I am curious - you have been taking metformin for 4 years, but only recently started feeling groggy with them. Has anything else changed, or your blood sugars gone up? Your medical team do need to know what meds you are, and are not, taking though.Been feeling pretty groggy lately, and someone suggested stopping taking Metformin for a while, I take four 500mg daily..... so couple of days ago I stopped it.......now feel great, and my sugars have not gone up........had a blood test yesterday and am awaiting results.....IF I have to go see diabetic nurse presumably I should mention this to her ?.......been taking it about four years now, just wondered what people think ........
Thanks for the replies.....when I say "groggy" I mean that awful feeling that you get when the sugars go too low, which mine seem to do frequently.......I shall of course discuss things with my doctor / diabetic nurse, if I ever get to see them......
Have you tried low carb instead of medication? It’s much more effective anyway. It not necessarily a case of swapping for something that induces hypos.Metformin - omg!!! Diarrhoea so bad I can no longer walk my dogs but I don't want to take anything that might cause a hypo, I NEED my driving licence. I have tried cutting it out for 48 hours then reintroducing it (suggested by dn) and it did help for a little while but basically metformin (even the slow release one I am on) gives me IBS.
Same with me so I stopped taking it and changed what I ate instead.Metformin - omg!!! Diarrhoea so bad I can no longer walk my dogs but I don't want to take anything that might cause a hypo, I NEED my driving licence. I have tried cutting it out for 48 hours then reintroducing it (suggested by dn) and it did help for a little while but basically metformin (even the slow release one I am on) gives me IBS.
I was on Metformin for several years and I never had an appetite and have always been slim. Metformin is an appetite suppressant and I never felt hungry but after a couple of courses of B12 injections, (Metformin is known to cause B12 deficiency) I thought I would stop taking the tablets for a few days. I am also on quick acting and slow acting insulin so it's not as if I would be left without any medication. Anyway, the day after I stopped taking them I actually felt hungry! Stopping it made no difference whatsoever to my sugar levels so when I told the diabetes nurse what I had done and asked if it would be OK to not take them she said to try it for a while and see how I got on and it's now around two years since I stopped taking Metformin. Regarding low readings, "Make four the floor" is a diabetes saying because although it's good to be low it doesn't take much to get too low. I kept striving for lows as I had read that high sugar readings are not good but was told by a diabetes nurse that low readings are advised for younger people to stop them getting complications but as you get older they want you to be running a bit higher. I'm 74 so my targets are 7-9 before meals and 10-12 before bed as they would much rather you were running a bit high than too low. Metformin apparently doesn't cause hypos but Gliclazide does so maybe that needs adjusting to avoid going too low. I certainly think that leaving out the Metformin is well worth a try.
I also take 1 1/2 glyclazide a day, plus various blood pressure tablets, and one blood thinner......at the moment am taking two Metformin, one in the morning and one at night......my sugar levels are pretty much the same as when I was taking the four Metformin......
I was on Metformin for several years and I never had an appetite and have always been slim. Metformin is an appetite suppressant and I never felt hungry but after a couple of courses of B12 injections, (Metformin is known to cause B12 deficiency) I thought I would stop taking the tablets for a few days. I am also on quick acting and slow acting insulin so it's not as if I would be left without any medication. Anyway, the day after I stopped taking them I actually felt hungry! Stopping it made no difference whatsoever to my sugar levels so when I told the diabetes nurse what I had done and asked if it would be OK to not take them she said to try it for a while and see how I got on and it's now around two years since I stopped taking Metformin. Regarding low readings, "Make four the floor" is a diabetes saying because although it's good to be low it doesn't take much to get too low. I kept striving for lows as I had read that high sugar readings are not good but was told by a diabetes nurse that low readings are advised for younger people to stop them getting complications but as you get older they want you to be running a bit higher. I'm 74 so my targets are 7-9 before meals and 10-12 before bed as they would much rather you were running a bit high than too low. Metformin apparently doesn't cause hypos but Gliclazide does so maybe that needs adjusting to avoid going too low. I certainly think that leaving out the Metformin is well worth a try.
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