Thanks Mrs GimliI'm not diagnosed long enough to really give the best advice.all I can say is I take metformin and I do feel good on it and with diet and excercise I'm hope I don't need it for ever but I have been talked to about the benifits of taking it..will your dr perhaps explain it all so you can make an informed choice
Thanks DouglasThe test strips you we on aren't really that accurate.
Some only indicate when your bs is above 10 for a while.
You really need a meter that tests your blood.
As to whether or not you take your metformin, there aren't normally any bad side effects, unless it's an upset stomach, but it's your choice as we can't advise on medical matters.
Hello all,
Between being diagnosed 3 weeks ago and my first clinic appointment two days ago I've been hardcore dieting and exercising. I feel great but the doctor prescribed metformin anyway. He said 'test your urine, it will be a little high in sugar but you will see it go down over the week as the metformin takes effect'. Weed on the strip when I got home and it tested clear of glucose. Same thing at varying times over the last two days. My question is should I take the metformin anyway, or just do the diet and exercise method? I appreciate this is probably a silly question but I'm new to all this.
thanks
Liam
well no - your Doc should not have prescribed metformin so early in the piece.
the current advice (NICE and DUk) is for new T2s to be given a trial period of three or six months on Diet and Exercise because they have to understand the absolute necessity for lifestyle changes. And shouldn't use medication as an immediate crutch.
Having said that there is no programme of Diet and/or Exercise for new T2s - its just go off and do your own thing according to what you understand.
That depends on the bs, the patient, and the doctors judgement at the time,.
It shouldn't depend on any of that. The National Institute of Clinical EXCELLENCE says metformin should only be introduced to new T2s after their A1c is still over 6.5 after a trial of lifestyle interventions lasting several months.
Diabetes Uk agrees with that and the whole theme of DUK's Spring Conference in 2010 was the importance of the lifestyle trial before metformin was chucked at new T2s as a "one size fits all" quickie solution.
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