Bertyboy
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 215
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
Once again catapillar, I'm in awe of your knowledge on the subject. To be honest, I wasn't expecting the dietician to have my blood test results (I assumed I would have been sent them in the first instance?) So I was caught a little off guard and probably didn't question her enough (in retrospect, I should have asked for a printout). All I recall her saying is that the antibody tests showed "negative". I had mentioned both GAD and c-peptide, so perhaps incorrectly assumed she meant both.It's very unusual for a type 2 diabetic to be diagnosed with ketones. The presence of ketones on diagnosis points towards type 1.
I'm not sure why you are thankful a cpeptide test came back negative? No cpeptide means you aren't producing any insulin, at all. Which would be unusual for a newly diagnosed adult type 1 diabetic because they would be expected to be honeymooning. It would be very unusual for a type 2 diabetic who would be expected to have higher than normal cpeptide because type 2 is hyperinsulimia. So no cpeptide points to type 1. What exactly do you mean by a negative result on your cpeptide test?
25% of type 1 diabetics are GAD negative. A negative GAD test doesn't mean you aren't type 1.
So that's a total daily dose of 46 units? And you're staying over 4? That's a fairly standard dose, it doesn't suggest insulin resistance. Nor does it suggest you'll be fine without insulin and without testing and injecting. You are obviously needing those injections to keep blood sugars in check.
Re: the ketones, the initial diagnosing GP and then the DSN said the same as you (along with the fact the symptoms were sudden onset). However, the dietician seems to have a hunch that it's something else. I'm hanging onto that hope, of course and I said I was happy to experiment if it clarified things.