Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been on the pre-diabetic range for A1C since my early 30's. It was 5.9 back then.
I'm now 45, and have an A1C of 6.1 back in sept 2024. Got it down to 5.8 as of feb 2025. But not very confident that I am able to get it lower nor that I won't go back to whatever habits cause it to be higher.
I had gestational diabetes with all of my pregnancies. I'm 10 lbs overweight and 20lbs to what I think would be a healthy weight for my 5.5 ft frame.
What else should I explore? GLP meds? Nutritionist? I want to get this down and not keep the risk of diabetes and other comlications.
Nutritionist. This 99.9% can be dealt with with nutrition. Start following a diabetic diet. Or rather simply a Whole Foods diet where you cut out all added sugars, you start your day with protein and healthy fats, and you avoid flours, grains, carbs that don't come from veggies or fruits.
You do NOT need bread and extraneous sugars and carbs. If you eliminate those unnecessary carbs and limit the others (you cannot eat 400 grams of fruit and veggies a day, follow the diabetic guidelines) you can and will loose weight. You will feel 1000% better and you can keep it off by eating healthy.
You don't need meds to manage this, you simply need to eliminate sugars and starches---they are not healthy for you---eat whole foods and you will feel so much better
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get on Metformin and continuous glucose monitoring device first.
Then get with a nutritionist and come up with a diet.
Start walking (wear a smart watch or use some tracking app). Every day, aim to increase around 100 steps, so that you can reach 3000 steps by end of month. Don’t be in a rush to do too much because you may end up injuring yourself.
Stick to 3000 steps for a month or so and then start increasing steps by 100 steps again, until you reach 6000 steps.
5000 - 10000 steps are more than enough for your health.
This is pretty decent advice. Metformin is pretty benign and may actually have some non-diabetic benefits. And “start slowly” is really important for exercise. If you hurt yourself you lose your progress and more. CGM’s are expensive but it looks like Abbot is coming out with a “consumer level” OTC version at somewhat lower expense. You probably wouldn’t need it very long — just until you found out how that baked potato, for example, impacts you. Regular glucose monitoring with a finger stick meter is less pleasant but again you probably wouldn’t need it for too long at any given time.
Anonymous wrote:Count carbs. No more than about 125-150 a day. And never more than about 35-40 in a meal.
Anonymous wrote:I've been on the pre-diabetic range for A1C since my early 30's. It was 5.9 back then.
I'm now 45, and have an A1C of 6.1 back in sept 2024. Got it down to 5.8 as of feb 2025. But not very confident that I am able to get it lower nor that I won't go back to whatever habits cause it to be higher.
I had gestational diabetes with all of my pregnancies. I'm 10 lbs overweight and 20lbs to what I think would be a healthy weight for my 5.5 ft frame.
What else should I explore? GLP meds? Nutritionist? I want to get this down and not keep the risk of diabetes and other comlications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the replies and input.
I have started using a CGM/dexcom (last 20 days) and it has been helpful for me to see the blood sugar after I eat my meals. I have a hard time with making good food choices when I am stressed (kids whining, long meetings at work, etc). So I'm trying to replace the habit of eating when stressed with something else...but it is a work in progress.
Before being focused on making improvement, I was only walking for exercise. Getting 6k average steps a day, sometimes more, sometimes less.
In the last 6 weeks, I have joined a studio and I do pilates 2 times a week (50 minute classes). I've started to walk 20 mins in the morning. I have started to do a light arm workout (10mins) once a week - this is via video/peloton app. If I try to do too much, I end up not doing it.
You need to do cardio 5X a week for at least 30 min.
"Need" isn't the right word here -- particularly given the perfectly normal dynamic OP describes of not doing it once she gets too ambitious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the replies and input.
I have started using a CGM/dexcom (last 20 days) and it has been helpful for me to see the blood sugar after I eat my meals. I have a hard time with making good food choices when I am stressed (kids whining, long meetings at work, etc). So I'm trying to replace the habit of eating when stressed with something else...but it is a work in progress.
Before being focused on making improvement, I was only walking for exercise. Getting 6k average steps a day, sometimes more, sometimes less.
In the last 6 weeks, I have joined a studio and I do pilates 2 times a week (50 minute classes). I've started to walk 20 mins in the morning. I have started to do a light arm workout (10mins) once a week - this is via video/peloton app. If I try to do too much, I end up not doing it.
You need to do cardio 5X a week for at least 30 min.