First day on Metformin
Ive been managing diabetes through diet and exercise...until now. A1C just hit 8.0 and Dr. put me on Metformin. 500 mg 1st week. 1000 mg after that. Stomach cramps, bloating, diarrhea. Will this go away?
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Congratulations on finding the right answer for you!! Hoping your husband can keep an open mind and find the right methods.
Wish U luck. I have been on same drug for 8 years and no side effects . Surprised he didn't make it 1000 twice a day. Guess he wanted to see how u tolerate it. I was on 1000 and got back to 6.1 so reduced it to 1000 once a day. Just had my blood work again and will see where it is at.
I've been on metformin for 5 years. I take 2000 mg daily. Plus victosa. My a1c is 5.9. I believe metformin should be in the water supply with so much sugar in all foods!
Thanks everyone for your input!!! Things settled down a bit after the initial 500 mg. However, after adding the second dose of 500 mg, Im experiencing nausea, bloating, flushing in hot weather, no appetite, etc. I checked with my doc and he suggests hanging in a bit longer; as long as I can tolerate it as Metformin is the best option for me right now.. Its been 4 weeks...yikes!
Eat something with it and maybe take a dose before you go to sleep. Maybe you can sleep thru it. I did that in the early days of Victosa. Sick on my stomach for months with Victosa but when I took it at night I just went to sleep.
@bonniewhite56 Good problem solving! Teresa
Thanks for your input...glad to see your a1c went down. After the ill effects, I hope mine does! 🙂
I've been on Metformin for 2 years. 500 mg in the AM and PM. A1C is 6.2 to 6.5. I had no side effects from the start and am hoping to be able to get off Metaformin at some point by following The Mount Athos Diet, which is 3 days fasting, 3 days moderation and 1 day feasting. Sugar, processed food and red meat are allowed once a week on Sundays. Fasting days are vegetarian (fruit, vegetables, nuts, beans and seeds - basically reverse diabetes) - and the "Moderate" days include fish and chicken. This is how the monks on Mt Athos eat and it is a modified Mediterranean diet. These monks live 10 years longer than the average Greek male and have no cancer, heart disease or diabetes. Seems worth a shot!
@kamuela I really like the sound of that "diet". Unfortunately when you are not just preparing meals for yourself it is more difficult to execute that type of specialty diet. I am going to make a note of though and see how much I could follow.
JK
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