I have lost two and half stone but it it's hardAw, welcome to the club. It seems like a lot of us are women. Everyone I've asked about my slow weight loss seems to say the same thing, that it's harder for women, especially middle-aged ones. It sucks.
Gastric surgery is still on the table for me, as my weight loss is glacially slow, but hoping I will avoid it. Weight management services are pleased with me for now so we'll see.It’s so good to find this thread.
I was diagnosed 16 years ago. They thought I had t2, put me on metformin straight away (hba1c of 12+), then actos/amaryl but I never really got things under control until I switched to insulin when pregnant.
Since then they’ve (recently) decided that I have a type 1/type 2 hybrid. I low carbed for a couple of years, lost baby weight, stopped after becoming pregnant a couple of times again, then tried low carb again but it just didn’t work this time.
I tried the Newcastle diet, thinking I only had t2, not only did it not work - I hardly lost any weight & bg not improved - but my insulin resistance went through the roof and there it’s stayed.
I’ve done running and weight/bg has stayed the same. I’ve not exercised for months after getting a bad injury (no road running for a year I’ve been told). My bg is out of control.
I’ve tried to take forxiga that is supposed to help with losing weight, but it didn’t. Tried it for 9 months and now can’t handle the side effects so need to come off it.
I’m told that gastric surgery can help but I don’t really fancy that...
@Binks85
So sorry you have had such a dreadful experience, and no help from GP.
Can you ask forvanother opinion?
How low are your daily carbs and how often do you eat? I had 10 years of low carb with good blood glucose levels, but no weight loss.Your post sounds like me.
I’m just about ready to do a bull in a china shop and trash the food cupboard.
I’ve done 3/4 years of low carb
Weighed everything washed chopped constantly read LCHF books. Spent a fortune on them as well. But heavier now than I have ever been.
Don’t trust low carb any more. My cholesterol has gone up.
Good luck.
I hit T2 with a BMI of just over 25 and had to drag it down to 21 to achieve remission, tho I believe the waist reduction from 41” to 31” was the real factor there.Very interesting thread, like many I lost a huge amount of weight initially but it's plateaued since.
Got my BMI from 42 to 32, still obese but did the trick for my blood glucose.
Another person could hit T2 with a BMI of 27 & have very little wiggle room.
I am 42 BMI at the moment. A long way to go.... especially as fairly slow.I hit T2 with a BMI of just over 25 and had to drag it down to 21 to achieve remission, tho I believe the waist reduction from 41” to 31” was the real factor there.
Bit by bit, you will get there.I am 42 BMI at the moment. A long way to go.... especially as fairly slow.
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