Has anyone here been a diabetic for more than 40 years?

Omnipod

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531
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Insulin
What Id like to ask is... all those T1's who have and who are posting in this thread.... When you speak of being young and not taking as much care..... how long did you not take your diabetes seriously.... what was your HBA1c back then.... and now that you are taking care...what is your hba1c now?
 

yingtong

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People who.kock diabetes
Hi Omnipod,back 1963 I'm not sure what Hba1c was or if they did that test then. It took me 10 years to come to grips with my diabetes .My last Hba1c,7 weeks ago was 46%
 
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CarbsRok

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4,688
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Insulin
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pasta ice cream and chocolate
What Id like to ask is... all those T1's who have and who are posting in this thread.... When you speak of being young and not taking as much care..... how long did you not take your diabetes seriously.... what was your HBA1c back then.... and now that you are taking care...what is your hba1c now?
I can't remember when the A1c came out but don't think it was around in the 1960's do remember it from the 70's though.
Home blood testing came along in about 1982. So all we had was strict diets or supposedly as the case may be. Back in those days I don't think we had as many stresses from diabetes as no testing etc. so no worries.
My A1c is 6.4 and hasn't been above 6.5 for 10 years and not above 7 in the last 20. That's as far as I can go back with my own records.
 

Minnie45

Well-Known Member
Messages
157
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
40 years for me this month, diagnosed when I was 6 - only found that out this month as I thought I was 7 lol. Have other auto immune conditions (under active thyroid, ulcerative colitis and inflammatory arthritis) but otherwise good health, and the not unexpected background retinopathy. I'm fortunate I had good care, my old Dr years ago put me on blood pressure tablets and statins to help protect things. My mum on the other hand has been a T1 for 49 years and has really suffered with her eyes in recent years, she also has coronary disease and is undergoing stents next month.
 
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RuthW

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Messages
1,158
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
Hi,I was diagnose in 1959 when I was 11 years.I have got a few complications but I dont let it get me down.
I too am on Novo rapid and Lantus.Just enjoy life.
Hey. My mum keeps telling me that when you've been Type 1 for fifty years, you can get a medal ( from whatever the British Diabetic Association is called now). Did you get one?

In answer to OP's question:

And I've had it since 1967, probably triggered by a minor operation I had a few months before. I got hypothyroidism at 13 (1975). I've had frozen shoulder twice and very, very minor bleeding in one eye. No laser treatment yet and no detectable vision deficiencies. I am rather inflexible, which can be a side effect of high blood sugars, though I can improve that with exercise.

Lately, I have been putting on belly fat, my previously superb blood pressure was not good at the last appointment, and my cholesterol is relatively high ( trigs are very low, though).

I also believe that some people (like me) are just lucky. There's no justice in this illness. I know people who have always been "good diabetics", much better than me, and they have much worse complications after a very short time. I believe that it's not all about the blood sugar. I think that's very important, but I think some people have more of a syndrome, where the autoimmune system attacks other parts of the body too. Otherwise, I think the variation in outcomes is inexplicable.
 
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RuthW

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Messages
1,158
Type of diabetes
Type 1
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Pump
What Id like to ask is... all those T1's who have and who are posting in this thread.... When you speak of being young and not taking as much care..... how long did you not take your diabetes seriously.... what was your HBA1c back then.... and now that you are taking care...what is your hba1c now?
Hahaha! There was no such thing as the HbA1c. There were no blood tests. We had to do urine tests twice a day. And of course most people hated them, couldn't see the point of them and faked their records. I can remember as a teenager sitting in the waiting room ( we also waited for hours and hours and hours back then) filling out my "results" and some little old lady telling me how to fake them better and how she did it! I was a bit startled. I still thought adults didn't tell lies, and also I had no idea what she was doing at the children's clinic. So, in short, we didn't know what our Hb was. Our treatment was hopeless. Our prospects were hopeless. I don't really understand why any poor doctor chose to specialize in diabetes.

