niseys4 130 Posted May 19, 2017 Hello! My name is Denise from California. I am 62 & waiting to see my surgeon hopefully in 2 wks. I'm having the sleeve. After seeing what my younger sister (50ish) & 40 yr old daughter experienced after having the sleeve I thought I would try loosing my weight naturally. I have been attending a Healthy Balance class afford by Kaiser since Dec. 2016 & have lost 10 lbs. Something I haven't been able to do in years after trying several diet plans. Anyway I saw my bariatric Dr. Who mentioned that since I was diabetic that having the surgery would be good for my health since it can bring my diabetes into remission. I was diagnosed with diabetes about 6 yrs ago. He said the longer I have this disease the more likely I can develop complications with my diabetes. Does any have any thoughts or suggestions on this matter? I would appreciate any feed back. Sent from my SM-T530NU using BariatricPal mobile app 1 lessismore4me reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lessismore4me 47 Posted May 19, 2017 Yes, the longer you have Type 2 Diabetes the more likely you will have high blood pressure, poor circulation in your legs, uncontrolled infections in different areas of the body, etc. Weight loss surgery helps you get your blood sugar back in contol. Just remember stay away from simple carbohydrates like bread, Pasta, rice, crackers, white potatoes, etc. The by-pass surgery is most effective for diabetics because if you eat sugar it causes you to feel very uncomfortable with perspiration and feeling shakey. My diabetes got much better, but has not completely gone away. That is because I have allowed simple sugars back into my life. I was sleeved June 28, 2016. So I am working to eliminate it again, but I have discovered that I have used simple sugars as a reward after I accomplish something or feel emotionally down. I am 62 also. 1 niseys4 reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Navigating the Wilderness 824 Posted May 19, 2017 Well, I was sleeved in February and my A1C went from a 7.6 in February to a 5.1 in May, so sleeves can be very effective for diabetes management. 1 niseys4 reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
niseys4 130 Posted May 19, 2017 Thank you both! You were very encouraging!👍🏻 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
niseys4 130 Posted May 19, 2017 8 hours ago, Navigating the Wilderness said: Well, I was sleeved in February and my A1C went from a 7.6 in February to a 5.1 in May, so sleeves can be very effective for diabetes management. Thank you! That helps! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tuhok1591 34 Posted May 19, 2017 Thank you! That helps! I am 52, my blood sugar was out of control & putting me on insulin actually made it worse. I had 3 of my doctors recommend the sleeve to help my diabetes and I had my VSG 1 month ago. I have only taken insulin 6-7 times since surgery and my fasting blood sugar this morning was 91. Before surgery my waking blood sugar was usually 225-250. I am still taking metformin but am so happy that I do not have inject insulin before every meal. I only have to test once a day at varying times. I have not had neuropathy pain in my feet/legs since & I think I may be getting feeling back in my fingers too. This has been a godsend for my health & the weight loss a huge bonus too. 3 AllysonB, niseys4 and Vivian Krueget reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites