Trulicity

Relationship to Diabetes
Type 2
Had my first dose by epi-pen on Monday. Was projectile vomiting by Tuesday evening plus diarrhoea. Terrible stomach cramps virtually constantly, waking me up in the night and constant nausea. I haven’t been able to keep any food in my body. Friday (today) I have spoken with practice nurse who advises that I stop taking my metformin tablets until the side effects wear off - please god let that be soon! I won’t be repeating my dosage this Monday ... if I make it that far. Such a shame as this sounded like it may have made a real difference. On the upside, I’m sure that I will have lost a good few lbs by the time my stomach stops screaming and expelling.
 
So sorry you have had such a nasty reaction to Trulicity @dissappointedinmyself

Do get in contact with your GP to let them know what happened and to you - they will certainly want to know.

Hope an alternative option can be offered that suits you better.
 
Had my first dose by epi-pen on Monday. Was projectile vomiting by Tuesday evening plus diarrhoea. Terrible stomach cramps virtually constantly, waking me up in the night and constant nausea. I haven’t been able to keep any food in my body. Friday (today) I have spoken with practice nurse who advises that I stop taking my metformin tablets until the side effects wear off - please god let that be soon! I won’t be repeating my dosage this Monday ... if I make it that far. Such a shame as this sounded like it may have made a real difference. On the upside, I’m sure that I will have lost a good few lbs by the time my stomach stops screaming and expelling.
 
I have explored a different approach with Victoza which may help others. I am T2 for over a decade and have followed the route most others have, starting with Metformin. My journey arrived at Ozempic and then followed 5 months of
diarrhea and incontinence and finally stopped. I was put on to Victoza, starting at 0.6 mg rising to 1.2. Not long after (couple of days) I was back to all I had wrestled with using Ozempic. My diabetes team wanted to move me on to insulin, but I did not, because Victoza has many other benefits, especially risk of cardio vascular issues. So I went back to 0.6 starting dose. NOW THE GOOD NEWS: I started at 0.6 and then increased the dose by one (1) click of the pen per week. One click = 0.06 mg The following day I had bit of abdominable gurgling which settled after about 24 hrs. I continued the journey towards 1.2. One week the gurgling was more pronounced and lasted a bit longer, so I stayed on that dose for 2 weeks, then returned to one click per week and after 12 weeks I reached 1.2 WITH NO SIDE EFFECTS. I know everyone is different and I was told that what I had done was very unconventional, but hey - it worked and is still working. So I hope I may have stumbled onto an approach that might well work for other people. I should also mention that I have an extreme form of IBS which makes this class of drugs difficult to tolerate, but this gently, gently approach managed to creep past the IBS with no reaction. I hope this might work for you, it`s definitely worth trying. Good luck.
 
Sounds like a very sensible and pragmatic approach @CornishDowser - allow the body time to adjust and get used to the higher doses, then increase by the smallest increment.

What was that old tale about frogs, where you could keep a frog happily alive at relatively high water temperatures as long as you increased the temperature very gradually, but if you dropped a frog into water at the same high temperature the shock would most likely kill it.
 
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