Diabetics, anybody taking Byetta for a long period?


bigmanofds

Well-Known Member
I have been taking the drug for about 2 weeks and it brought my blood sugar down for 298 to 158. Also, it has cut my appetites tremendously. I have not had any side affects so for. Only thing is if I have not eaten after taking the shot it makes me nervous and jumpy. If there is anybody out there that has been taking the drug longer, I would like to hear your experiences so I can determine if this is a long term solution for me.
 
I was on it for 3 months but had to stop while band camp was going on because of the same thing. I was EXTREAMELY irritable and found myself in confrontations all of the time. It did drop my count down from 244 to a manageable 110 and I lost a lot of weight(34 lbs) but now I'm on Actos and I'm fine! It's good medication just be careful and take it on time!
 

Are ya'll Type1 or Type2?

I've seen the commercials for it, but I don't think I could take giving myself a shot.

I have not been taking my meds regularly lately and It it showing in my blood sugar level but my cholesteral has been doing better with what I've been eating. It's not all good but thats how it is for now.
 
I've only used Levimir and the Novolog...(a steroid I take makes me susceptible to elevated blood sugar levels)...and I've never had an issue, I have heard of people having mood issues with Byetta.
 
Are ya'll Type1 or Type2?

I've seen the commercials for it, but I don't think I could take giving myself a shot.

I have not been taking my meds regularly lately and It it showing in my blood sugar level but my cholesteral has been doing better with what I've been eating. It's not all good but thats how it is for now.


I think I am type 2. It took me a while to face the fact I was a diabetic and started taking care of myself. I have not been able to stick myself yet. I always get my son or my wife to do it for me. As I stated I was in denial about being a diabetic. I did not want the shots, so my doctor gave me some pills. Those pills put me in some embarrassing situations because they had me running to the bathroom all the time. So I stop taking them, and thought I could loose some weight and the diabetes would go away (yeah I know, I?m a dumb azz). :) Well I lost 67 lbs but my sugar level went up higher. So my doctor put me on Byetta.
 
I was on it for 3 months but had to stop while band camp was going on because of the same thing. I was EXTREAMELY irritable and found myself in confrontations all of the time. It did drop my count down from 244 to a manageable 110 and I lost a lot of weight(34 lbs) but now I'm on Actos and I'm fine! It's good medication just be careful and take it on time!


Thanks for the info, I will try it for a while and see what happens
 
Wow, what were yall doing to have your blood sugar levels up that high? In the 200's? I was diagnosed last year, and "had" lost alot of weight, but when football season hit, I never have time to work out, and have sinced gained some weight back....but I never miss taking my meds. I only check my levels periodocally, I admit I don't check it daily like I should but I am rarely above 100. 110 is high for me, and that is even after I eat some of the sweets I know I should be staying away from.....

Well, I will say this, this has been an inpirational post for me. I know others are dealing and managing their diabetes, makes me want to continue working hard on managing mine.

I still only take metaforim, and NPH insulin(2 shots per day).
 
Wow, what were yall doing to have your blood sugar levels up that high? In the 200's? I was diagnosed last year, and "had" lost alot of weight, but when football season hit, I never have time to work out, and have sinced gained some weight back....but I never miss taking my meds. I only check my levels periodocally, I admit I don't check it daily like I should but I am rarely above 100. 110 is high for me, and that is even after I eat some of the sweets I know I should be staying away from.....

Well, I will say this, this has been an inpirational post for me. I know others are dealing and managing their diabetes, makes me want to continue working hard on managing mine.

I still only take metaforim, and NPH insulin(2 shots per day).

That was MY thoughts. Mine got up to 159 ONCE, when I first started my steroid, but after that MAYBE the highest was 120, when I was moody and had two desserts lol...(I hated being confined)
 
Wow, what were yall doing to have your blood sugar levels up that high? In the 200's? I was diagnosed last year, and "had" lost alot of weight, but when football season hit, I never have time to work out, and have sinced gained some weight back....but I never miss taking my meds. I only check my levels periodocally, I admit I don't check it daily like I should but I am rarely above 100. 110 is high for me, and that is even after I eat some of the sweets I know I should be staying away from.....

Well, I will say this, this has been an inpirational post for me. I know others are dealing and managing their diabetes, makes me want to continue working hard on managing mine.

I still only take metaforim, and NPH insulin(2 shots per day).


