Elisa17591
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Can you give us some numbers as well HbA1c on diagnosis after 6 months after a year?Diagnosed almost a year ago. Switched to a low carb diet and started hitting the gym pretty hard. I've gained weight but lost body fat which I think is ok? My first A1C dropped drastically with diet and exercise after the months but after six it shot way up (no changes to diet or exercise). I'm on medication as of February but that doesn't seem to help either. Sugars spike while exercising and sleeping but drop while fasting during the day. Medication seems to not be helping anymore. Doctor can't explain and good only solution is more meds, which I'd like to avoid. Any experts with insight that would help?
Doctor probably hasn't thought of LADA. Can you explain what that is?Hello and welcome to the forum. Tagging @daisy1 for the info pack offered to all newcomers.
Sorry but I am completely flummoxed. Perhaps if you could give us a typical day's menu we may be able to spot something that could stand a bit of tweaking to see if that helps. Is there a possibility that you have LADA (Type 1.5 Diabetes)?
May I ask what medications you are taking, please?
Have a look around the forum and ask as many questions as you like.
Doctor probably hasn't thought of LADA. Can you explain what that is?
A1C
3 months: 6.5%
6 months: 8.4%
10 months: 7.5%
Medication: gluceuretic farxiga 10 mg a day
Breakfast: coconut flour pancakes or almond flour muffins with some sort of protein
Lunch: salad and dark chocolate for dessert (usually 85% cacao)
Dinner: some sort of protein with veggies
Post workout: protein shake (low carb plant protein) with soy or cashew nut milk (low carb) and chia seeds.
Any clue on why sugars would spike post workout? It's pretty significant. Everything I've read says exercise brings them down.
Thanks again!
I'm about average as far as weight goes. It's gone up a little but my body fat has gone down.Do you have lots of weight to lose? Your diet looks good. And SGLT2 inhibitors are good at removing excess glucose...might be helpful to get your insulin levels and GAD antibodies checked out to rule out LADA etc.
I'm testing 3-4 times a day. Fasting levels are high (between 180's and low 200's down to 120's by midday after eating back up to high 100's/low 200's after workout). I'm not overweight and am average (not slim) and I'm getting fitterLooks to me like you would benefit tremendously from testing your blood glucose on a home meter before and 2 hrs after each of your meals and exercise sessions. If you do it regularly you will quickly spot where the rises are, and that will inform you whether your exercise or food intake is causing the rises - or whether it is something else, such as LADA (which is a form of type 1 diabetes that takes a while to develop, but will eventually need insulin).
I'm afraid that relying on 3 monthly HbA1cs isn't going to help you identify your daily fluctuations, or help to manage them.
Exercise can most definitely raise blood glucose. It all depends on the length and intensity of the workout, and varies quite a lot depending on fitness levels.
I test 3-4 times a day. High fasting levels, decent levels around midday, high levels after workout. My highs are between high 100's and low 200's. My midday levels are 120's. Workouts last 30 minutes to an hour and include both cardio and weight liftingLooks to me like you would benefit tremendously from testing your blood glucose on a home meter before and 2 hrs after each of your meals and exercise sessions. If you do it regularly you will quickly spot where the rises are, and that will inform you whether your exercise or food intake is causing the rises - or whether it is something else, such as LADA (which is a form of type 1 diabetes that takes a while to develop, but will eventually need insulin).
I'm afraid that relying on 3 monthly HbA1cs isn't going to help you identify your daily fluctuations, or help to manage them.
Exercise can most definitely raise blood glucose. It all depends on the length and intensity of the workout, and varies quite a lot depending on fitness levels.
I'm testing 3-4 times a day. High glucose fasting and post workout (high 100's to low 200's) decent levels around midday. Workouts are 30-60 minutes and consist of cardio and weight lifting. I'm average buildLooks to me like you would benefit tremendously from testing your blood glucose on a home meter before and 2 hrs after each of your meals and exercise sessions. If you do it regularly you will quickly spot where the rises are, and that will inform you whether your exercise or food intake is causing the rises - or whether it is something else, such as LADA (which is a form of type 1 diabetes that takes a while to develop, but will eventually need insulin).
I'm afraid that relying on 3 monthly HbA1cs isn't going to help you identify your daily fluctuations, or help to manage them.
Exercise can most definitely raise blood glucose. It all depends on the length and intensity of the workout, and varies quite a lot depending on fitness levels.
Yes I'm testing 3-4 times a day: fasting, post meal at midday, and post workout. I'm pretty active - working out 3-5 times a week for 30-60 minutes at a timeLooks to me like you would benefit tremendously from testing your blood glucose on a home meter before and 2 hrs after each of your meals and exercise sessions. If you do it regularly you will quickly spot where the rises are, and that will inform you whether your exercise or food intake is causing the rises - or whether it is something else, such as LADA (which is a form of type 1 diabetes that takes a while to develop, but will eventually need insulin).
I'm afraid that relying on 3 monthly HbA1cs isn't going to help you identify your daily fluctuations, or help to manage them.
Exercise can most definitely raise blood glucose. It all depends on the length and intensity of the workout, and varies quite a lot depending on fitness levels.
Yes I'm testing 3-4 times a day: fasting, post meal at midday, and post workout. I'm pretty active - working out 3-5 times a week for 30-60 minutes at a time
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