Great idea will benefit you greatly both in terms of blood sugar control and weight loss (if required).My first instinct was to get onto a ketogenic diet, as I have had success with this in the past.
Nursey is talking nonsense. It's almost impossible to develop ketoacidosis with T2 as you are producing too much insulin rather than too littleMy nurse is very anxious about this however, suggesting that it could send me into ketoacidosis. Although everything I read online reassures me that this won't happen with early-stage T2D.
Have you tested your blood glucose when having these episodes? It might be what we call a "false hypo" where your blood glucose is lower than usual (although not actually being at hypo levels) your symptoms sound like that might be the case.This is coupled with me feeling quite unwell in the afternoons (weak, clammy, bit of a headache) at the moment, a while after eating lunch.
I'd rather not be an interesting type of diabetic! I am only a week into treatment and a week into keto so I guess it's too early to see any real results?For an ordinary type two eating a diet of low carb foods should result in lower blood glucose quite quickly - however some people who are diagnosed as type two are in fact more interesting types of diabetic.
Mainly meat and eggs to be honest. I tend to go animal food-heavy. Had a couple of burgers with keto bread buns, and a few fat bombs I bought. Otherwise chicken wings, lamb chops, egg foo yung.What sort of things are a typical day's menu for you now?
No, the nurse hasn't asked me to track my blood sugars at all at the moment. He told me to check my ketones every three hours, as he was expecting imminent ketoacidosis. I ran out of test strips almost immediately though so haven't checked since last night, at which point I was at 2.8; far above the nurse's level of concern of 1.2!Are you testing before and after meals?
I'm a little surprised your numbers are that high on your current diet, which is leaning more towards carnivore from the sound of it, than keto. Can you give an exact breakdown of your meals and drinks in a single day? I get you've been on keto before, so you know what you're doing, but just in case... While nutritional ketosis is perfectly fine (If it wasn't, I would've been dead for years now), diabetic ketoacidosis could be problematic if it's not the diet that's bringing the ketones up, but rather a lack of insulin production... Have you lost weight without trying prior to diagnosis? I think it'd be really, really worth it to request a GAD and a C-peptide test to check whether you truly are a T2. Because if you're not, things could turn ugly quite fast if all you're on is metformin. Maybe put in a call to ask for those sooner rather than later.I was diagnosed with T2D a couple of weeks ago. I've met with a diabetes nurse twice who has put me onto metformin. At the moment I'm on 500mg in the morning only, working up to 500mg in the evening as well.
My first instinct was to get onto a ketogenic diet, as I have had success with this in the past. My nurse is very anxious about this however, suggesting that it could send me into ketoacidosis. Although everything I read online reassures me that this won't happen with early-stage T2D.
The nurse gave me a blood sugar / ketone reading device and told me that, if my ketones go above 1.2, I should go straight to A&E. I have however chosen to believe what I've read on DietDoctor and on here that 0.5-3.0 is normal reading and so not to worry.
However, I'm aware that my blood sugar is also high - 12-15 mmol/litre on my device. I'm therefore a bit worried that I've giving myself high blood sugar and high ketones, and that that will indeed put me at risk of ketoacidosis. This is coupled with me feeling quite unwell in the afternoons (weak, clammy, bit of a headache) at the moment, a while after eating lunch.
Now it's very early days for me as I've only just been diagnosed, so I don't expect to feel great overnight. But I guess I'm after some reassurance that my combined ketone and blood sugar levels are safe. Because if I was to believe my diabetes nurse I'd get off keto right away.
I am seeing a pro-keto doctor next week on Thursday so expect to get some good advice there. But that's over a week away so I'm hoping someone on here can tell me if I'm possibly heading for trouble in the meantime.
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