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Type 1 Diabetes
Losing control? Type 1 child.
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<blockquote data-quote="Jaylee" data-source="post: 912764" data-attributes="member: 101136"><p>Hi, welcome.</p><p></p><p>I was a T1 child of the 1970s, so may not be of any help to you. Through the regime your little girl is currently on don't sound dissimilar to me back in the day, from your description...</p><p> </p><p>These are my thoughts. Trying to think back many many years......</p><p>To Q1. Sounds like something not quite right in her constant daily routine regarding carb count or diet attributing to a certain point in the day..?</p><p>To Q2. Over treating any hypo can & will swing it the other way, resulting in a high. </p><p>To Q3? The honeymoon will end when it's over.. The doses prescribed are adulterated by the "swan song" of you daughter pancreas before it finally gives up causing these inconsistencies... (Though to my mind they seem consistent by you description.)</p><p></p><p>Constant testing is key.. Bear in mind due to the nature of blood flow/circulation there is a "lag" in the result given by the blood meter. So a low if treated already may take time to show a rise even if the meter is saying the blood is still low? Think of the meter reading as a "snapshot" of upto 15 minutes ago... So don't panic if you test her every 30 seconds & she still seems low..?</p><p></p><p>Reading your recent post. Heat can increase insulin sensitivity regarding the variable thrown in the mix....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jaylee, post: 912764, member: 101136"] Hi, welcome. I was a T1 child of the 1970s, so may not be of any help to you. Through the regime your little girl is currently on don't sound dissimilar to me back in the day, from your description... These are my thoughts. Trying to think back many many years...... To Q1. Sounds like something not quite right in her constant daily routine regarding carb count or diet attributing to a certain point in the day..? To Q2. Over treating any hypo can & will swing it the other way, resulting in a high. To Q3? The honeymoon will end when it's over.. The doses prescribed are adulterated by the "swan song" of you daughter pancreas before it finally gives up causing these inconsistencies... (Though to my mind they seem consistent by you description.) Constant testing is key.. Bear in mind due to the nature of blood flow/circulation there is a "lag" in the result given by the blood meter. So a low if treated already may take time to show a rise even if the meter is saying the blood is still low? Think of the meter reading as a "snapshot" of upto 15 minutes ago... So don't panic if you test her every 30 seconds & she still seems low..? Reading your recent post. Heat can increase insulin sensitivity regarding the variable thrown in the mix.... [/QUOTE]
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