Very unlikely.1. I’ve seen through looking at this forum that a lot of people say that you need two results to confirm the diagnosis. So does this mean it’s possible I don’t have diabetes? (This is why I haven’t set my diabetes status)
All carbs turn to glucose in your body, and refined sugar is just a carb.2. Should I just be cutting out the refined sugar as suggested or should I start adjusting my diet more?
3. If I do adjust my diet is it simply a case of going low carb or is a low gi diet as beneficial? Or should it be a combination of the two?
YES!4. Is it worth me getting a blood glucose monitor before I speak to the doctor?
I only look at the carbs, not the 'of which sugar'. It's all glucose once my body has dealt with it.5. Do I need to take any notice of the ‘of sugars’ on food labels I.e. should it be a percentage of the carbs? Or should I completely ignore this?
Not fainting sounds like a priority to me, and improving your blood glucose would be a close second in my book.I have the added complication that if I don’t eat enough my PoTS gets worseso I really need to figure this all out so I can adequately plan and research everything so I don’t faint from not eating enough either but I need to eat little enough to lose weight. It just feels like a vicious circle.
Vegetarian low carb isn't a problem although it's a little more restrictive than eatig omnivorous. Bring reading glasses to the supermarket to check the carbs in commercial meat replacers, some are quite low carb, others very much not so.and vegetarian to boot (that’s more relevant from a diet point of view)
Hi @Dippers83 , welcome to the forum.
Let's see:
Very unlikely.
Mixing up of test tubes in labs is very, very rare.
Sometimes, when someone is only just over the diabetes threshold of 48 mmol/mol, they can have dropped below with the confirmation test. With a hba1c of 77 this isn't likely.
All carbs turn to glucose in your body, and refined sugar is just a carb.
A very small amount of refined sugar in an otherwise low carb meal will make blood glucose rise a lot less than a full plate of 'healthy' porridge.
YES!
If you use it to test before and two hours after meals, it can be a very powerful tool to work out what foods work for you. It will also answer question 3, without bias on one type of diet over the other.
Tagging @Rachox for information about meters in the UK to save you from spending more than you need to.
I only look at the carbs, not the 'of which sugar'. It's all glucose once my body has dealt with it.
Not fainting sounds like a priority to me, and improving your blood glucose would be a close second in my book.
Losing weight is cool, and it will likely help with the diabetes as well, but for me, it would be a lot farther down the list of priorities.
Besides, many of our members have found they lost weight by lowering their carbs, and without lowering (or even watching) their calories.
Vegetarian low carb isn't a problem although it's a little more restrictive than eatig omnivorous. Bring reading glasses to the supermarket to check the carbs in commercial meat replacers, some are quite low carb, others very much not so.
Vegetarian low carb staple items to get enough calories are eggs, cheeses in all their glorious variety, cream, butter. All those items can be used to enrich any vegetable dish, both in calories and in flavour. And diabetes will be happy with those.
If you don't mind reading about meat, I find this piece written by one of our members very informative on how diabetes and food work, just mentally replace all the bacon mentioned with cheese and cream: https://josekalsbeek.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-nutritional-thingy.html
And again provided you don't mind reading about eating meat, here's a friendly thread in the low carb section of the forum where we share what we eat. Very good to get ideas: https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/what-have-you-eaten-today-low-carb-forum.75781/page-2954[/
- basic quorn pieces are around 3% carb which can make a good addition to a low carb diet.
For a type 2 Diabetic vegetarian diet it helps me to keep in mind:
* Eat less ultra processed food
* Eat more non-starchy vegetables
And even gentle exercise can help (e.g. walking). Especially after meals.
Hi @Dippers83 and welcome to the forum. Thanks for the tag @Antje77 , here’s some info on UK meters, and to be clear I have no commercial connections with any of the companies mentioned.
HOME HEALTH have the Gluco Navii, which is a fairly new model and seems to be getting good reviews.
https://homehealth-uk.com/all-produ...ose-meter-test-strips-choose-mmol-l-or-mg-dl/
Links to the strips for future orders:
https://homehealth-uk.com/all-products/glucose-navii-blood-glucose-test-strips-50-strip-pack/
Then they sell the older SD Code Free, details to be found here!
https://homehealth-uk.com/all-products/codefree-blood-glucose-monitoring-system-mmoll-or-mgdl/
SPIRIT HEALTHCARE have a meter called the Tee2 + which is quite popular:
https://shop.spirit-health.co.uk/co...e2-blood-glucose-meter?variant=19264017268793
The strips are to be found here:
https://shop.spirit-health.co.uk/co...py-of-tee2-test-strips?variant=19264017367097
If there is a choice of units of measurement then ‘mmol/L’ are the standard units in the UK, ‘mg/dl’ in the US, other countries may vary.
