What was the cause of your diabetes?

AwesomeGuy37
AwesomeGuy37 Posts: 436 Member
My doctors have told me the main cause for mine is my obstructive sleep apnea. I always figured it was caused from eating too much sugar and never thought I'd get it because I didn't eat sweets. I've learned so much from getting diabetes, that in some sort of weird way I'm thankful I have it.

Anyone else have sleep apnea?

Replies

  • bdubya55
    bdubya55 Posts: 506 Member
    My diagnosis arrived in 1982 after a routine physical. My lab included an HbA1c result of 12.0, with no genetic factor.

    My weight at diagnosis was 270lbs. Clearly morbidly obese and presumably IR, and immediately started on Met and insulin for treatment.

    I wasn't as grateful for a diagnosis of T2D back then, as today- I'm very grateful now-living a complication free life with T2D since my diagnosis. To that end-I share in your thoughts of being thankful.

    Although I don't have an osa condition-OSA, plays a complicated and significant role in people with diabetes, as both condition's are comorbid, meaning they both interact with each other.

    Wishing you the best in working through both of these conditions, and getting positive results.
  • shaynepoole
    shaynepoole Posts: 493 Member
    MI always figured it was caused from eating too much sugar and never thought I'd get it because I didn't eat sweets.


    This made me smile :) I was diagnosed in the late 90's with diabetes and never really explained to me - I had the same head scratching reaction, but I don't eat cakes and candy and actually sugar

    20 years later I am finally much wiser and took diabetes education classes and now understand it's all about the carbs and I was a carbaholic - snacks, bread, etc

    10 years ago, I was diagnosed with sleep apnea as well - the cause was that was the weight for me

    Today, I have no sleep apnea (I had the test redone) and not taking any meds for the diabetes
  • AwesomeGuy37
    AwesomeGuy37 Posts: 436 Member
    MI always figured it was caused from eating too much sugar and never thought I'd get it because I didn't eat sweets.


    This made me smile :) I was diagnosed in the late 90's with diabetes and never really explained to me - I had the same head scratching reaction, but I don't eat cakes and candy and actually sugar

    20 years later I am finally much wiser and took diabetes education classes and now understand it's all about the carbs and I was a carbaholic - snacks, bread, etc

    10 years ago, I was diagnosed with sleep apnea as well - the cause was that was the weight for me

    Today, I have no sleep apnea (I had the test redone) and not taking any meds for the diabetes

    I did love the bread. Sandwiches were a staple in my old diet. I was told I may have to use my CPAP for the rest of my life, but it doesn't bother me that much. I control my diabetes with diet alone. When I was diagnosed I was so scared because I absolutely hate the thought of needles. I was lucky to have a doctor who was in the know about all the recent studies.
  • MysteriousMerlin
    MysteriousMerlin Posts: 2,270 Member
    Working the midnight shift full time and not caring about what went in my face.
  • Lesa1129
    Lesa1129 Posts: 66 Member
    Mine was found on routine bloodwork also. But I have always been a bread lover. I think I miss that more than the potatoes. : /
  • CrisEBTrue
    CrisEBTrue Posts: 132 Member
    My biological mother was a type2 diabetic.

    My adoptive parents were mid-westerners and I was raised on a "clean your plate/ meat and potatoes" diet.

    As a young child I was normal.. my mom thought I was too thin. :sad:
    At the age of about 7 I had my tonsils and adenoids removed and... I started eating.

    Food suddenly tasted good to me; I guess that before that I couldn't really smell food? And after that... I turned into a carboholic and LOVED sweets, which I had not really cared for before. Give me a hunk of warm crunchy bread and a slab of butter, and
    I'm a happy camper. (well, was) :wink:

    Looking back over my life, I can see the signs of a pre-diabetic person. Hypoglycemia, carb addiction...etc.
    (It's a long list so I'll spare you)

    I don't think eating carbs and sweets "caused" diabetes. It''s like.. what came first, the chicken or the egg?
    I don't think it's something you just bring down on yourself, I think you're carrying it around inside like a virus and certain situations just make it develop into a Thing. I have a whole theory about addictive personalities, and things like alcoholism (which also runs in my genetic makeup but I am not one).