The last ten years has been a complete revolution in diabetes treatments.
 
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RuthW

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Messages
1,158
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
What Id like to ask is... all those T1's who have and who are posting in this thread.... When you speak of being young and not taking as much care..... how long did you not take your diabetes seriously.... what was your HBA1c back then.... and now that you are taking care...what is your hba1c now?
When it comes to "not taking as much care", there were no DAFNE courses back then. There were no basal and bolus regimes. Nobody knew their "carb ratio". (The doctor did but never mentioned it.) Nobody knew their own factors of any kind. We staggered from accidental hyper (mistake at estimating carbs) to hypo (no mention EVER of planning a change in your insulin regime for exercise or unusual activity) when we just schlucked back dextrose tablets or whatever else we could lay our hands on. It was like trying to live on the deck of a ship in a raging sea. And when you went to the clinic, desperate, sad and exhausted, unable to make sense of it all, you got a "telling off" because of course it was your fault, wasn't it? You were "non-compliant." Oh the bad old days!
 
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zjed

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Messages
110
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Insulin
Dislikes
Lazy Doctors and Endos
I've had T1 for 43 years, since I was 7. Lots of drugs, alcohol and partying in my teens and 20s but somehow I've got away with it. I must have some protective genes in there somewhere.
I am now under pretty tight control and am confident of not getting complications.
Here in Victoria you get a 50 year medal and high tea at the governor general's house (not sure if it's low carb)
 
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notoriousnick

Member
Messages
10
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
I was diagnosed in 1972 at the age of 12. I've been using a pump for the last ten years and a CGM for the past couple of weeks. Like others here, early control was terrible - finding myself unconscious or near-unconscious on a regular basis from low BGs. Single shot of insulin a day, which peaked during late morning, forcing me to stuff myself full of carbs to prevent a plummeting BG. No BG tests, just urine tests. Then the insulin would run out in late evening meaning sky high BGs overnight.

In my late teens I worked out that running in the evenings stopped the jump in BGs overnight (still no BG tests available), and so have kept up running (and other activities) ever since. Then around 1980, after knocking myself out on a skating rink (as you do) and winding up in hospital, I was kept there also to stabilise my BGs. Switched over to MDI. I was so impressed by how much better I felt when using the hospital's BG measuring device (a big machine) I begged and pleaded if there was any sort of device I could borrow or rent to do this at home. Doctors looked at each other, disappeared for a while, and came back with one of the first home BG meters ever invented - the size of a house brick! I believe it was originally designed by some Melbourne engineer for his T1 daughter, then developed by Ames, but the details escape me now.

Anyhow, no complications, highly fit and waiting for another 7 years to get that medal :).

If someone were to ask me what the secret is to surviving T1, I'd say (apart from picking the right genes and controlling BGs), high amounts of exercise. Live like an athlete (but no doping! :)).

Cheers,
Nicholas
 

himtoo

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why can't everyone get on........
don't know how i haven't stumbled on to this thread before............

great inspiration :)

been type 1 since august 1972 so coming up 43 years shortly. ( am 57 )

I have had some issues overs the years but its funny that some of them they don't really tell you that it is because of the diabetes until you start having the trouble

frozen shoulder , duyputrens contracture , necrobiosis lipoidica to name 3

i have taken BP and cholesterol meds for about 18 years so am reasonably well controlled there
and I started MDI by myself after I read about it happening in germany.
had a bit of laser in 2002 and 2012 for minor bleeds and a few ( 3 ) lucentis injections in 2013 for a macular edema close to my central vision in 2013.

as I am such a positive person I think I am doing remarkably well all things considered
I do test religiously and eat a lot of green veg and have managed to keep my A1c's below 6.5% for many many years now
 
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I think you are ALL fantastic.:) so inspirational. I have 14 more years to go until my 40th diaversity and I hope those years will be good ones with not too many blips along the way.

With best wishes RRB :)