@Leadinglights
That is a salutary warning. Do you say that on the basis of your experience and/or the following note on the Diabetes UK retinopathy page?
There is evidence to suggest that reducing blood sugar levels too quickly if they have been high for a long time may increase the risk of diabetic retinopathy. So it is important to work with your diabetes team to help you to reduce your blood sugar levels gradually over a few weeks or months.
See: https://www.diabetes.org.uk/about-diabetes/looking-after-diabetes/complications/retinopathy
My GP said nothing about that when I told her about the VLCD I intended to follow. I had read Prof Roy Taylor's book and wanted to see if my FBG would come down from 17 mmol/L to around 6 mmol/L in 7 days. It did.
Thanks to Google AI, I have seen that studies indicate:
A rapid HbA1c reduction of more than 2% points within a period of 3 months is specifically noted in relation to worsening DR and TIND [Diabetic Retinopathy and Treatment Induced Neuropathy of Diabetes]
I have put
worsening in bold as pre-existing DR is a stated risk factor. Early worsening (EWDR) in some cases is well documented.
@Leadinglights, would you agree everyone should have their eyes checked for signs of retinopathy before starting any ambitious glucose and/or weight reduction programme? Or, on the precautionary principle, does your advice apply even when there are no signs of retinopathy?
P.S. As it happened the retinal images taken at my annual visit the opticians showed no sign of retinopathy before or after diagnosis.