NathanWinters
Newbie
- Messages
- 4
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Hi Rachox, thanks for your support. She has is not eating anything with sugar at the moment and was already not eating many carbs. She had lost 80 pounds prior to being diagnosed.Hi @NathanWinters and welcome to the forum. I’m sorry your wife is suffering so much and not getting much in the way of support from her health care professionals. During all of this has your wife changed her diet at all? A lot of us with type 2 have improved our readings by reducing carbohydrates (not just sugars) in our diet. If your wife does this she needs to be careful as on gliclazide she could end up going hypo if she doesn’t reduce carbs carefully.
Edit for typo
Hi Rachox, thanks for your support. She has is not eating anything with sugar at the moment and was already not eating many carbs. She had lost 80 pounds prior to being diagnosed.
Thank you for the advice and support. She has altered her diet although she already did not take many carbs. She isnt a brand new diabetic and we had it mostly under control but she suffered the metformin side effects.Hello and welcome @NathanWinters
It really sounds like you and your wife have had a tough time. Virtual hugs to both of you.
I agree with @EllieM that you should try to explore exactly what type of diabetes your wife has. It's not unknown for medical professionals to make assumptions without exploring all the possibilities.
The fact that your wife took steps to allow her to take pills indicates to me that she is a strong and determined person. That will only help.
I do suggest that it may be worthwhile keeping a log of the exact carb intake and the following blood sugar levels- that information may help with considering what type of diabetes she has.
Virtual hugs and a warm welcome - Good luck.
No she hasnt been checked, is that an easy thing to do?There are (luckily rare) circumstances in which blood sugars being high can be a medical emergency.
Has your wife been checked for forms of diabetes other than T2 (which although the most likely is not the only out there)? (eg Weight loss has some red flags for LADA/T1, though it is also possible for T2s).
You'd need cpeptide (detects how much insulin is being produced) and GAD antibody tests to tell whether LADA (slow developing T1, where the pancreas gradually destroys its insulin producing cells) is in play. I'm not sure whether your GP can order these or whether you would need a referral to a hospital endocrinologist. There are additional even rarer types of diabetes, but they would need an endocrinologist.No she hasnt been checked, is that an easy thing to do?
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