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Just some feedback on my metformin experiment, just in case it is interesting or helpful to others.
I began taking it seven months ago and I’ve been keeping records on my Fasting Blood Glucose (FBG), and my general bodily response to metformin. 2x 500 mg, morning and evening, always with food. (Wouldn't dare not to, re the tummy pain and nausea.)
I have written elsewhere, in the fasting sub-forum, on the combo of metformin and an intermittent fasting (IF)/window of eating regimen, and intend to on the weight loss and dieting sub-forum on the effect of the pill and the IFing on my waist measurement, waist height ratio, and weight for the BMI.
Here I will share the changes in my FBGs in particular.
Metformin affects me personally by lowering my appetite, and making me feel intermittently nauseous, which also lowers my appetite. In the first month or two, I was also actually physically (and violently) sick a few times over two months, although that stopped by month three. The intermittent nausea has greatly lessened, at the six month mark. I still get it from time to time. Funnily enough – less as I forget to take a pill at least three times a week, and when that happens, so lessens the intermittent nausea.
Anyway – FBGs. I began the month prior to a full month on metformin, with an average FBG of 9.2. After a month on metformin it dropped 12% to an average of 8.1. After two months, I saw a very big drop – 28% - in my average FBG – down to 6.6. (Awfully, I put this down to the nausea and vomiting, which peaked in that month.) The following five months they were all in the low to mid 7s, an average of 7.2. So a reduction from the baseline/month-preceeding pill popping - of 22%.
Or a nice easy way of expressing it – I dropped two numbers, from 9.2 to 7.2 in seven months.
In five months of metformin-ing (and three months of sunrise to sunset IFing) my HBA1c went from 57, to 52, to 47, so a drop in 10 numbers or a drop of 18%.
This is significant as it indicates the lowering of the amount of extra glucose my liver makes and spurts out for the get-up-and-go dawn phenomenon, I am supposing. If this is particularly dysregulated it keeps my Blood Glucose readings (BGs) high all day, with relatively few dips during the day, over the last three years when my BG went to hell in a handbasket. Cheers from Aloe!
I began taking it seven months ago and I’ve been keeping records on my Fasting Blood Glucose (FBG), and my general bodily response to metformin. 2x 500 mg, morning and evening, always with food. (Wouldn't dare not to, re the tummy pain and nausea.)
I have written elsewhere, in the fasting sub-forum, on the combo of metformin and an intermittent fasting (IF)/window of eating regimen, and intend to on the weight loss and dieting sub-forum on the effect of the pill and the IFing on my waist measurement, waist height ratio, and weight for the BMI.
Here I will share the changes in my FBGs in particular.
Metformin affects me personally by lowering my appetite, and making me feel intermittently nauseous, which also lowers my appetite. In the first month or two, I was also actually physically (and violently) sick a few times over two months, although that stopped by month three. The intermittent nausea has greatly lessened, at the six month mark. I still get it from time to time. Funnily enough – less as I forget to take a pill at least three times a week, and when that happens, so lessens the intermittent nausea.
Anyway – FBGs. I began the month prior to a full month on metformin, with an average FBG of 9.2. After a month on metformin it dropped 12% to an average of 8.1. After two months, I saw a very big drop – 28% - in my average FBG – down to 6.6. (Awfully, I put this down to the nausea and vomiting, which peaked in that month.) The following five months they were all in the low to mid 7s, an average of 7.2. So a reduction from the baseline/month-preceeding pill popping - of 22%.
Or a nice easy way of expressing it – I dropped two numbers, from 9.2 to 7.2 in seven months.
In five months of metformin-ing (and three months of sunrise to sunset IFing) my HBA1c went from 57, to 52, to 47, so a drop in 10 numbers or a drop of 18%.
This is significant as it indicates the lowering of the amount of extra glucose my liver makes and spurts out for the get-up-and-go dawn phenomenon, I am supposing. If this is particularly dysregulated it keeps my Blood Glucose readings (BGs) high all day, with relatively few dips during the day, over the last three years when my BG went to hell in a handbasket. Cheers from Aloe!