Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you not feel sick with an A1c that high?
Most people would not even at that level. You would never even know it if you did not test. That is why type 2 is so bad. Silent and deadly.
Yeah, but excessive thirst and urination and eating, weight loss, blurred vision, mood changes. BS has to be high for a long time to get those levels You’d have to know something is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you not feel sick with an A1c that high?
Most people would not even at that level. You would never even know it if you did not test. That is why type 2 is so bad. Silent and deadly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to tell you but diet alone is not bringing your 12 down to anything reasonable. So while this is all good above advice, you will need the drugs (you are starting at a high dose of metformin so hopefully it works for you!).
+1. This is serious. See an endocrinologist and dietitian.
+2. Not sure why you are asking a bunch of random Internet strangers for medication advice rather than getting recommendations from a more specialized doctor.
+3. So strange to be polling randos rather than looking for a specialist. 12 is really really high.
Nothing wrong with seeking other peoples' experiences. It helps inform the poster and helps them know more what questions to ask their doctor(s). Clearly this isn't someone who just randomly tested their glucose and self-diagnosed.They are seeing a doctor. Responders suggesting it's more of an emergency might unnecessarily be alarming OP or they might be rightly encouraging OP to be more aggressive with their doctor.
If OP has an A1c of 12, that’s severely uncontrolled diabetes and they are facing risks of serious complications like vision loss and kidney disease. That’s not something to mess around with doing your own “research” on the Internet asking a bunch of random people on DCUM.
Op is seeking medical advice, not other people’s “experiences.” Several people on this thread have posted false information that shows they have the medical knowledge of the average 5th grader. I would hate if the OP took that incorrect medical advice seriously and harmed their health because they were not smart enough to differentiate between the anonymous idiot and someone actually qualified to give medical advice.
Not PP but I think you are wrong. OP is asking for people's experience. Not to treat but to see how treatments worked and to be readu to talk to the doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to tell you but diet alone is not bringing your 12 down to anything reasonable. So while this is all good above advice, you will need the drugs (you are starting at a high dose of metformin so hopefully it works for you!).
+1. This is serious. See an endocrinologist and dietitian.
+2. Not sure why you are asking a bunch of random Internet strangers for medication advice rather than getting recommendations from a more specialized doctor.
+3. So strange to be polling randos rather than looking for a specialist. 12 is really really high.
Nothing wrong with seeking other peoples' experiences. It helps inform the poster and helps them know more what questions to ask their doctor(s). Clearly this isn't someone who just randomly tested their glucose and self-diagnosed.They are seeing a doctor. Responders suggesting it's more of an emergency might unnecessarily be alarming OP or they might be rightly encouraging OP to be more aggressive with their doctor.
If OP has an A1c of 12, that’s severely uncontrolled diabetes and they are facing risks of serious complications like vision loss and kidney disease. That’s not something to mess around with doing your own “research” on the Internet asking a bunch of random people on DCUM.
Op is seeking medical advice, not other people’s “experiences.” Several people on this thread have posted false information that shows they have the medical knowledge of the average 5th grader. I would hate if the OP took that incorrect medical advice seriously and harmed their health because they were not smart enough to differentiate between the anonymous idiot and someone actually qualified to give medical advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to tell you but diet alone is not bringing your 12 down to anything reasonable. So while this is all good above advice, you will need the drugs (you are starting at a high dose of metformin so hopefully it works for you!).
+1. This is serious. See an endocrinologist and dietitian.
+2. Not sure why you are asking a bunch of random Internet strangers for medication advice rather than getting recommendations from a more specialized doctor.
+3. So strange to be polling randos rather than looking for a specialist. 12 is really really high.
Nothing wrong with seeking other peoples' experiences. It helps inform the poster and helps them know more what questions to ask their doctor(s). Clearly this isn't someone who just randomly tested their glucose and self-diagnosed.They are seeing a doctor. Responders suggesting it's more of an emergency might unnecessarily be alarming OP or they might be rightly encouraging OP to be more aggressive with their doctor.
If OP has an A1c of 12, that’s severely uncontrolled diabetes and they are facing risks of serious complications like vision loss and kidney disease. That’s not something to mess around with doing your own “research” on the Internet asking a bunch of random people on DCUM.
Op is seeking medical advice, not other people’s “experiences.” Several people on this thread have posted false information that shows they have the medical knowledge of the average 5th grader. I would hate if the OP took that incorrect medical advice seriously and harmed their health because they were not smart enough to differentiate between the anonymous idiot and someone actually qualified to give medical advice.
Anonymous wrote:How did you not feel sick with an A1c that high?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
T2 is high sugar. T1 is low. Please don’t comment about things you fundamentally don’t understand. She has T2.
Ummmm, no.
Both present with high blood glucose and high A1C. Further blood tests necessary to distinguish difference.
Type 1 is insulin dependent. The body does not make enough insulin and insulin injections/pump required.
Type 2 is insulin resistant. The body is still producing insulin, but resistant to it.
Low blood glucose can happen to anyone; however, blood glucose can drop dangerously low in Type 1.
Anonymous wrote:
T2 is high sugar. T1 is low. Please don’t comment about things you fundamentally don’t understand. She has T2.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Have an appointment for an endocrinologist! Currently checking blood glucose in morning and after every meal and vigorous exercise 6 to 7 days a week. Numbers are coming down with metformin but not normal yet. But then again it’s only been 10 days. But I am eating very well.
You don’t specify what you mean by “very well,” but for diabetics, carbs are the enemy, regardless what the diabetes association might say at any given time.
Metformin is a standard treatment. There are drugs you can add to increase insulin production (e.g., repaglanide), send sugar out through the kidneys (e.g., jardiance), and the various metabolic injections (e.g., Ozempic), as well as short and long-acting insulin.
The endocrinologist is the person to see.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Have an appointment for an endocrinologist! Currently checking blood glucose in morning and after every meal and vigorous exercise 6 to 7 days a week. Numbers are coming down with metformin but not normal yet. But then again it’s only been 10 days. But I am eating very well.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP is trolling us as before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to tell you but diet alone is not bringing your 12 down to anything reasonable. So while this is all good above advice, you will need the drugs (you are starting at a high dose of metformin so hopefully it works for you!).
+1. This is serious. See an endocrinologist and dietitian.
+2. Not sure why you are asking a bunch of random Internet strangers for medication advice rather than getting recommendations from a more specialized doctor.
+3. So strange to be polling randos rather than looking for a specialist. 12 is really really high.
Nothing wrong with seeking other peoples' experiences. It helps inform the poster and helps them know more what questions to ask their doctor(s). Clearly this isn't someone who just randomly tested their glucose and self-diagnosed.They are seeing a doctor. Responders suggesting it's more of an emergency might unnecessarily be alarming OP or they might be rightly encouraging OP to be more aggressive with their doctor.