That is the reason I started this thread, to get information out to help me and somebody else. Sometimes people can get wrong information about diabetes like I did. I thought diabetes was something that fat folk who eat sweets all the time get. One of the reasons I was in denial about having diabetes is that I don?t eat sweets. I have never even had a cavity in my life. I found out eating a lot of starchy foods (eating rice and gravy everyday is a Louisiana thing), being over weight, and a family history is a cause. My blood sugar was high and I did not even know it until I had eye surgery about a year and a half ago. I didn?t have the usual symptoms. When that nurse told me I was a diabetic, I told her she didn?t know what the hell she was talking about until I got a second opinion. When it comes to health issue, some people are going to do what they need to no matter what and some are not no matter what. I hope to pass information to those who could go either way. I just started dealing with this about six months ago so everything is still new to me.
 
I'm 31 and I have been a diabetic since I was 14, and both may parents became diabetics in their late 50's. Everyone please take care of yourselves because my father who did not see a doctor and did not believe he was a diabetic until her had a blood infection from a sore one his foot and had to have one of his toes amputated and is now legally blind. Keep you blood sugar regulated to protect your eye, kidneys and limbs.
 
I'm 31 and I have been a diabetic since I was 14, and both may parents became diabetics in their late 50's. Everyone please take care of yourselves because my father who did not see a doctor and did not believe he was a diabetic until her had a blood infection from a sore one his foot and had to have one of his toes amputated and is now legally blind. Keep you blood sugar regulated to protect your eye, kidneys and limbs.

My eye sight is my wake-up call, I am blind in one eye now. Everything else seems to be fine for now and I want to keep it that way.

Thanks for sharing.
 
Diabetics......

I think I am type 2. It took me a while to face the fact I was a diabetic and started taking care of myself. I have not been able to stick myself yet. I always get my son or my wife to do it for me. As I stated I was in denial about being a diabetic. I did not want the shots, so my doctor gave me some pills. Those pills put me in some embarrassing situations because they had me running to the bathroom all the time. So I stop taking them, and thought I could loose some weight and the diabetes would go away (yeah I know, I?m a dumb azz). :) Well I lost 67 lbs but my sugar level went up higher. So my doctor put me on Byetta.

It has caught up with me in more ways. I wasn't taking my meds regularly and doing what I should have been doing. My doctor sent me to a endocronologist and they have me taking some more meds and shooting myself with insulin once a day. They want to see how I do in the next two weeks with the new meds and the insulin and they say I should'nt be on the insulin for long.

Anyone have to take something called Starlix?

I have a appt with a nutritionist to help me learn more about the foods I need to be eating.

What are ya'll doing about your health when it relates to diabities?
 
Re: Diabetics......

My daddy died last Feb. of complications from diabetes. All I can say is please take care of yourself because it ravages the body slowly, but SURELY. Obey your doctor - take your meds.
 
Re: Diabetics......

Believe me, I know all too well about diabetes, and how it affects one and one's family. The sad thing about diabetes is that so many people can have it, and not even know it...and all it may take is something simple to trigger it (stress, in my case...and cold weather in my father's case).

Being a diabetic myself, I know how hard it is to keep up with taking medicine and trying to maintain a healthy lifestyle. But IT IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU DO EXACTLY THAT. If you don't, the consequences from complications can be fatal.

So if you are a diabetic, visit a specialist (preferably and endocrinologist) often, take your medicine, and exercise.
 
Companies report 4 new deaths with diabetes drug

Eli Lilly and Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. on Tuesday reported four new deaths in patients taking Byetta, even as the companies tried to shore up the safety profile of their popular diabetes medication.

The announcement comes a week after the Food and Drug Administration said two Byetta patients died of acute pancreatitis, sinking shares of both drugmakers. An executive from Eli Lilly said the FDA was aware of the additional deaths but did not announce them because they involved a milder form the pancreatitis. The condition can cause nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.

"They were concentrating on the more severe forms of the condition, but we felt it was important to get this information out there," Eli Lilly Medical Director James Malone told the Associated Press.

Malone stressed that all four patients had complicating medical conditions, ranging from leukemia to gallstones, which were likely the primary cause of death.

Since the FDA announcement, Eli Lilly shares have fallen over 3 percent, while shares of Amylin Pharmaceuticals have fallen nearly 20 percent. San Diego-based Amylin co-developed Byetta and makes about 80 percent of its revenue from the injectable drug. The drug accounted for about 3 percent of Lilly's sales last year.

Prescriptions for the twice-daily treatment fell 2.1 percent last week, according to pharmaceutical data firm IMS Health.

Company representatives scheduled a conference call Tuesday evening to stress how rare the reported problems have been.

In an interview ahead of the call, Malone said that media coverage of the deaths with Byetta "tended to be a bit sensationalized."

He noted there has only been one report of pancreatitis for every 3,000 patients taking the drug for one year.

