InDeathsWaitingRoom
Newbie
- Messages
- 1
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Hello,
Newbie here. I was diagnosed at 34, 15 years ago. I recently lost my business, home and 2 of my 3 dogs, and developed frozen shoulder and then fractured same **** shoulder in 3 places 2 months ago, so life is really [4 letter word]. With the time off though I have been constantly studying my levels on my apple watch using zukka, an XDrip4ios fork and I log every gram I eat using NutraCheck. And it makes no sense whatsoever...
the last 2 nights are a perfect example. Saturday night was a good night. I ate 200g of carbs throughout the day and was hovering between 4 and 7 mmol all day. My last meal was at 7, by midnight I had been at 6 mmol for hours, took my Lantus and was hovering between 3 and 5 all night. So pretty good if a bit low. Yesterday, Sunday I basically ate the same food and similar readings all day and again ate my last meal at 7. Come midnight the plateau of 7mmol started to rise gradually so I gave myself 2 units of Novo and my usual 18 units lantus. As I dozed off at one it was very slowly going down so it all looked good. I got an alarm on my watch at 4 (I only have high warning alarms at night otherwise I wouldn't sleep) telling me I was at 18 so I groggily gave myself 6 units of Novo and went back to sleep. Checking the graph when waking at 8.30 it went down to 6 before rising again to 10 when I woke so I gave myself another 4 units of Novo to lower it and counteract the oat milk coffee I would have 20 minutes later for breakfast.
I don't understand how two similar days can lead to such different results.
I have lived in a ****** little town without a hospital for the last decade and only once did my GP try and arrange for me to meet a team at a hospital 10 miles away but they kept on cancelling and then I never heard from them again so in my 15 years of type 1 I have only ever had one hospital appointment and that was the generic 'eat brown pasta' type of affair. I have been diagnosed with maculopathy (I do get eye tests at my local health centre) and with my lifelong history of chronic depression and all the stuff mentioned at the beginning I am really struggling with the idea of keeping on going. It seems blindness is the only thing I have to 'look forward to'.
I've never used AI before (except for a really garbage compressor I bought for music production) but is there a reliable AI that can look at the graphs of food input and insulin dosage and help me work out a good dose and when to take it? Otherwise I see no way out...
Newbie here. I was diagnosed at 34, 15 years ago. I recently lost my business, home and 2 of my 3 dogs, and developed frozen shoulder and then fractured same **** shoulder in 3 places 2 months ago, so life is really [4 letter word]. With the time off though I have been constantly studying my levels on my apple watch using zukka, an XDrip4ios fork and I log every gram I eat using NutraCheck. And it makes no sense whatsoever...
the last 2 nights are a perfect example. Saturday night was a good night. I ate 200g of carbs throughout the day and was hovering between 4 and 7 mmol all day. My last meal was at 7, by midnight I had been at 6 mmol for hours, took my Lantus and was hovering between 3 and 5 all night. So pretty good if a bit low. Yesterday, Sunday I basically ate the same food and similar readings all day and again ate my last meal at 7. Come midnight the plateau of 7mmol started to rise gradually so I gave myself 2 units of Novo and my usual 18 units lantus. As I dozed off at one it was very slowly going down so it all looked good. I got an alarm on my watch at 4 (I only have high warning alarms at night otherwise I wouldn't sleep) telling me I was at 18 so I groggily gave myself 6 units of Novo and went back to sleep. Checking the graph when waking at 8.30 it went down to 6 before rising again to 10 when I woke so I gave myself another 4 units of Novo to lower it and counteract the oat milk coffee I would have 20 minutes later for breakfast.
I don't understand how two similar days can lead to such different results.
I have lived in a ****** little town without a hospital for the last decade and only once did my GP try and arrange for me to meet a team at a hospital 10 miles away but they kept on cancelling and then I never heard from them again so in my 15 years of type 1 I have only ever had one hospital appointment and that was the generic 'eat brown pasta' type of affair. I have been diagnosed with maculopathy (I do get eye tests at my local health centre) and with my lifelong history of chronic depression and all the stuff mentioned at the beginning I am really struggling with the idea of keeping on going. It seems blindness is the only thing I have to 'look forward to'.
I've never used AI before (except for a really garbage compressor I bought for music production) but is there a reliable AI that can look at the graphs of food input and insulin dosage and help me work out a good dose and when to take it? Otherwise I see no way out...