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<blockquote data-quote="DCUKMod" data-source="post: 2089986" data-attributes="member: 345386"><p>[USER=6467]@LittleGreyCat[/USER] , in addition to the comments made by [USER=388174]@SimonCrox[/USER] , I'd be interested to know if those retinopathy changes persisted beyond the screening done to find them.</p><p></p><p>Some people find reducing their A1c quickly can "bring on" (evidence of) retinopathy, but find it to be gone at the next screening. Similarly, there was a paper noted a thread about unexpected retinopathy, a year or so ago, that suggested that retinopathy could be indicative of glucose levels much further back that the recent past.</p><p></p><p>I'm certainly not rubbishing the findings, or anyone's experience on that medication, but just pondering how they can be so certain Semaglutide caused the retinopathy, rather than it being incidental, or caused by some other, unrecognised factor.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DCUKMod, post: 2089986, member: 345386"] [USER=6467]@LittleGreyCat[/USER] , in addition to the comments made by [USER=388174]@SimonCrox[/USER] , I'd be interested to know if those retinopathy changes persisted beyond the screening done to find them. Some people find reducing their A1c quickly can "bring on" (evidence of) retinopathy, but find it to be gone at the next screening. Similarly, there was a paper noted a thread about unexpected retinopathy, a year or so ago, that suggested that retinopathy could be indicative of glucose levels much further back that the recent past. I'm certainly not rubbishing the findings, or anyone's experience on that medication, but just pondering how they can be so certain Semaglutide caused the retinopathy, rather than it being incidental, or caused by some other, unrecognised factor. [/QUOTE]
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