My blood test of 30 Sept 2024 shows a glucose reading of 45 in a range of 42-47 as prediabetic.
My GP has flagged up to be discussed at next appointment. I wondered if taking Pred for 2 years and now down to 7.5 mg has any bearing on this reading before I contact the GP?
The reading was 41 in the July test. I have read a bit in the web page for Diabetes and got the drift - lose weight, no sugar and so on. Losing weight through exercise is not that easy with PMR and neuropathy in both feet, but I do try and walk when I can.
I was at a party at the weekend with lots of cakes and no-no foods and wondered if I could blame that for this high reading last Monday or does it take longer to show up?
In short if I can get advice about the Pred and reducing the prediabetic threat so I dont have to see the GP, that would be great. I gained 10 kg at first and have now lost 5 Kg of that (70kg now).
Thanks for any information or tips.
Written by
Motida
To view profiles and participate in discussions please or .
If you read your patient information leaflet for Pred - it lists this as a common side effect -
• increased blood sugar
For most most people it usually reduces as you lower the Pred dose... but your recent increased reading may or may not be due to too much sugar the previous weekend... I'd suggest another test to see if it has reduced on it’s own.....
Pred doesn't necessarily cause Type 2 diabetes but it does cause steroid-induced diabetes. Type 2 diabetes is caused by problems with insulin - either your pancreas can't produce enough for your body (less body needs less insulin in that case which is why they say to lose weight) or your body has become resistant to the insulin activity.
Pred induced diabetes is caused by pred making your liver release random spikes of blood sugar from the body stores in liver and muscle. This means your average blood sugar level is pushed higher and the blood test they did rises. It is called the Hba1c test and reflects the average BS level over the last 3 months - so no, I'm afraid you can't lay all the blame on that party!!! When did the GP last check that blood test? Have they looked at it before?
Lots of people on the forum have been able to reduce their Hba1c level by cutting carbs a lot, especially processed carbs, added sugar and being careful to limit root veg and some fruits - lots of carbs in bananas and apples etc!
When I started on pred I really cut down on carbs and also I went gluten free. I became a total bore about food in fact. I went gluten free as I heard it would stop me getting a fat face!! My glucose readings tend to be between 37 and 38.
Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.
Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.