While the company cannot rule out a connection between its drug and the pancreas problems, Malone said there have been reports of similar problems with rival medications.

"With all other diabetes medications we know there has been pancreatitis and some of those people have died," said Malone. "So it's not a unique phenomenon with Byetta." He added that diabetes patients are already three times more likely to develop pancreatitis compared with healthy patients.

The FDA said last week it would seek a stronger, more prominent warning for Byetta, but details of the new label are still in the works.

Malone also tried to ease concerns about the timeline for company's long-acting version of Byetta ? which is formulated for use once a week, instead of twice a day. He said the companies still hope to bring the drug to market by mid-2009 and that there are no plans for additional studies, despite the FDA's safety concerns.

Lilly and Amylin Pharmaceuticals split worldwide sales of Byetta, which grew over 50 percent to $650 million last year. Wall Street continues to maintain a positive outlook for the drug and the next-generation formula.

Leerink Swann & Co. analyst Jonas V. Alaenas, reaffirmed an "Outperform" rating on Amylin Monday, calling the pancreatitis concerns "overblown." Last week, Goldman Sachs analyst Meg Malloy reaffirmed a "Buy" rating with a similar comment.

Approved in 2005, Byetta was the first in a new class of diabetes medications that have shown improved ability to control blood sugar levels. The drug is expected to face competing products as soon as next year.

In June, Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk reported data showing its experimental drug liraglutide was more effective than Byetta at controlling blood sugar levels. Swiss firm Roche is also working on its own next-generation diabetes medication.

Considering competition from Novo Nordisk and others, Robert Hazlett expects long-acting Byetta to make $100 million in sales during its first year on the market, compared with earlier analyst estimates of up to $700 million.

Lower revenues from the drug would also impact biotech company Alkermes Inc., which helped develop the longer-acting formula and is slated to receive royalties from its sales.
 

Companies report 4 new deaths with diabetes drug

Thanks Fyiah for the heads-up, good looking out. For once me being hardheaded do not cost me. I sopped taking the stuff 4 months ago. My doctor had prescribed it to me for my diabetes and appetite suppressor. I had lost 70lbs so start taking that stuff and gain 50 of it back. So I stop taking it. :tup:
 
DOCTORS AND PHARMACISTS ARE VERY GOOD WITH MEDICATION MANAGEMENT. YOU SHOULD SEEK OUT THE ADVICE OF A REGISTERED DIETITIAN WHO IS A CERTIFIED DIABETIC EDUCATOR. THIS INDIVIDUAL CAN ASSIST YOU WITH INDIVIDUALIZED DIETARY PLANNING AND WEIGHT LOSS GOALS FOR GLUCOSE CONTROL. I NOTICED A COUPLE OF YOU STATED THAT YOU HAD EXPERIENCE A LOT OF WEIGHT LOSS AND FREQUENT URINATION. THIS IS ONE OF THE SIGNS OF ELEVATED GLUCOSE AND POOR DIABETIC MANAGEMENT. ASK YOUR DOCTOR TO GET A HGB A1C TO SEE HOW WELL YOU HAVE BEEN CONTROLLING YOUR DIABETES OVER THE PAST THREE MONTHS. REMEMBER THE CONSEQUENCES OF POOR DIABETIC MANAGEMENT MAYBE EYE DISEASE, KIDNEY FAILIURE, POOR CIRCULATION OF THE LEGS/FEET AND HEART DISEASE. TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF ! :):)
 
DOCTORS AND PHARMACISTS ARE VERY GOOD WITH MEDICATION MANAGEMENT. YOU SHOULD SEEK OUT THE ADVICE OF A REGISTERED DIETITIAN WHO IS A CERTIFIED DIABETIC EDUCATOR. THIS INDIVIDUAL CAN ASSIST YOU WITH INDIVIDUALIZED DIETARY PLANNING AND WEIGHT LOSS GOALS FOR GLUCOSE CONTROL. I NOTICED A COUPLE OF YOU STATED THAT YOU HAD EXPERIENCE A LOT OF WEIGHT LOSS AND FREQUENT URINATION. THIS IS ONE OF THE SIGNS OF ELEVATED GLUCOSE AND POOR DIABETIC MANAGEMENT. ASK YOUR DOCTOR TO GET A HGB A1C TO SEE HOW WELL YOU HAVE BEEN CONTROLLING YOUR DIABETES OVER THE PAST THREE MONTHS. REMEMBER THE CONSEQUENCES OF POOR DIABETIC MANAGEMENT MAYBE EYE DISEASE, KIDNEY FAILIURE, POOR CIRCULATION OF THE LEGS/FEET AND HEART DISEASE. TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF ! :):)

