Badgerabroad
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The exercise is excellent but the biggest factor for a T2 is diet, and different people have very different definitions of what is healthy. If your definition is low fat, and healthy carbs (eg wholemeal bread and brown rice) then you won't have been doing your body any favours, as T2s are carbohydrate intolerant and have to produce more and more insulin to process the carbs they eat. Eventually their bodies cannot produce enough insulin and their blood sugar levels go up. Unfortunately a side effect of high insulin levels and high blood sugar tends to be weight gain (though there are thin T2s) which can lead to a vicious circle of weight gain leading to increased insulin resistance and blood sugars and increasing weight gain...I follow a healthy diet and excersise regularly,
Thanks so much for detailed reply, I should note that up until November I was taking Gliclazide 40mg daily and linagliptin 5mg daily, this had zero effect on reducing my hba1c. I have honestly lost faith in some of the medicine and tried various other methods. I went to see a dietician who is knowledgeable about type 2 and he said concentrate on weight training. I used to be 120kg when I was first diagnosed but now I'm about 79kg and look quite thin, Compared to how I used to be, certainly not overweight, I seem to lose more weight when blood sugar is high. Which is quite often, I will be seeing the local doctor here in Sunday to get an updated hba1c but from my own daily results I'm sure it will be just as high as it's always been.
I went to see a dietician who is knowledgeable about type 2 and he said concentrate on weight training. I used to be 120kg when I was first diagnosed but now I'm about 79kg and look quite thin, Compared to how I used to be, certainly not overweight, I seem to lose more weight when blood sugar is high. Which is quite often, I will be seeing the local doctor here in Sunday to get an updated hba1c but from my own daily results I'm sure it will be just as high as it's always been.
T2 can lose weight via high bloods too.Loosing weight with high bg’s is a sign of type 1. Late onset presents with characteristics of both type 2 & type 1. If you find the meds don’t work & insulin is now required I would request a c-peptide test to find out how much insulin your body is producing. Without that info you can not be 100% sure which type of diabetes you have.
If your sure it’s type 2 I would question the ‘dietician that knows about type 2’ quite often they still steer you in the direction of high carb diets. If you can give an idea of the average amount of carbs you eat in a day this may also indicate why the meds are not working.
When you hit a crossroads like now it’s helpful to look at all possible causes & effect.
How were you diagnosed T2?My last few hba1c tests have been above 12, I follow a healthy diet and excersise regularly, I'm currently not in the UK because of my work and the doctor here in Singapore is suggesting that I start to inject insulin, I'm due back in the UK in April and not sure if I should wait to speak to my GP or just take the doctor here advice. I am finding that of I am less stressed my morning numbers can be as low as 12 but if I'm stressed with work ect my numbers can be as high as 18 or more. Just wondering if I should take the local doctor here advice and start injecting insulin straight away or wait. I've been on 2000mg of metformin daily for the past 5 years.
I used to be 120kg when I was first diagnosed but now I'm about 79kg and look quite thin,
You might very well need insulin - and that is something to get sorted out at the double, as it can get very urgent very quickly for some - for others it is a long slow process but it seems that it isn't predictable.
My last few hba1c tests have been above 12, I follow a healthy diet and excersise regularly, I'm currently not in the UK because of my work and the doctor here in Singapore is suggesting that I start to inject insulin, I'm due back in the UK in April and not sure if I should wait to speak to my GP or just take the doctor here advice. I am finding that of I am less stressed my morning numbers can be as low as 12 but if I'm stressed with work ect my numbers can be as high as 18 or more. Just wondering if I should take the local doctor here advice and start injecting insulin straight away or wait. I've been on 2000mg of metformin daily for the past 5 years.
Personally I'd take the Drs advice and get some insulin so at least you have access to it to use as required by testing & testing & testing. Better to have it and not need it than the other way round. Then, in April you can assess how its all gone, if you turn out still to be type 2 after further tests you can always stop it (under medical guidance). I would not want to stay at those levels for 2 more months and although I understand it's certainly not straightforward in your case, if you are a type 2 I don't think you will have done yourself much harm by taking (possible very small) amounts for 2 months. On the other hand your numbers are likely to remain high without it (I see you're already low carbing) and you must check for ketones. x
Out of curiosity and my doc here will update me but is there a minimum lantus course to take, I mean if i get my numbers in check would I reduce dosage or reduce frequency of dosage or just carry on as is?
You really need the c-peptide and GAD tests to see if you are in fact a slow onset T1 (LADA), as seems possible from a lot of your symptoms. If you are LADA then your insulin production gradually goes down and eventually you need to inject it, even if you are on a keto diet. (Some people slow down the move to insulin by reducing their carbs, but I suspect you have already gone past that point.) So, various options here
1) You are LADA. Insulin will bring your levels down to normal, though you'll probably need to add in a short acting insulin soon to balance the carbs you have with your meals. Insulin will become a permanent part of your life, but on the plus side you'll have the freedom to inject to compensate for a high carb meal or snack. You'll probably be able to drop all the drugs other than the insulin, but you'll be injecting multiple times a day. (I've been T1 for 51 years, it's a pain but not a death sentence).
2) You are T2. In which case a low carb diet may be able to reduce or eliminate you need for insulin. Lantus is a 24hour drug, so you need to keep taking it every day, though if your levels come down you'll be able to reduce the dose. Hopefully the doctor warned you about hypos? (If not, ask on here, because you need to know about them. Make sure you carry sugar or equivalent with you at all times)
3) You have some other much more obscure form of diabetes (eg MODY) and you'd need a specialist endocrinologist to diagnose and treat.
But it's excellent that the insulin is bringing your levels down. Good luck.
Do you think its a matter of urgency to get the c-peptide tests or it could wait until I get back home?
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