- Messages
- 8,453
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Last August my HbA1c was 99, and my GP was arranging for me to go onto Insulin. We eventually compromised and he agreed to support slf monitoring, and I agreed to take positive action to reduce bgl klevels. The chart I enclose shows how the battle went up to today. The graph is event driven, and each step represents the outcome following a change I made. It is in time order, but the steps are not representing time periods.
Step(1) shows what happened when I changed from Metformin to Metformin XR at same dose and time. Step(2) is me reverting back to standard Metformin. Steps (3 to 8) are me adjusting the timing of my metformin and gliclazide relative to my meals, and step(8) is where I was finally happy that further tweaking was unecessary. Note: I have not changed any actual dose or other med, just timings and splitting doses.
Step (9) was when my GP and DSN told me to take all 4 Metformin tabs at once in the morning. Step 10 shows recovery when I disagreed with that decision.
Steps (11 to 13) is when I started taking Bitter Melon supplement, Step (14) is what happened when I stopped.
Steps (14 to 16) is when I started taking Gymnema Sylvestre supplement. step (17) is when I stopped.
Step (18 to 19) show the effect Christmas had when I took a holiday, and although it was supposedly LC, it obviously wasn't too successful
Step (20) is when I started to take LCHF seriously. But I was not going into ketosis. My HbA1c was 44
Step (21) is when I dropped my carb input to around 30 g/day, and my ketostix changed colour. Reduced Gliclazide dose consistently now. Drop was quite dramatic Projected next HbA1c is around 36, which is my target. My GP target is 55, so he thinks I am too low. (????)(!!!!!)
You can see that my two meters in parallel track each other quite well, and apart from this last week the SD consistently reads higher than the NEO. However, this last week my NEO suddenly started reading higher than the SD. This was not due to a strip change, but was in fact the NEO battery going flat. Changed battery, and sanity has returned. The NEO rose by over 2mmol/l in the week, which is disturbing, considering I am still driving.
In conclusion, I found for myself, that changing meds and their timings and splitting doses has a significant but not major effect. I found that both Bitter Melon and Gymnema Sylvestre each had a beneficial effect on my bgl. Finally I have found that LCHF has had very significant effect especially once I had triggered keto mode.
Step(1) shows what happened when I changed from Metformin to Metformin XR at same dose and time. Step(2) is me reverting back to standard Metformin. Steps (3 to 8) are me adjusting the timing of my metformin and gliclazide relative to my meals, and step(8) is where I was finally happy that further tweaking was unecessary. Note: I have not changed any actual dose or other med, just timings and splitting doses.
Step (9) was when my GP and DSN told me to take all 4 Metformin tabs at once in the morning. Step 10 shows recovery when I disagreed with that decision.
Steps (11 to 13) is when I started taking Bitter Melon supplement, Step (14) is what happened when I stopped.
Steps (14 to 16) is when I started taking Gymnema Sylvestre supplement. step (17) is when I stopped.
Step (18 to 19) show the effect Christmas had when I took a holiday, and although it was supposedly LC, it obviously wasn't too successful
Step (20) is when I started to take LCHF seriously. But I was not going into ketosis. My HbA1c was 44
Step (21) is when I dropped my carb input to around 30 g/day, and my ketostix changed colour. Reduced Gliclazide dose consistently now. Drop was quite dramatic Projected next HbA1c is around 36, which is my target. My GP target is 55, so he thinks I am too low. (????)(!!!!!)
You can see that my two meters in parallel track each other quite well, and apart from this last week the SD consistently reads higher than the NEO. However, this last week my NEO suddenly started reading higher than the SD. This was not due to a strip change, but was in fact the NEO battery going flat. Changed battery, and sanity has returned. The NEO rose by over 2mmol/l in the week, which is disturbing, considering I am still driving.
In conclusion, I found for myself, that changing meds and their timings and splitting doses has a significant but not major effect. I found that both Bitter Melon and Gymnema Sylvestre each had a beneficial effect on my bgl. Finally I have found that LCHF has had very significant effect especially once I had triggered keto mode.