Thanks for the advise but it is getting hard to know who to believe these days. Just from personal observation, everything is base on how much medical insurance you have. It seem that the medical profession is more concern with how much that can charge your insurance than what is best for you. This CERTIFIED DIABETIC EDUCATOR you speak of makes paranoid because is this somebody who will help or somebody else who wants a piece of the action. I am not clear on what is consider good diabetic management because one person will tell you one thing and other will say something different. If you don?t have medical insurance ?ain?t nobody going to tell you nothing.? Like I said earlier I went to a doctor and some other specialist to gain 50 lb. Like the song says ?I can do bad by myself.? I just really went back to listening to my body, being more active, watching what I eat and I quick drinking beer and hard alcohol. I eat more salads, drinking water more, walking, and only drink wine every now and then. I feel more energized and I lost 20 of that 50 pound gain the past three months. But again thanks for the information I have found out you can?t have to much of it.:):)
 
The Cure for Diabetes
What if the American Heart Association endorsed the trans-fat diet? Problem, right? Look at what the American Diabetes Association is spoon-feeding people with diabetes: sugar. Not to worry: We've got the solution right here
By: Adam Campbell, Photographs by: Michael Lewis

Walking Out Cured

It's a wonder no one has tried to have Mary Vernon's medical license revoked.



Since 1999, the 52-year-old family doctor has been treating diabetic patients in Lawrence, Kansas, with an approach that was abandoned by most physicians in the 1930s. Worse, this Depression-era remedy is the opposite of the current guidelines established by the American Diabetes Association, a nonprofit organization that spent nearly $51 million on research in 2005, and so should know a thing or two about how to handle diabetes.



There's no question that Dr. Vernon is trouble -- but for whom? Not her patients, that's for certain. They just won't stay sick. People walk into her office afflicted with type-2 diabetes and, by every objective medical measurement, walk out cured. There's $51 million that says that isn't supposed to happen, not in a clinic in Kansas, and definitely not as a result of cleaning out the refrigerator.



"My first line of treatment is to have patients remove carbohydrates from their diets," explains Dr. Vernon, a petite, energetic mother of two who also serves as the president of the American Society of Bariatric Physicians. "This is often all it takes to reverse their symptoms, so that they no longer require medication."



That's it?



That's it -- a simple strategy, but one that's controversial. If Dr. Vernon and a growing cadre of researchers are correct about carbohydrates, we may be looking at an epic case of ignorance on the part of the medical community. That, however, pales next to the implications for the American Diabetes Association, namely that the very organization dedicated to conquering diabetes is rejecting what could be the closest thing we have to a cure.


A Diabetic Epidemic

Although not an infectious disease, diabetes seems to be spreading like one. Since 1980, its prevalence in the United States has risen by 47 percent, a trend that's expected to take a space-shuttle trajectory in the next decade. That's because nearly half of American men today either have the condition or are on the verge of developing it, according to a new report from the National Institutes of Health. And the consequences are considerable: Diabetes is the primary cause of cardiovascular disease, slashing a man's life span by an average of 13 years. Dodge early death and you could still end up impotent, blind, in kidney failure, or, most likely, minus a foot. (A gangrenous limb or digit is amputated every 6 minutes in the United States.)



"This is a 'grab your muskets, fellas, the wolves are at the door' scenario," says David Katz, M.D., an associate professor of public health at Yale University school of medicine. "What once was 'adult-onset' diabetes -- a condition mostly of overweight, sedentary, middle-aged adults -- is now an epidemic in children under the age of 10."



So what exactly is diabetes? In freshman-biology terms, it's a disease of the hormone insulin. Secreted by your pancreas, insulin moves glucose -- the form of sugar your body uses for energy -- from your bloodstream into your cells. Problems arise, however, when, often due to excessive weight gain, your cells start to become resistant to the effects of insulin. (It knocks, no one answers.) As a result, more insulin is required to dispose of the same amount of glucose. (The knock becomes a loud banging.) This condition, called insulin resistance, is the first stage of type-2 diabetes.

http://www.menshealth.com/cda/artic...fae010VgnVCM20000012281eac____#ReaderComments
 
Insulin Resistance here...non-complinat on taking metformin....but I went to the doctor yesterday and was given a glucometer.



Has anyone tried simply removing carbs from your diet?
 
Insulin Resistance here...non-complinat on taking metformin....but I went to the doctor yesterday and was given a glucometer.



Has anyone tried simply removing carbs from your diet?

The dietician for my mom said she could not do a low card diet becuase of her diabetes. But I can't remember her reasons.
 
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