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When are you Diabetic

mjr173010

Newbie
Messages
3
Hello all My GP tells me I am pre-Diabetic because of my reading fasting 6.5, 2 hours after eating 6.1 and when she sent me for a GTT 6.6 before and 6.5 after, I have a blood monitor and I have never had a reading lower than 5.8 and the highest was 10.6, 30 mins after a meal. These readings seem to be a constant, would like your remarks please.
 
Welcome to the forum In my opinion I would agree with what your doctor says. Have you had an HbA1c test done? 30 minutes after a meal is too soon to test - you should test at 2 hours after the meal when your level should be similar to your before meal level. Since you are pre-diabetic some basic information might help you to avoid becoming fully diabetic if you take care of yourself now. Ask as many questions as you like as there is usually someone here to help.

 
You are diabetic if you have regular readings outside of the range:

4 - 7mmol/L

Super basic rule if thumb, there.

10.6 30 mins AFTER a meal is pretty high. It usually takes 1hr for the sugar/carbs in food to hit yor BG at full whack, so it's possible that your BG rose even more after your +30min reading.

You MIGHT get away with diet only control. Check around this site for ways to modify your diet.

HINT: Bread and pasta is BAD. :wink:
 
Hi and Welcome.

Good advice above...

There are guidelines which define the numbers used to determine the formal diagnosis criteria BUT I'd say that as you are already showing signs of developing Diabetes it is best to act now, rather than wait to see how bad it gets.

Think of a dam with water pressure building up behind it, and hairline cracks starting to show in the structure... it is far easier to lower the water level and shore up the dam before it bursts.

In the same way you may find it easier to make some changes now, to what you eat and perhaps your activity level (doesn't have to the gym-thing... just get out for a walk regularly... take the stairs etc...) so as to stave off a full-blown diagnosis and possibly the need for medication etc...

As detailed above: I'd focus on BG testing just before and 2 hours after each meal. Keep a food diary and watch for repeatable patterns. Consider changes to meals that have the greatest effect on your BGs... read around the forum and on-line for ideas.
 
Hi Again Not sure if I have clicked the right button for replying to you all, if I have thanks for the advice, I did mean to say that these readings and my Doctor telling me I am pre - diabetic have now been going on for 6 years does that sound about right. I would add that I really disagree calling someone pre-diabetic surely that is perfectly obvious after all surely everyone is pre-diabetic forgetting BG readings.
 
mjr173010 said:
I would add that I really disagree calling someone pre-diabetic surely that is perfectly obvious after all surely everyone is pre-diabetic forgetting BG readings.

Know what you mean, and POTENTIALLY that's true. However, there are specific reasons for this labelling.
Officially, according to your blood test results, there are 3 levels you can be :-
1) Non-diabetic, don't worry, a glucose tolerance test would show that your sugars don't go up too high.
2) Pre-diabetic, originally called borderline diabetic. This means your sugar levels are raised above what is considered "normal", particularly after a Glucose tolerance test, but not so high that you are considered fully diabetic. Sensible diet will control the condition, and CAN result in you returning to a non-diabetic state (whereby you would once again pass a Glucose tolereance test)
3) Diabetic. Your sugar levels are further raised, although you MAY still be able to control those levels on diet alone, without medication. You will not, however, be able to return to a non-diabetic state under current medical knowledge and practice.

Hope this clarifies the definitions. Well done for remaining pre-diabetic for so long without progressing to full diabetes.
Malc
 
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Non-diabetic blood readings would be 3.6 - 4.5 mmol/l fasting and for the most part under 5.5 mmol/l 2 hours post meal.. although up to 7.8 mmol/l can be seen in some circumstances.. You therefore have an impaired response to glucose.. your GTT isn't high enough for them to class you as type 2 and therefore you fall into the 'pre-diabetic' category.

This means that the likelihood of your developing type 2 in the future is reasonably high... the problem is that higher than 'normal' blood glucose levels damage the beta cells that produce insulin.. as this damage increases your blood glucose levels get worse and then you get into a self-perpetuating cycle.

As others have suggested you are probably still at the stage where a reduction in carbohydrates in your diet would have a positive effect and would help to normalise your blood glucose levels.
 
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