Lakeslover
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 484
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Yes, I wear the libre so can see easily what is happening. I get dawn phenomenon, takes ages for that to go down, no big spikes after meals but rarely drop below a blood sugar of 10. So after a low carb meal last night (chicken, cauliflower, creme fraiche, spices, 1/2 small onion, small handful of flaked almonds) pre meal 10.5, I was at 12.6 3 hours later when I went to bed, by 7 this morning I was 16, slowly falling until now at 1 it is 11.7. It seems to be it’s the base level which is wrong, so an additional med to lower this and it should be fine.Ozempic, has had very good clinical results.
Before the recent clamour of usage, it was used primarily for those struggling with control of blood glucose levels and rising hba1c levels. For those who couldn't go low carb, or health issues or other digestive issues.
There are some who have side effects but many more that don't. For example, you digest metformin, but inject Ozempic.
The reason for insulin should be last resort and after tests, to see why you are still going higher.
The Sitagliptin suggests insulin resistance and because of that, the initial first phase insulin response is causing the higher than normal spikes for the low carb.
You may try going even lower carb or keto to try and help with this. Are you taking readings pre meal and two hours after, to see what your food is doing to your blood glucose levels?
If you are not satisfied with your GP or your dsn, you could ask for a referral to an endocrinologist.
Take care.
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