    I just don't think it's as simple as "avoid sugar and you won't get diabetes". Yes, eating a proper diet can help you
    avoid it. But it's NOT that cut and dried.

    JMHO :happy:
  • awelmore
    awelmore Posts: 13 Member
    I recently read that heredity loads the gun, environment pulls the trigger. Not sure about that one.

    I also read and believe that my weight gain came from undiagnosed diabetes. I ballooned in my 50's and am just getting back to a healthy weight. I guess it doesn't matter to me but maybe for my children.
  • swalewis
    swalewis Posts: 26 Member
    I don't know.
    I'm only 6 months since diagnosis. I have no family history of diabetes, but do have a family history of obesity. My extra weight around the middle, put on steadily (and post-pregnancy) at about a pound a year through my 30s, still put me at the upper end of normal. I ate very healthy, but not stringently for or against anything, doing most of my cooking & baking at home, eating organic & local, etc. It was definitely not low carb, but included lots of veggies and fruit - not a lot of snack foods or desserts. While I was active - (walked a marathon 5 years ago) I always had difficulty losing weight by the usual eat less/exercise more routine.

    I've lost 35 lbs over the last 2 years (25lbs of which was *prior* to the diagnosis, due to my undiagnosed fasting blood glucose int he 250-300 range), which puts me in the lower end of normal for my height. I'm on metformin, cardio exercise 3x a week and eating very little grains/carb, and much higher fat/protien. My a1c dropped from 12ish to 5ish in 4 months. We'll see what my cholesterol looks like in May.

    I suspect that I am genetically insulin resistant and something just kicked it over the edge, but there is no real "cause" I can put my finger on., I think there are just lots of little things that add up.

    I just finished reading two books "Why we get fat" by Gary Taubes and "The Glycemic Load Diabetes Solution" by Rob Thompson, both which explore the feedbacks and mechanisms of weight/insulin/diabetes (the first more scientifically than the second). Definitely helped with my perspective on being diagnosed with Type II.
  • CrisEBTrue
    CrisEBTrue Posts: 132 Member
    For me...

    it just gets tiresome. I have to stop thinking about "why" and focus on the positive.

    There are just so many negatives about being type2.
    Don't eat this at all, don't eat too much of that (even healthy food...

    It makes me depressed and discouraged.
    I almost have to put myself on autopilot.

    I make healthy foods for my us, But, if, for example, I make beef stew.. I take the potatoes out of my
    portion,eat a tiny serving, and try to fill up on salad .He gets a whole wheat roll.
    I get. Nothing.

    He eats a cookie later in the evening and I drink herb tea.

    I've been 200-300 calories under my limit every day for a week. I'd better lose another pound soon, or....


    :huh:
  • Gentyl
    Gentyl Posts: 184 Member
    Genetic factors and a sleep medication known to cause diabetes. Ugh.
  • Sharonks
    Sharonks Posts: 884 Member
    I believe mine is completely hereditary. I get it from both sides of my family. No one has ever gotten it their 30s except for me. At that time I did high impact aerobics for an hour a day. Often swam, walked and did physical labor regularly. I ate lots of fruits, veggies and whole grains. I was a little plump but not overweight. I was never able to get close to having any control without drugs.

    Losing weight has never helped since I wasn't particularly overweight. Exercise does help. More drugs has made a lot of difference. So now I watch what I eat. I run about 20 miles a week. Walk about 10. Lift heavy 3 times a week. My fastings are often above 125. Most of my between meals run in the 80's. After meals range from 100-175. So I do all the right things according to the Drs. but if I let my guard down I can easily shoot up to 200. To me, this points not to my lifestyle being the problem but to something truly malfunctioning in my body. At 48, I am barely in the normal range of insulin production. I am insulin resistant. I have some minor neuropathy.

