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Diabetes / Insulin Resistance / Metabolic Syndrome For discussion of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome. |
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07-13-2015, 11:08 AM | #1 | |||
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I just got my annual bloodwork results back and am beyond disappointed.
My A1c last year was 5.3, not bad, but having idiopathic small fiber neuropathy and reactive hypoglycemia, I concluded it was time to start treating myself like a diabetic. I completely overhauled my diet which had been VERY "healthy-carb" laden. The mainstays of my diet were whole grain carbs....pasta, bread, rice, cereal, etc... For the past 8 months, I've been eating low carb/high fat. My carb intake is between 20g and 60g most days. I also eat to my meter. Anything that takes my post-prandial blood sugar over 140 is off the menu. So what happens to my A1c? It goes up. It came in at 5.6. My heart sank when I saw that. How can that be? Is a process started that I can't stop? I'd always been tested by Quest before, and this year had to switch to Lab Corp. Can testing techniques be different between labs? |
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07-13-2015, 01:47 PM | #2 | ||
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Hi, I just looked at last year's labs and my glucose came in a 99, HbA1c at 5.4 and report says Optimal. Last year my A1c was 5.6. My insulin says 11 (intermediate risk). Last year insulin was 5.
Why all these change as they do we just don't know and can drive ourselves nuts. You did a good thing by changing diet and I've changed a lot too but I'm not perfect and I weaken with some sweets.... Maybe taking 250mg G.S.E. a couple times per day. I think I read on one of my sites about taking 300+mg two times per day for diabetic issues. Keep up with the healing nutrition. PS: I do all my labs non-fasting...just can't get to the doc's office early in the morning, so gotta take that into account. |
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07-13-2015, 01:54 PM | #3 | |||
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Wisest Elder Ever
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All this glucose testing can drive you mad.
There are things to take into account. Surely the other lab could be calibrated slightly differently. Lab testing is never 100% accurate. When you eat less glucose the liver makes more. And the liver is not a very accurate organ for this, and tends to make more than you need. The old saying of "you need to eat to lower glucose or lose weight" is true. Those A1C numbers are not the end all ...anyway. They are only a marker. And tend to increase with age too. All of them, the charts and everything were made up as best guesses. With time we may see some changes there too.
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07-13-2015, 02:03 PM | #4 | |||
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Thank you for this, MrsD.
Of course as soon as I get this news, I went into "figure it out" mode. I just couldn't understand how this could possibly happen. The liver thing makes sense. I don't understand the process well, but I understand weird things can happen when you drastically change your diet. One thing I definitely saw was that my FBG went up initially. I was consistently over 90 whereas I'd been mostly low 80s. I read somewhere this sometimes happens because your body is shocked by the lower carb intake and allows your BG to drift higher. It's back down to the mid 80s now. I also read this article which is interesting regarding the life of red blood cells. Not knowing any better, it makes sense to me. I guess. http://chriskresser.com/why-hemoglob...liable-marker/ Thanks again. |
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07-17-2015, 10:08 AM | #5 | |||
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I had my annual physical yesterday, and after grilling me on what I was eating and drinking to make sure I was doing things right, my doctor had no explanation for why my A1c didn't drop. As you'd mentioned, MrsD, some diabetics I consulted with said that if I'm eating too much protein, my liver will convert excess into glucose. That's not something I'm monitoring at all, so I'll have look at how much I should be getting, and compare it to the reality. I'm definitely much heavier on the protein than I ever have been.
