Greetings from a guy in his mid-40s who was recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Well actually I had a suspicion I had high blood sugar, had the blood test but was told my levels were normal, only to be told a month later I had been given the wrong information!
However, I took it upon myself to get on a low-carb diet and after three weeks not only have I lost weight enough that my trousers don't fit properly, but it feels like my BS level is normal.
Not had my appointment with the diabetes nurse yet, but so far I'm trying to make a positive change and hopefully I can keep this up!
Looking forward to getting involved and hopefully getting some support; I cannot deny the long-term prospects scare me.
My HBA1C result was pretty bad, over 100! That was baffling. So far I'm not finding the lack of rubbish food that difficult, although I'm no saint and will no doubt enjoy the occasional biscuit. And I still love a bottle of wine on the weekend. I was half-heartedly trying to lose a bit of weight anyway, but this was the kick up the backside I needed, a good solid reason to.Hi and welcome. Sounds like you are already doing the right things and it may be that your next (first?) HBa1C blood test will be good. If you control your blood sugar then there should be no long-term downside to your diabetes so don't worry. It's possible that you may only need to continue with the Metformin which is a good safe drug.
Thanks!Hi, Welcome to the site.
I was diagnosed with T2 after a routine blood test in March.
I had NO symptoms at all
The diabetic nurse offered me a cocktail of medication Metformin Statins and BP meds.
I was SHOCKED at the diagnosis.
I declined the medication and was told to "shift some weight "
After 8 weeks on The 8 Week Blood Sugar Diet ( Book EBay £5 )
returned to the GP.Weight loss 2 stone +
New blood test.RESULT....no longer DIABETIC....
Sugars and cholesterol normal.
No need for medication .I was THRILLED...
Still on LCHF have now lost over 3 stone.
I am going to maintain this eating regime as I do NOT want medication ,
and if this keeps me healthy then that's fine.
I am 60 but don't want a cocktail of medication if it can be avoided by
something as simple as altering my diet drastically .
Good luck and keep your chin up.Give that book a read it has been a revelation .
Greetings from a guy in his mid-40s who was recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Well actually I had a suspicion I had high blood sugar, had the blood test but was told my levels were normal, only to be told a month later I had been given the wrong information!
However, I took it upon myself to get on a low-carb diet and after three weeks not only have I lost weight enough that my trousers don't fit properly, but it feels like my BS level is normal.
Not had my appointment with the diabetes nurse yet, but so far I'm trying to make a positive change and hopefully I can keep this up!
Looking forward to getting involved and hopefully getting some support; I cannot deny the long-term prospects scare me.
Not got that far yet (waiting for the appointment later this month). I feel 'normal' because I'm not constantly thirsty, going to the loo every five minutes, getting sleep and not feeling dehydrated. Maybe I should have phrased it a bit better. The symptoms were driving me mad, especially because I was given a result of normal BS; I simply didn't believe it so decided to do something for myself, even if it was initially to see what happened.congratulations on the progress! Sounds like you are hitting this thing head on. Well done.
Are you testing?
I ask because you said you feel your blood glucose is normal.
It is actually VERY difficult to gauge this, because the body adapts to whatever blood glucose is habitual, so that becomes what feels normal. Much better to get a meter and actually know.
Hope that helps.
Oh I've not been on the forum 24 hours and already read some truly inspirational accounts of people determined to keep on top of it. That really chimes with me right now.Welcome and congratulations about getting to grips even though you haven't seen the practice nurse yet
I've managed to turn my life around since my diag 12 weeks ago. Discipline and determination are the watch words. All my metabolic markers have resolved and all I'm
waiting for now is my 3 months Lipid Panel and A1C...I'll update my signature once I have the results.
So be encouraged, if I can do it, so can you
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