I was diagnosed with T2 diabetes about a year ago, with a downright terrifying A1C number.
In late July of last year I had another set of results back. The A1C was down (as was my BMI, from 25.7 to just over 23: I was losing weight so fast at one point that I was worried I was going to end up underweight), but still a worryingly high 68mmol/mol.
I panicked, and started using a flash monitor, and worked out what was causing the spikes. By November my weight had stabilised (BMI a little over 21, and a waist to height ratio of 0.47). My friends made comments about "skinny". For months my daily glucose average was hovering around 5.5mmol/L (which should convert to an A1C of around 32mmol/mol) and a variability coefficient that dropped to as low as 12%.
I thought, "rockin' it like The Boss!"
I thought, "remission territory!"
About 2 months ago I bought a batch of 4 sensors (Abbott Libre 2+). Around this time, my daily average jumped by about 10%. I blamed some iffy sensors, especially when fingerprick tests often (but not always) seemed to be reading lower. One of them was definitely faulty, but a couple of days ago I attached a new sensor from a different manufacturing batch, expecting the daily average to drop back to what it had been.
It didn't.
I don't think my diet has changed significantly. If anything I am eating even less carbohydrate (nuts and peanuts were a key source of protein and fibre, and those have been cut back on because of the carb content). I'm still covering 70-100,000 steps/week (except for ten days in the hills, where I exceeded that by some margin, but that was when I was using the definitely faulty sensor).
I have a review next week. I know that a daily average of around 6.2mmol/L isn't especially risky, and is well within target tolerances for diabetic glucose levels. The faulty sensor aside, I probably haven't had a glucose spike above 10mmol/L in months, but I am very concerned about that fact that my glucose levels are going up.
What do I need to ask? Could this be a homeostasis issue, where my glucose levels are simply reverting to a mean? If so, why is my body not burning even more stored fat (my weight might have gone up slightly, but if so we are talking about half a kilo)? I mention my weight for a reason: I know that LADA (type 1.5) is more common among people who are not overweight, and I was barely into the overweight category. Could this be LADA? If so, how do I persuade the powers that be to conduct what I understand is an expensive test?
Thank you.
In late July of last year I had another set of results back. The A1C was down (as was my BMI, from 25.7 to just over 23: I was losing weight so fast at one point that I was worried I was going to end up underweight), but still a worryingly high 68mmol/mol.
I panicked, and started using a flash monitor, and worked out what was causing the spikes. By November my weight had stabilised (BMI a little over 21, and a waist to height ratio of 0.47). My friends made comments about "skinny". For months my daily glucose average was hovering around 5.5mmol/L (which should convert to an A1C of around 32mmol/mol) and a variability coefficient that dropped to as low as 12%.
I thought, "rockin' it like The Boss!"
I thought, "remission territory!"
About 2 months ago I bought a batch of 4 sensors (Abbott Libre 2+). Around this time, my daily average jumped by about 10%. I blamed some iffy sensors, especially when fingerprick tests often (but not always) seemed to be reading lower. One of them was definitely faulty, but a couple of days ago I attached a new sensor from a different manufacturing batch, expecting the daily average to drop back to what it had been.
It didn't.
I don't think my diet has changed significantly. If anything I am eating even less carbohydrate (nuts and peanuts were a key source of protein and fibre, and those have been cut back on because of the carb content). I'm still covering 70-100,000 steps/week (except for ten days in the hills, where I exceeded that by some margin, but that was when I was using the definitely faulty sensor).
I have a review next week. I know that a daily average of around 6.2mmol/L isn't especially risky, and is well within target tolerances for diabetic glucose levels. The faulty sensor aside, I probably haven't had a glucose spike above 10mmol/L in months, but I am very concerned about that fact that my glucose levels are going up.
What do I need to ask? Could this be a homeostasis issue, where my glucose levels are simply reverting to a mean? If so, why is my body not burning even more stored fat (my weight might have gone up slightly, but if so we are talking about half a kilo)? I mention my weight for a reason: I know that LADA (type 1.5) is more common among people who are not overweight, and I was barely into the overweight category. Could this be LADA? If so, how do I persuade the powers that be to conduct what I understand is an expensive test?
Thank you.