    While losing weight and exercise can prevent a lot of complications being sedentary and obese isn't the only cause of T2. Stress can elevate your blood glucose so the stress of having other health issues can cause your BG to rise. There are some circumstances where your body can be damaged by chemical exposure or illness making it inefficient at managing its glucose/insulin balance but I still wonder if it takes a predisposition to T2. There are people who are sedentary and obese who don't have T2. Don't ever blame yourself, you just "won" the genetic lottery. And while it is great if you can improve your lifestyle and not need drugs never kick yourself if that is not where you are at. The goal is always to stop the rot and if it takes drugs to do that then that is so much better than developing complications.
  • earlnabby
    earlnabby Posts: 8,171 Member
    Who knows? I wasn't even pre-diabetic during the summer of 2012 when I was in a drug trial for a new antidepressant and they did regular, extensive blood work. I was diagnosed T2D in January of this year during routine blood work to try and figure out why I was so short of breath and had no strength. The primary diagnosis was severe anemia (probably from gastric bleeding but they couldn't find anything to point to during the endoscopy or colonoscopy except some stomach erosion) but my glucose was in the 170's and my A1c was 7.2. I have no sleep apnea, heart issues, kidney issues, etc. but I have been on antidepressants since 2003 which are known for raising blood glucose. Then there is the weight. I have fought weight gain since I was in my 20's and lost the battle 10 years ago after a fall (I was hiking in Nepal) caused serious hip and back problems which prevented me from doing the hiking and walking I did to keep my weight down.

    My doctor thinks that it was a combination of weight and medications and I got kicked over the edge into actual diabetes by being anemic for so long (at least 8-9 months) and the stress it put on my body.
  • Alsvic
    Alsvic Posts: 93 Member
    I think it might have the house full of teenage girls.:laugh:

    All through my forties I would come home and eat dinner than go to my room and watch TV. I found it was easier than trying to apologize for saying the wrong thing and causing all sorts of tears. That sedentary life style and the fact that I was knocking on 350 pounds may have been the cause?

    That's my story I blaming it on my Daughters.
  • jknops2
    jknops2 Posts: 171 Member
    Ok, I have read and thought about this too. So my understanding of what causes diabetes;

    1. Genetics, nothing you can do about this. So stop blaming yourself. If your genetics predispose you to diabetes, well that’s the way it is.

    2. Being overweight and not exercising speeds the development of diabetes up. So, whenever you get the message of diabetes or pre diabetes, lower your weight and exercise, it slows the progression of diabetes down. In contrast, to genetics, this, you can do something about, so exercise at least 1 hour a day and bring your BMI within the normal range.

    3. If you are pre - or are diabetic, lower carbs in your diet. No way around it, unless you perfectly manage insulin injections, the only option you have of keeping your glucose spikes under control is to control what you eat. In my experience oral medication helps with the morning and overnight glucose numbers, but after meal spikes are mostly controlled by limiting and spacing your carb intake.

    4. And for us diabetics. Carbs are carbs, no matter if it is sugar or starch.

    5. Sleep apnea or sleeping issues. I don’t know. It is correlated with diabetes, but no study has implicated any specific mechanism. Maybe it is just an indirect correlation.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,004 Member
    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm

    The Newcastle University study (link above) contends that true type 2 is caused by excess fat in the liver and pancreas and can be reversed by losing enough visceral fat.

    I was diagnosed Aug 2012 with an hba1c of 10+ and started losing weight with MFP. By November 2013, I was instructed to stop medication. I have been medication free since that time, and my recent hba1c was 5.0.
  • cwrig
    cwrig Posts: 190 Member
    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm

    The Newcastle University study (link above) contends that true type 2 is caused by excess fat in the liver and pancreas and can be reversed by losing enough visceral fat.

    I was diagnosed Aug 2012 with an hba1c of 10+ and started losing weight with MFP. By November 2013, I was instructed to stop medication. I have been medication free since that time, and my recent hba1c was 5.0.

    This is true. And Congrats.

