This sounds like an excellent recipe for success. You have listed your strategies in order of probable efficacy. As regards Metformin, it often has no effect at the low dose you are on. If it is not causing you undue digestive upset, you could ask your doctor to very gradually increase your dose. I found that it worked much better for me when I reached the maximum dose of 1g x twice daily extended release. Good luck!Sugars were high enough, but hopefully my diet, exercise and metformin will help bring them down
Welcome to the forum @Jawl. Yes that is a good fbg reduction in just a month. Keep up the good work and your bgs should come down further. And well done on getting a bg meter!This morning when I woke, my sugar levels were 9.4. From my blood tests a month ago they were 14.9 and that was fasting too. So an improvement even if it's still high?
If you want to test regularly, do it right when you wake, just before eating, and 2 hours after first bite. Random testing doesn't tell you all that much.I'm not sure if i should be testing other times in the day?
Be aware that an early morning test can be influenced by overnight liver dumps of glucose so take more account of checks during the rest of the dayIf you want to test regularly, do it right when you wake, just before eating, and 2 hours after first bite. Random testing doesn't tell you all that much.
Quite right. But doctors usually seem to want to know fasting bloodsugars for some reason.Be aware that an early morning test can be influenced by overnight liver dumps of glucose so take more account of checks during the rest of the day
Depends on a lot of things - your activity during the day could affect your BG, as will loads of other factors- the starting point before you had lunch would have provided a comparison so you could see the impact of what you have eaten ?- you will find that lots of things will move your levels, and we are all different - so you may be more or less affected than someone else - testing before/after will provide you with more useful comparison - random testing, as you are seeing, will not actually tell you much. You could be at 7.6 on the way down, or 7.6 on the way up - who knows ?Oooooh I’ve just tested. It was 9.4 this morning as soon as I woke up. I’ve had breakfast, a mid morning snack and ate lunch two hours ago, and just tested now and it says 7.6. Surely that’s inaccurate??
It's probably accurate. In the morning your liver dumps glucose into your bloodstream to give you energy to start the day. It usually tapers off after that. The rest of the day depends on what you eat, but the mornings depend on what your liver's been up to.Oooooh I’ve just tested. It was 9.4 this morning as soon as I woke up. I’ve had breakfast, a mid morning snack and ate lunch two hours ago, and just tested now and it says 7.6. Surely that’s inaccurate??
a fasting level usually should eliminate the effect of any food consumed so provides a baseline comparator without having to second guess what someone may have eaten affecting the result - however - loads of variables in play reference liver dump etc.Quite right. But doctors usually seem to want to know fasting bloodsugars for some reason.
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