Welcome, your post may have got lost in another topic but Metformin is usually the first medication that you will be prescribes if your HbA1C is high and in conjunction with dietary changes helps the body to use the insulin it produces more effectively. It is well known that some people do suffer side effects particularly an upset stomach but it will often settle down, this is why it is usual to start on a low dose and then increase over a few weeks. However if it continues to give problems the a slow release version is supposed to be gentler on the stomach. I helps to take the medication mid meal.Can anyone talk to me about metformin. And side effects
side effects: five years of topirimate (anti seizure epilipsy med) given for migraine resulted in me having more migraines than before, I'd lost half my hair, and had temporary cognitive impairment. (which thankfully wore off but my hair is destroyed).Although many people can cope from the outset, and some have a reaction at first, I found the consequences of just a single tablet of Metformin were something I could not live with.
I have always had extreme reactions to any medication- penicillin and similar antibiotics always made me housebound for the duration of the course, but that is usually 5 days. Five weeks of Metformin and Atorvastatin and I was suicidal, but I did benefit in the form of a professional quality carpet and upholstery cleaner.
I stopped taking the tablets just before Christmas 2016 and things did begin to improve. By the time I came to the attention of the GP surgery again the low carb diet had put me under the diabetic range for Hba1c, so I am only pushed to go back on statins around once a year.
The side effects I suffered were not recorded or reported, which is - I suspect - why the medication is safe and effective on paper but pretty life destroying if one is sensitive.