kerrysmithies
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Hi Kerry and welcome. @daisy1 will be along soon with your welcome pack of information about diabetes.Hi I'm Kerry and have just been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes and I am frightened to death!!!!!
My initial blood test results showed 12.5 and then after waiting for a month to see the diabetic nurse she confirmed it and gave me a prescription for Metformin which I started yesterday. She didn't give me a monitor but I got one from the doctors anyway and as am sure most people would do was curious to see what my levels were like. My first reading was 12.5 my second after I just had food was 13.9 and this morning after fasting it was 14.2, is this normal for a diabetic??
I don't know if it was the medication but I felt sick all night and have a banging headache, as I'm new to all this I'm probably making myself worse by worrying. Thanks for any information x
Glad to hear you are increasing it slowly.I'm on 500g of Metformin but I'm on just one at my evening meal for a few days and then one at breakfast and evening meal for another few days and then after a week three a day. I've probably had diabetes for a while because of the symptoms I have but now I know I'm worried about it. Thanks for you reply
What's liver dumping! Am new sorryHi Kerry and welcome, as @CatLadyNZ says there's no need to be frightened of T2 which you will learn given time.
I was knocked sideways by my diagnosis just a month ago and my levels were sky high and, according to my DN, had been for months (Hba1c was 13.2).
My very first self test of fasting was 21.1
However with medication a change in my eating habits,monitoring and the great support and sharing of experiences and tips found on this forum I have managed to grab my T2 by the throat and get my levels down to almost within my target range ( still a struggle with liver dumping some mornings)
Once you get to grips with it all and get the results of all the effort it does wonders for your self esteem and whenever you feel like you're struggling? Well I've found there's always someone on here to share the load - one big family
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htmHi I'm Kerry and have just been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes and I am frightened to death!!!!!
My initial blood test results showed 12.5 and then after waiting for a month to see the diabetic nurse she confirmed it and gave me a prescription for Metformin which I started yesterday. She didn't give me a monitor but I got one from the doctors anyway and as am sure most people would do was curious to see what my levels were like. My first reading was 12.5 my second after I just had food was 13.9 and this morning after fasting it was 14.2, is this normal for a diabetic??
I don't know if it was the medication but I felt sick all night and have a banging headache, as I'm new to all this I'm probably making myself worse by worrying. Thanks for any information x
In short, I recommend reducing carbs and eating enough fats to avoid carb cravings and replace energy lost from reducing carbs.Thanks for all your comments. I'm a carb lover and have started WW and doing the filling and healthy but are using wholewheat everything, rice pasta bread and also eating loads of fruit and veg because I need to lose weight. I'm struggling to understand what fruit I can eat as I understand some are better than others. Trying to loose weight as well as trying to get the diabetes right is so hard any food recommendations and the dos and donts would be appreciated X thanks
Most people don't suffer bad side effects from metformin, and it has several benefits besides reducing BGs. It's just that newly diagnosed people often think metformin will be the main way to get their BGs down, when it only does this a little bit. Food is more important for reducing BGs in T2. Metformin also suppresses appetite and reduces the liver dump, so it's good for overweight T2s. And it's good for T1s who have insulin resistance. If someone is having really bad side effects after trying the slow release version for at least 2 weeks, then they should discuss with their HCP whether to stop taking it. There's no need to go on for months or years in such cases.@sanguine
Why are people then tortured with Metformin? I couldn't handle it and with insulin I'm most times in the range of pre diabetic readings. And yes, the right food has the biggest impact.
Today I had 6.6 two hours after huge meal with dessert
Thanks for all your comments. I'm a carb lover and have started WW and doing the filling and healthy but are using wholewheat everything, rice pasta bread and also eating loads of fruit and veg because I need to lose weight. I'm struggling to understand what fruit I can eat as I understand some are better than others. Trying to loose weight as well as trying to get the diabetes right is so hard any food recommendations and the dos and donts would be appreciated X thanks
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