Good luck with that. My Diabetes nurse is of the opinion that I am not diabetic and never was, for reasons I won't bore the world with again. However the diabetes expert of the surgery, won't hear a word of this. I have given up trying to have any conversation around this. It's pointless.I love that: 'they were right'
No, they never said that. It was my daughter and I that are postulating that. No idea how to prove it though.
As someone here said, once diagnosed as a diabetic then that stays with you.
So, anyone any idea how to prove that someone is not diabetic?
I’m sure the test results will be interesting. For me, even if my diabetes resolved itself I’d be happy to keep as diabetic on my medical notes, since that would get me a yearly hba1c and cholesterl, liver, eye and foot checks to make sure the time that I did have diabetes hadn’t caused any damage further down the line, and that the diabetes had returned. I’d probably just start only attending the tests I thought relevant each year though and checking the results online, only making an appointment to discuss if I was concerned about them.
That’s just my preference though, if you’d prefer to stop the annual reviews and remove diabetes from your current diagnosis, maybe just do your own tests if ever you feel symptoms returning.
Hi @Gwynn I've been following this with interest. So what do you deduce from this? I like being fitter and healthier tooOk the results are in.
At test start BG 4.8
At 2hrs BG 7.0 (normal)
At 2.5 Hrs BG 6.6 (going in the right direction)
Pulse and BP raised a little probably due to anxiety over the possible result.
I am not trying to get my diagnosis changed and I agree that the annual checks can only be helpful as I get older. I just needed to know.
Oh, and I am not going to change my diet or exercise. I like being healthier and fitter. 🙂
No medical training either. It could have been any/none of the aboveI deduce that from this test and over 500 food BG tests, and all the fasting and evening BG tests, where not one single BG test was above 6.3, that although I was definitely 'diabetic' at diagnosis, but that it may have been caused by my pancreas shutting down, possibly due to an iron overload, carb overload, lousy diet, and being above my personal fat threshold.
However, I have lost considerable weight, control my carb intake and I now think that the original problem was probably reverible and therefor temporary as long as I took the right steps.
However, as I am not a trained medical expert, I recognise that I could be wrong and may have misinterpreted things.
Key for me has been coming off the meds, reducing carb intake, getting my weight down, and increasing my daily exercise. Not sure if it was one of those things or a combination of all of them. I suspect it was all of them.
I went for 115 minute walk in windy conditions this morning. At diagnosis I couldn't even climb the stairs !
Any thoughts or feedback?
I deduce that from this test and over 500 food BG tests, and all the fasting and evening BG tests, where not one single BG test was above 6.3, that although I was definitely 'diabetic' at diagnosis, but that it may have been caused by my pancreas shutting down, possibly due to an iron overload, carb overload, lousy diet, and being above my personal fat threshold.
However, I have lost considerable weight, control my carb intake and I now think that the original problem was probably reverible and therefor temporary as long as I took the right steps.
However, as I am not a trained medical expert, I recognise that I could be wrong and may have misinterpreted things.
Key for me has been coming off the meds, reducing carb intake, getting my weight down, and increasing my daily exercise. Not sure if it was one of those things or a combination of all of them. I suspect it was all of them.
I went for 115 minute walk in windy conditions this morning. At diagnosis I couldn't even climb the stairs !
Any thoughts or feedback?