Dear ByJingo or Mum, I agree that your glucose reading after meals is high at 185 mg/dl but your HbA1c is great. I too was told that a non diabetic persons reading does not exceed 140 mg/dl. Especially after 2 hours after eating. I myself have tested my family when I was the only diabetic among us. I was the only one that my glucose would go higher than 140, usually around 180 - 190 after a meal and theirs never even got close to 140. Usually less than 110 at the same time during my test. I suggest that you seek other methods of increasing your milk production and continue eating healthy. Once you complete this mission, then seek ways to address your diabetes concerns. In case you did not know, pain and stress also elevates your glucose. Keep your focus on the more important things first, which in this case are your children. Take care, good luck and God bless you and your family.Hi
I'm looking for opinions from people who actually know about this stuff, because I've absorbed a whole lot of info in the past week or so and I'm not confident that I am correctly interpreting what I'm seeing.
Firstly, a bit of background and explanation:
I'm 32, female, BMI of around 22, mother of two, never been seriously overweight. My diet, for the last couple of years at least, I think is pretty good as far as mainstream healthy eating goes - carbs are mostly brown, lots of veg, some fruit, a balance of meat and plant proteins, plus a protein supplement and a big vitamin d supplement. However, I haven't been able to make enough breastmilk to come close to feeding either of my children and in trying to find out why that is the case, I got some blood tests done. My a1c came back as 5.2, which a support group I'm part of suggested means I'm insulin resistant, which is known to cause problems with milk supply.
I was a bit sceptical to be honest, but was pointed towards Blood Sugar 101, which I read cover to appendix, then purchased a glucose meter, hoping to rule out the possibility. Well, the first post-meal (+1hour) reading I took was 185mg/dl (10.3mmol/L)! So I carried on testing. Next test gave me 146 (8.1) at 1 hour and 122 (6.8) at 2 hours. Then I tried to do a home 2hOGTT with mini party ring biscuits (24 of them = 65g carb (it was the most appropriate thing we had in the house at the time!)) and got 130, 114, 74 (7.3, 6.2, 4.1) at 1,2,3 hours having had a fasting rate of 85 (4.7) immediately beforehand. Fasting rates taken on other mornings have been in the high 80s. I've now run out of the free strips that came with my meter and am waiting for more to be delivered, so am taking this time to try to dispel some of the slight panic I'm feeling and make a plan for how to proceed from here.
My conclusions from what I've discovered so far are:
I am in fact insulin resistant.
I'm probably regularly exceeding the 140mg/dl level at which 'diabetic' complications are a possibility.
I'm slow to process glucose ie get back to a fasting level after eating.
I'm probably not diagnosable as pre-diabetic far as the NHS is concerned and therefore they're probably not going to be interested.
So I'm thinking I need to be looking at cutting carbs to a level that my body can cope with. Which means testing lots of meals to see what makes me go high and work from there. I'm also planning to measure in ten minute intervals after a meal to see when I peak so I can measure most accurately. But I'm wondering if there's anything else I need to be trying to find out - fasting insulin level, for example - to tell me where on the road to problems I am or if I should be worrying about beta cell function etc. Or indeed whether I am on that road at all - my husband isn't fully convinced (hasn't read the literature) which is seeding doubt since I seem to be between normal and pre-diabetic. I'd like to be solidly sure I need to before starting the significant work of changing my diet properly at this point in time (with a baby and a toddler to look after).
So if you could spare the time to share them, your knowledgeable thoughts would be much appreciated, whether confirmation of my thinking, telling me I've got it all wrong, pointers of what to do next or just acknowledgement that I'm in limbo, anything really.
Thanks in advance and apologies for the essay.
Yours
Concerned Mum
Hi Alison
Thanks very much for your reply, I'm interested in getting any views I can from outside my 'argh, my post-meal values look scary' little box - it's somewhat reassuring to have people saying that I don't seem to be in any immediate danger.
I suspect I should have been clearer in my original post saying it's long-term risk that concerns me most - if I'm at a stage now where most people who do end up with pre-/diabetes have been, without realising it, before their (possibly sudden) diagnosis, ie they've gone from where I am to having pre-/diabetes, then I'd like to do something about it before it gets to that stage, partly since I'm guessing smaller changes would be needed now than if I got to a 'diagnosable' level. I guess there aren't many people in my situation on here (or anywhere in fact) but I don't know where else to try to get useful information. If you know of any resources that might be helpful I'd love to hear of them.
Also, I realised yesterday that my a1c result is from a period (july-October ish) when I was avoiding all bread in my diet for a separate reason, so it probably isn't a reliable indicator at this point, since I'm currently firmly back on bread.
Thanks for reading and replying, I am grateful for your time and thoughts as they've given me a more objective view of what's going on and also stimulated useful thought in different areas.
Hi Alison
Thanks very much for your reply, I'm interested in getting any views I can from outside my 'argh, my post-meal values look scary' little box - it's somewhat reassuring to have people saying that I don't seem to be in any immediate danger.
I suspect I should have been clearer in my original post saying it's long-term risk that concerns me most - if I'm at a stage now where most people who do end up with pre-/diabetes have been, without realising it, before their (possibly sudden) diagnosis, ie they've gone from where I am to having pre-/diabetes, then I'd like to do something about it before it gets to that stage, partly since I'm guessing smaller changes would be needed now than if I got to a 'diagnosable' level. I guess there aren't many people in my situation on here (or anywhere in fact) but I don't know where else to try to get useful information. If you know of any resources that might be helpful I'd love to hear of them.
Also, I realised yesterday that my a1c result is from a period (july-October ish) when I was avoiding all bread in my diet for a separate reason, so it probably isn't a reliable indicator at this point, since I'm currently firmly back on bread.
Thanks for reading and replying, I am grateful for your time and thoughts as they've given me a more objective view of what's going on and also stimulated useful thought in different areas.
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