    But it's important to clarify that you have not reversed your diabetes. You have controlled it through proper eating and minimized or eliminated the potential complications. (which of course is great). But if you eat a piece of chocolate cake your BS will spike; if you reversed the diabetes; it would not.

    You probably know this, but just wanted to clarify for new folks (like myself) that it is possible to control the BS and symptoms for type II's so meds may not be required, but not to reverse diabetes itself.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,004 Member
    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm

    The Newcastle University study (link above) contends that true type 2 is caused by excess fat in the liver and pancreas and can be reversed by losing enough visceral fat.

    I was diagnosed Aug 2012 with an hba1c of 10+ and started losing weight with MFP. By November 2013, I was instructed to stop medication. I have been medication free since that time, and my recent hba1c was 5.0.

    This is true. And Congrats.

    But it's important to clarify that you have not reversed your diabetes. You have controlled it through proper eating and minimized or eliminated the potential complications. (which of course is great). But if you eat a piece of chocolate cake your BS will spike; if you reversed the diabetes; it would not.

    You probably know this, but just wanted to clarify for new folks (like myself) that it is possible to control the BS and symptoms for type II's so meds may not be required, but not to reverse diabetes itself.

    i would venture to disagree. As long as I don't put on the visceral fat again, I believe my diabetes symptoms have stopped. I eat normal carbs including chocolate cake and do not notice spikes in my intraday BG, but have stopped testing intraday as my glucose has been normal for 4 months since stopping medication. My post prandial glucose has actually been normal since May 2013 but I was taking a tiny dose of metformin between May 2013 and Nov 2013.
  • cwrig
    cwrig Posts: 190 Member

    i would venture to disagree. As long as I don't put on the visceral fat again, I believe my diabetes symptoms have stopped. I eat normal carbs including chocolate cake and do not notice spikes in my intraday BG, but have stopped testing intraday as my glucose has been normal for 4 months since stopping medication. My post prandial glucose has actually been normal since May 2013 but I was taking a tiny dose of metformin between May 2013 and Nov 2013.

    Then you would be the first documented case of diabetes being reversed.

    Go ahead and have a slice of cake: Someone without diabetes will get a tiny spike as their body adjusts the sudden rush of sugar to keep levels consistent. Someone with Diabetes will notice a rather large spike. Test your BS before you eat, then one hour after the chocolate cake. I think you will see a big spike. There are no documented cases of diabetes being reversed. Controlled with diet yes. In fact the case studies your link points to show this. They say that their BS is under control as long as they maintain a low carb diet. This is Not reversing the disease.

    Testing once a day does not show even if your BS is under control. The A1C is a 3 month average. You could be spiking above 140 a few times a day and not know it. Anything above 140 is doing damage.
  • albertabeefy
    albertabeefy Posts: 1,169 Member
    Go ahead and have a slice of cake: Someone without diabetes will get a tiny spike as their body adjusts the sudden rush of sugar to keep levels consistent. Someone with Diabetes will notice a rather large spike. Test your BS before you eat, then one hour after the chocolate cake. I think you will see a big spike.
    To be more accurate (if you can afford the strips) it's best to do your n=1 experiments every 15 minutes for two hours (yes, eight times) instead of just one hour.

    Different foods spike different people at different times. In fact, the same food can spike the same person differently at different times. The only way to get an ACCURATE picture is more-frequent testing for about 2 hours.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,004 Member

    i would venture to disagree. As long as I don't put on the visceral fat again, I believe my diabetes symptoms have stopped. I eat normal carbs including chocolate cake and do not notice spikes in my intraday BG, but have stopped testing intraday as my glucose has been normal for 4 months since stopping medication. My post prandial glucose has actually been normal since May 2013 but I was taking a tiny dose of metformin between May 2013 and Nov 2013.

    Then you would be the first documented case of diabetes being reversed.

    Go ahead and have a slice of cake: Someone without diabetes will get a tiny spike as their body adjusts the sudden rush of sugar to keep levels consistent. Someone with Diabetes will notice a rather large spike. Test your BS before you eat, then one hour after the chocolate cake. I think you will see a big spike. There are no documented cases of diabetes being reversed. Controlled with diet yes. In fact the case studies your link points to show this. They say that their BS is under control as long as they maintain a low carb diet. This is Not reversing the disease.

