DiabeticDaddy
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What pill? Some medications, especially anything ending 'flozin' put you at great risk of a serious condition called dka if you suddenly and drastically reduce carbs because they act on the carbs in your body, and if no carbs are going in it becomes dangerousand on a pill that basically makes me pee out sugar
Diabetes medications ending in flozin are SGLT2 inhibitors and its rare that they put a Type 2 diabetic at risk of DKA (which is almost unheard of in Type 2's), but this is a very serious condition and is another reason to reduce carbs slowly and not to go so far as less than around 20gms per day - which is where continual ketosis kicks in. But side effects on the urinary tract can be quite nasty (the result of all that sugar in the urine). However by cutting the carbs it should be possible to come off the SGLT2's.What pill? Some medications, especially anything ending 'flozin' put you at great risk of a serious condition called dka if you suddenly and drastically reduce carbs because they act on the carbs in your body, and if no carbs are going in it becomes dangerous
Best if this is the case, to reduce carbs slowly and over several weeks and months rather than suddenly
https://www.nhs.uk/medicines/dapagliflozin/
Increase your salt intake while you are losing weight, and keep well hydrated when using the other med (a gliflozin, I suspect?) If it is a Gliflozin, then be careful with the keto since it likes to have some carbs to work on, and will devour muscle and protein if there is none around. I have found keto unecessary for my condition, and am using a low carb version of the mediterranean diet (Pioppi) to control my levels. It is easier than keto and not so demanding. As has just been said, this is a marathon, not a aprint. So you can afford to take some time to do things gently at first. Less trauma.
Keep a food log along with your meter readings. I use a spreadsheet for mine, and it allows me to gradually eliminate meals that spike me. It also produces a nice graph that I can show my doctor to show improvement since the trending functions work well to exaggerate this aspect, which impresses most GP's. I was also able to adjust my medication and reduce meds, and this also impressed my GP since he was supplying me with test strips on scrip, and I was able to justify him supporting my habit.
Diabetes medications ending in flozin are SGLT2 inhibitors and its rare that they put a Type 2 diabetic at risk of DKA (which is almost unheard of in Type 2's), but this is a very serious condition and is another reason to reduce carbs slowly and not to go so far as less than around 20gms per day - which is where continual ketosis kicks in. But side effects on the urinary tract can be quite nasty (the result of all that sugar in the urine). However by cutting the carbs it should be possible to come off the SGLT2's.
What pill? Some medications, especially anything ending 'flozin' put you at great risk of a serious condition called dka if you suddenly and drastically reduce carbs because they act on the carbs in your body, and if no carbs are going in it becomes dangerous
Best if this is the case, to reduce carbs slowly and over several weeks and months rather than suddenly
https://www.nhs.uk/medicines/dapagliflozin/
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