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Diabetes Discussion
Newly Diagnosed
So many options I don't know what to choose
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<blockquote data-quote="SimonCrox" data-source="post: 1588131" data-attributes="member: 388174"><p>One can mix injections and tablets - it is a very common practice. Insulin and sulphonylurea tablets tend to put weight on and cause hypos. Gliptin tablets, SGLT-2 tablets and GLP-1 injections on their own do not cause hypos and help lose weight. There are so many options now, if one has Type 2 Diabetes. Yes, the odd highs are a bother; one study by Umpierrez compared correcting bedtime highs to doing nothing - glucose levels were the same the next morning. It might be that if you were on modern agents, these agents and improved pancreatic beta cell function and insulin sensitivity due to better glucose levels would all together keep your glucose levels under control and you would be less likely to get these peaks; one could give it a go and see what happens.</p><p>best wishes</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SimonCrox, post: 1588131, member: 388174"] One can mix injections and tablets - it is a very common practice. Insulin and sulphonylurea tablets tend to put weight on and cause hypos. Gliptin tablets, SGLT-2 tablets and GLP-1 injections on their own do not cause hypos and help lose weight. There are so many options now, if one has Type 2 Diabetes. Yes, the odd highs are a bother; one study by Umpierrez compared correcting bedtime highs to doing nothing - glucose levels were the same the next morning. It might be that if you were on modern agents, these agents and improved pancreatic beta cell function and insulin sensitivity due to better glucose levels would all together keep your glucose levels under control and you would be less likely to get these peaks; one could give it a go and see what happens. best wishes [/QUOTE]
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