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Daughter hypos after dinner - advice please
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<blockquote data-quote="Jaylee" data-source="post: 2322191" data-attributes="member: 101136"><p>Hi,</p><p></p><p>If your daughter rapidly lost weight prior to diagnosis. (I did as a kid. A 2stone 7/8 year old isn't great.)</p><p>Pretty much starving the body due to the lack of insulin dissallowing the body to utilise what's eaten thus burning body tissue for fuel.. (Layman's terms.)</p><p></p><p>At a guess, your daughter maybe injecting into muscle tissue? Which could cause the insulin to kick in faster..</p><p></p><p>It seems to me she's doing great so far. It may get a little easier with the bolusing when she regains what weight was lost?</p><p>From personal experience, novorapid can still have a kick in the tail 4 hours later. Some of the carb content of the pudding could have been enough to catch a drop that may have been happening anyway??</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jaylee, post: 2322191, member: 101136"] Hi, If your daughter rapidly lost weight prior to diagnosis. (I did as a kid. A 2stone 7/8 year old isn't great.) Pretty much starving the body due to the lack of insulin dissallowing the body to utilise what's eaten thus burning body tissue for fuel.. (Layman's terms.) At a guess, your daughter maybe injecting into muscle tissue? Which could cause the insulin to kick in faster.. It seems to me she's doing great so far. It may get a little easier with the bolusing when she regains what weight was lost? From personal experience, novorapid can still have a kick in the tail 4 hours later. Some of the carb content of the pudding could have been enough to catch a drop that may have been happening anyway?? [/QUOTE]
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Daughter hypos after dinner - advice please
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