    Testing once a day does not show even if your BS is under control. The A1C is a 3 month average. You could be spiking above 140 a few times a day and not know it. Anything above 140 is doing damage.

    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm
    I'm afraid your information is out of date. Have a look at the Newcastle University study linked above. I'll quote from the final section with links to the research papers:


    In 2008, we published the Twin Cycle Hypothesis to explain the cause of type 2 diabetes. This hypothesis predicted that diet could entirely reverse type 2 diabetes. Read our scientific review, Pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes on the US National Library of Medicine website.
    A clinical study designed to test the hypothesis was funded by Diabetes UK. The results were very clear. Weight loss averaging 15kg (2 stone 5lb) achieved over 8 weeks caused two distinct sets of changes. Within 7 days, liver fat had fallen by 30%, liver insulin sensitivity had returned to normal and fasting blood glucose had become normal. By 8 weeks, pancreas fat content had returned to normal and insulin secretion by the pancreas had returned to normal. Read the full scientific paper, Reversal of type 2 diabetes and the related Newcastle University Press Release, Diet Reverses Type 2 Diabetes.
    This new understanding of what causes type 2 diabetes and how it can be completely reversed has been used by individuals worldwide, a report has been publushed documenting practical management of type 2 diabetes in respect of reversal .
    Professor Taylor was awarded the 2012 Banting Lectureship of Diabetes UK. Read his lecture Reversing the twin cycles of Type 2 diabetes .
    Scientists and doctors with access to the journal Diabetes Care, can read a full review of the science underlying this matter: Type 2 diabetes: etiology and reversibility.
  • albertabeefy
    albertabeefy Posts: 1,169 Member

    i would venture to disagree. As long as I don't put on the visceral fat again, I believe my diabetes symptoms have stopped. I eat normal carbs including chocolate cake and do not notice spikes in my intraday BG, but have stopped testing intraday as my glucose has been normal for 4 months since stopping medication. My post prandial glucose has actually been normal since May 2013 but I was taking a tiny dose of metformin between May 2013 and Nov 2013.

    Then you would be the first documented case of diabetes being reversed.

    Go ahead and have a slice of cake: Someone without diabetes will get a tiny spike as their body adjusts the sudden rush of sugar to keep levels consistent. Someone with Diabetes will notice a rather large spike. Test your BS before you eat, then one hour after the chocolate cake. I think you will see a big spike. There are no documented cases of diabetes being reversed. Controlled with diet yes. In fact the case studies your link points to show this. They say that their BS is under control as long as they maintain a low carb diet. This is Not reversing the disease.

    Testing once a day does not show even if your BS is under control. The A1C is a 3 month average. You could be spiking above 140 a few times a day and not know it. Anything above 140 is doing damage.

    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm
    I'm afraid your information is out of date. Have a look at the Newcastle University study linked above. I'll quote from the final section with links to the research papers:


    In 2008, we published the Twin Cycle Hypothesis to explain the cause of type 2 diabetes. This hypothesis predicted that diet could entirely reverse type 2 diabetes. Read our scientific review, Pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes on the US National Library of Medicine website.
    A clinical study designed to test the hypothesis was funded by Diabetes UK. The results were very clear. Weight loss averaging 15kg (2 stone 5lb) achieved over 8 weeks caused two distinct sets of changes. Within 7 days, liver fat had fallen by 30%, liver insulin sensitivity had returned to normal and fasting blood glucose had become normal. By 8 weeks, pancreas fat content had returned to normal and insulin secretion by the pancreas had returned to normal. Read the full scientific paper, Reversal of type 2 diabetes and the related Newcastle University Press Release, Diet Reverses Type 2 Diabetes.
    This new understanding of what causes type 2 diabetes and how it can be completely reversed has been used by individuals worldwide, a report has been publushed documenting practical management of type 2 diabetes in respect of reversal .
    Professor Taylor was awarded the 2012 Banting Lectureship of Diabetes UK. Read his lecture Reversing the twin cycles of Type 2 diabetes .
    Scientists and doctors with access to the journal Diabetes Care, can read a full review of the science underlying this matter: Type 2 diabetes: etiology and reversibility.
    I think it's important to note though that in these cases we're reversing symptoms, not the disease itself.