Don’t forget to check the box if you have pre diabetes or diabetes so you can buy VAT free. (for all meters and strips)
Firstly, as others have suggested, your hba1c result suggests diabetes. I'd also add that it's well beyond margins of error on testing, so I would suggest it's best to proceed on the basis that you are diabetic and go from there.Not sure where to start with this one and I have so many questions!
So I received private blood tests back this week and among other things showed my Hba1c is 77. The doctor basically said this shows diabetes and cut out the refined sugar.
I’ve sent these results to my NHS gp and have a telephone consultation booked in a couple of weeks but I feel a bit in limbo in the mean time.
I should say as well that I have an under active thyroid, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (PoTS), a BMI of 43 and vegetarian to boot (that’s more relevant from a diet point of view)
My main questions are below if anyone can help with any of them please?
1. I’ve seen through looking at this forum that a lot of people say that you need two results to confirm the diagnosis. So does this mean it’s possible I don’t have diabetes? (This is why I haven’t set my diabetes status)
2. Should I just be cutting out the refined sugar as suggested or should I start adjusting my diet more?
3. If I do adjust my diet is it simply a case of going low carb or is a low gi diet as beneficial? Or should it be a combination of the two?
4. Is it worth me getting a blood glucose monitor before I speak to the doctor?
5. Do I need to take any notice of the ‘of sugars’ on food labels I.e. should it be a percentage of the carbs? Or should I completely ignore this?
I have the added complication that if I don’t eat enough my PoTS gets worseso I really need to figure this all out so I can adequately plan and research everything so I don’t faint from not eating enough either but I need to eat little enough to lose weight. It just feels like a vicious circle.
Thank you if you got this farany advice is really appreciated. Even if it’s ’wait for the appointment’
I'd second that.My last bit of advice at this point is to just stop, pause, and breathe. It's simple to say, but I really do understand the panic and urge to "fix" the problem immediately
I'd second that.
I think for me, once I joined after DX, it was more akin to using the forums help as it guided me into taking a little bit of 'this' out & adding a little bit of 'that' to successive meals over those early days & weeks, (that with the aid of my meter) helped me turn a 58 HBA1c down to 42 HBA1c in just under 3 months.
And losing near on 3 stone, without even trying.
Good luck on your journey.
Don’t worry about feeling snappy and grumpy when you’re reducing carbs. Your body (and your gut microbes) are used to what they’re used to, and have ways of resisting change (even change for the better). That will settle when your new way of eating becomes established.@Paul_ thank you so much. I’m definitely a carb ***** so this sounds like a good plan. I’m already snappy with trying to cut them downI think if I can find a couple of carbs that I can tolerate well I will find this all a lot easier.
I'm gladThank you so much, this really gives me hope.
A big fan of those .You can add some nuts like almonds, peanuts, walnuts, brazil nuts along with salads and fresh non starchy veggies.....They are low carb and filling too...
I'm glad
I too was all lost when I first got here (like far too many, I've since found)
I didn't know what to eat, and after trying the doctors advice (eatwell plan) I was starving AND desperate.
But I still couldn't convince myself such simple changes could be the answer (lchf)..so each day I dipped a toe in, and changed just a little, measured, and each time I improved, & before long I was convinced & fully immersed myself in lchf.
But I think for each of us, it's a tailored fit, to get it to a suitable fuel source for our daily life and any others ailments, we might have.
I like to tell a little story about back then.
I never took much notice of any blood works for doctors ..'fine' meant 'all is ok '
But I started backtracking all my old ones and match them to the DX ones
Seems my measures, pre dx, read more "omg ...how are you still alive" ...then was sensible.
Yep, they were poor, but no one had said.
6 months on lchf, got each metric (HDL,LDL,trigs & cholesterol )
Into "you'll live forever', NEXT' territory with the doctors .
Even got a "well done" text from the surgery.
The trigs, the one I now think of as the most important, but aren't they all.
I got from a 6..high danger
Down to 1.2..optimal using lchf
Hope is out there, amending the diet is the best way I think for many...and likely the easiest to boot.
Pre DX I use to eat 4 to 5 meals / snacks a day .
On the eatwell I barely ate anything, I was so worried
On lchf, once I got my head around it, I ate my fill .
Evening meal, plate full of food, big ol' fried breakfast ...missus was gobsmacked how well I ate AND how tasty it all was .
Pretty soon I began not getting hungry in between meals..
and the meal count dropped to one main meal a day sometimes , but most times it was just that one main evening meal a day plus a little snack (usually Greek yoghurt or a couple of boiled eggs) for breakfast as I aimed for 60 carbs a day .
Hope is out there aplenty, if we're willing to try , honest .
Good luck.
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