Teessideguy66
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Woohoo within 6 months of being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes I'm now in remission
By what definition? It varies.......ate more healthily
Just out of interest, what were your before and after hba1c results to get you into "remission".Woohoo within 6 months of being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes I'm now in remission
Not sure what my results were but I've lost 2 stone since April and 4 stone in the last 12 monthsJust out of interest, what were your before and after hba1c results to get you into "remission".
I lost the weight I needed to loose, but I did not class myself in "remission" till I had a string of low hba1c results in the mid 30 mmol/mol range.Not sure what my results were but I've lost 2 stone since April and 4 stone in the last 12 months
Has your doctor confirmed that your HbA1C is in the non-diabetic range?
I'm also interested in what you define as a healthy diet- there are many on this site looking for ways to approach their diagnosis- if your HBa1C is in the non -diabetic range it would be nice to know what dietary changes you have made. You talk about a lot of exercise what is great but they say you can't outrun a bad diet.
Congratulations on your achievement.
I was on 3 500mg metformin per day, then was reduced to 1 a day for one week, then taken off them completelyCongratulations!
How long did it take you get off metformin? were you on a low dose at first then stopped or did you need to reduce slowly?
Think we all know "bad diet choices", healthy eating is lot of fresh vegetables and fruit (avoiding the high sugar fruits such as grapes) fibre and protein rich foods, avoiding high fats and sugar foods. It's simply sensible eating and drinking and common sense portion control
I eat meat also but mainly fresh meat not processed I even eat quorn (it's not the best to be honest)That's not what I as mainly carnivore would say was eating healthily though.
Many of us in here find most fruits and a lot of fibre rich foods send our glucose rocketing and the fats keep us full and our cholesterol and weight drops despite them. It’s not as clear cut as the powers that be would have us believe, hence why we asked what you did. Some need bigger changes than others. Congratulations on finding what works for you.Think we all know "bad diet choices", healthy eating is lot of fresh vegetables and fruit (avoiding the high sugar fruits such as grapes) fibre and protein rich foods, avoiding high fats and sugar foods. It's simply sensible eating and drinking and common sense portion control