    If the people gain weight again, and subsequently regain visceral bodyfat, they will still be diabetic.

    In many cases, even with 'reversal' of symptoms the disease is still present. I have absolutely normal, non-diabetic HbA1c levels, yet my pancreas produces almost NO insulin. I still control it with diet and exercise every day. It would be rather presumptuous to say it's anything but CONTROLLED as opposed to reversed or cured.

    Also of note, researchers get more headlines and other media attention - and subsequently more funding - when they make grandiose claims about cures or disease-reversals instead of saying they can control something.
  • cwrig
    cwrig Posts: 190 Member

    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/magres/research/diabetes/reversal.htm
    I'm afraid your information is out of date. Have a look at the Newcastle University study linked above. I'll quote from the final section with links to the research papers:


    In 2008, we published the Twin Cycle Hypothesis to explain the cause of type 2 diabetes. This hypothesis predicted that diet could entirely reverse type 2 diabetes. Read our scientific review, Pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes on the US National Library of Medicine website.
    A clinical study designed to test the hypothesis was funded by Diabetes UK. The results were very clear. Weight loss averaging 15kg (2 stone 5lb) achieved over 8 weeks caused two distinct sets of changes. Within 7 days, liver fat had fallen by 30%, liver insulin sensitivity had returned to normal and fasting blood glucose had become normal. By 8 weeks, pancreas fat content had returned to normal and insulin secretion by the pancreas had returned to normal. Read the full scientific paper, Reversal of type 2 diabetes and the related Newcastle University Press Release, Diet Reverses Type 2 Diabetes.
    This new understanding of what causes type 2 diabetes and how it can be completely reversed has been used by individuals worldwide, a report has been publushed documenting practical management of type 2 diabetes in respect of reversal .
    Professor Taylor was awarded the 2012 Banting Lectureship of Diabetes UK. Read his lecture Reversing the twin cycles of Type 2 diabetes .
    Scientists and doctors with access to the journal Diabetes Care, can read a full review of the science underlying this matter: Type 2 diabetes: etiology and reversibility.

    I read that link the first time you posted it, which is why I was compelled to clarify that it does not say that diabetes was cured; it says the symptoms were controlled by diet. And if you read the case studies of the people who actually did it; they tell you their BG is only under control with low carb eating. They know that if they eat a lot of carbs the BG will spike. They are Not Cured.

    It is well and good to advertise the importance of controlling diabetes by proper eating and lifestyle changes. But dont mislead people into thinking someone found a cure for diabetes. That is simply not true.
  • Bookwitch
    Bookwitch Posts: 33 Member
    Diabetes is a hereditary desease. It may have been coincidental that it just happened to rear its ugly head and the time you found out about your sleep apnea.
  • sandign
    sandign Posts: 56
    I agree 100%. I've not read one study that says diabetes is cured. They may use the term "reversed" but I agree that it means controlled. Easting heavy carbs, sugar etc will bring it back meaning the blood sugar will more than likely increase and if not controlled will get out of control again.

    I was diangosed in Jan with an A1C of 10.4 and fasting of 253. I've been able to bring it down with tight control loss of alomst 40lbs (Lost 6" in my waist) but I'm not kidding myself. I ate one thing this week that I haven'ty had since December and I spiked big time. Having to be extra careful now to get it back down since I will have another blood test this Sat.

    I'm glad that you have it under control but don't kid yourself into thinking it is gone forever. I also have a cousin who is skinny and always has been but was diagnosed alomst 20 yrs ago. He's still on insulin and is still skinny. In fact the doctor told him he needed to gain weight.