over 20 years. So there are advances and I hope that they continue.
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?