Well I did it!

I have just returned from the doctor, where I picked up my scrip for
Byetta. I stopped by the drug store, but they won’t have any until
Tuesday, so I left the scrip and will start next Friday. I hope that
the worst of the side effects (if any) come sooner rather than later
so they will be over the weekend instead of surprises as the office.

My blood work was back (it had been two years and I expected the
worst) — my A1c was 6.3 (which is an average of 124 as per the handy
dandy conversion chart link someone posted recently) and my doctor
said it wasn’t high enough for Byetta. He recommended upping my Actos
from 30 to 45. But I persevered for the diet/weight loss effect. He
agreed provided I took my blood sugar rising, 2 hours after breakfast,
2 hours after dinner, bedtime, and whenever I felt funky. My fasting
glucose (after 2 days of forgetting my Actos) was 122.


I plan to buy one of the travel devices y’all have recommended, and
will let you all know how it goes the first few days.

Thank you all for all of the advice and support so far!

Jessica

5 Responses to “Well I did it!”

  1. Neva Marjory Says:

    Peggy –

    One of the things I like about my doctor, and something I agree with
    him wholeheartedly about, is the idea of being as least invasive as
    possible. If it were possible to completely control diabetes without
    drugs I would do so. I had a shot at that when I was first diagnosed,
    and stuck religiously to the Zone diet using fish and low fat dairy as
    my only proteins. Sadly, I gained a bunch of weight, and losing weight
    is one of the things that can convert you back to non-diabetic.
    (Another very successful thing is that roux-en-x massively invasive
    surgery I can never remember the correct name of — instant
    non-diabetic.)If you are a type 2 diabetic, initially your body’s
    cells lose the ability to properly uptake insulin at the cellular
    level. The body then starts putting out more and more insulin, and
    your blood sugar levels rise. Eventually, many type 2 diabetics become

    insulin dependent because their bodies can no longer produce insulin,
    and they need insulin shots. HOWEVER, every last bit of holistic
    literature indicates that getting very thin can, for the vast majority
    of people, "switch" the cells back to be able to use the insulin
    produced by their bodies without cuasing the continual flow from alpha
    cells. (BTW this is not true of type 1’s, who are diabetic either
    because of a congenital problem, or an autoimmune problem, or a virus.)

    My belief is that it will hopefully be possible to drag this
    40-something body back to a state of health — meaning a weight loss
    of 50 - 80 pounds. I have been unsucessful at a bunch of diets since
    January, generally due to getting hungry. That’s why **I** want Byetta
    – general laziness and lack of discipline.

    My doctor, who has been my doctor for 12 years, and before I was
    diagnosed, would like to see me stick to Weight Watchers and exercise
    an hour a day, a keep up a low drug regimin.

    Byetta is designed (and it’s in their literature) for diabetics who
    cannot control their diabetes with metformin and/or sulfonureas. It
    ISN’T for preventing high glucose per se. The uses for pre-diabetics
    are considered and off-label use, and it also isn’t for
    diet-controlled diabetics.

    I believe it is heaven sent for people who need large drug regimens
    and already face secondary complications — I’m not there yet, but
    fear that gaining another 20 pounds could send me there.

    So that’s what I’ve got to say.

    Jessica

  2. Irwin Mayme Says:

    Congrats, Jessica. Not everyone has problems with nausea, etc. so here’s
    hoping for the best.

  3. bruce_6 Says:

    Congrats, Jessica. Not everyone has problems with nausea, etc. so here’s
    hoping for the best.

    *************************************************
    I am probably strange or something but I had no nausea from Byetta for the
    first 3 weeks on the 5 mcg pen and no other side effects either. Then the 4th
    week, I had about 3 days of some off and on nausea which went away almost
    immediately when I took a Phenergan tablet. After that I had no nausea, not
    even when I moved up to the 10 mcg pen. The 10 pen gave me no side effects at
    all but I could tell it was working by the drop in my blood glucose after
    meals. I am so pleased to get good BG control with no side effects and with
    shots that are easy and painless. The only drawback for me is having to keep
    the pen cold. When I am away from home (in town) and plan to eat out, I usually
    just dash home and do my shot and take my Metformin before I go to the
    restaurant. That way I can leave the Byetta pen in the refrigerator and I

    won’t
    have to worry about it getting too warm or cold. Janet

  4. Maureen Hines Says:

    I keep a bottle of WahMah Equate Pepto on the desk at home and at work and
    that seems to help a lot with the nausea - YMMV. I’m going to pick up some
    Pepto tablets and see if they work as well.

    Carl E. Moore www.dcfx.com/cmoore

  5. Neva Marjory Says:

    Peggy –

    I’m sorry — I probably didn’t write clearly enough — his goal for
    diabetic patients is A1c at 6.0 or below, fasting glucose at below
    120, and no spikes EVER above 180, and the ability to maintain that
    with diet and exercise. He would like people to get there with as few
    drugs as possible.

    I should have also said that I will be his 4th or 5th patient on
    Byetta. He’s an internist, not an endocrinologist, so perhaps he isn’t
    as "forward thinking" (if that’s the term) as other people’s doctors.

    Jessica

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