As I expected, there was a discussion about both my LDL and triglycerides which increased significantly from last year. The triglycerides were still within normal reference range, but I still need to try to understand why they more than doubled. I know they're very sensitive to what you've eaten in the week prior, but I don't remember eating anything hateful before this blood draw. We had the discussion about bad LDL and benign LDL which I initiated, and she asked if I wanted to get the more refined test to check my LDL particle count to distinguish between the two. I think it will run about $100, and am still trying to decide whether I want to do that or not. I know I can bring my LDL down by just backing off on the saturated fat which would be the path of least resistance, and then just re-check the regular panel in 6 months. She did at one point ask, "Do you want to take something to bring it down?" She knows I'm not a pill-popper and would decline, but I got the feeling she was obligated to ask. I'm sure "offered and refused" went into her notes. I wish I had asked for her honest opinion on statins. It would have been interesting to hear her answer. Last edited by janieg; 07-17-2015 at 10:30 AM. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | DejaVu (07-26-2015) |
07-18-2015, 02:12 AM | #6 | |||
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[QUOTE=janieg;1155632]I had my annual physical yesterday, and after grilling me on what I was eating and drinking to make sure I was doing things right, my doctor had no explanation for why my A1C didn't drop. As you'd mentioned, MrsD, some diabetics I consulted with said that if I'm eating too much protein, my liver will convert excess into glucose. That's not something I'm monitoring at all, so I'll have look at how much I should be getting, and compare it to the reality. I'm definitely much heavier on the protein than I ever have been.
As I expected, there was a discussion about both my LDL and triglycerides which increased significantly from last year. The triglycerides were still within normal reference range, but I still need to try to understand why they more than doubled. I know they're very sensitive to what you've eaten in the week prior, but I don't remember eating anything hateful before this blood draw. We had the discussion about bad LDL and benign LDL which I initiated, and she asked if I wanted to get the more refined test to check my LDL particle count to distinguish between the two. I think it will run about $100, and am still trying to decide whether I want to do that or not. I know I can bring my LDL down by just backing off on the saturated fat which would be the path of least resistance, and then just re-check the regular panel in 6 months. She did at one point ask, "Do you want to take something to bring it down?" She knows I'm not a pill-popper and would decline, but I got the feeling she was obligated to ask. I'm sure "offered and refused" went into her notes. I wish I had asked for her honest opinion on statins. It would have been interesting to hear her answer. Hi Jan I hope this finds you doing "ok".. I read you have Idiopathic small fiber Neuropathy. I also suffer with I-Sfn and my first A1C was 5.7. My BS fasting average around 83. I was told I am pre-diabetic. Like you I changed my diet and eat like I am a diabetic. I eat low carb and very little red meat. I get my protein mostly from chicken, fish , vegs and legumes. Lots of avocado, peanut butter, olive oil and walnuts. My A1C did go down to 5.3. My (2) Endo Docs do not believe my Pre-Diabetes is related to the I-SFN!. My Neurologists "thinks" there may be a correlation between the sfn and pre-diabetes. Its all so frustrating, to think these "Specialists" do not understand any of this... I did my own research and read studies show even early stage (pre-diabetes) can cause harm to the small fibers and cause neuropathic pain! I am interested in knowing how your sfn started and what kind of "symptoms" or pain your suffern with. I see you take mostly natural supplements. Do you take anything else for your pain? Mine all started in early 2011 with pins & needles in my calves and burning under both feet. Its been 4 years and it spread to all over my body. Mainly painful pins and needles, roaring tinnitus with surging buzzing and burning. I take 300 mgs Lyrica, and Tramadol as needed. Neither one of these meds help with this type of pain. I take Klonopin for anxiety. I dont know what else to do or who to talk too. I tried all the "first-line" meds, including Gabapentin, Cymbalta and Elavil, nothing worked. What do you take , if anything and how are you coping? Sorry this response is not an answer to your question or concerns. I felt the need to respond to you because of your I-sfn & Pre-diabetes. Feeling alone and isolated with pain. Any comments or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. If you like, you can private message me and we can talk further. I think that would be good.. Marie |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | DejaVu (07-26-2015) |
07-22-2015, 03:02 AM | #7 | ||
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Sorry to see your post. Hope things turn around very soon. You have my positive thoughts and best wishes.
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