First thing DONT PANIC, welcome as well. I'll tag @daisy1 who will hopefully be along soon to give you info for the newly diagnosed. Have a look around the forum and site. Many people find a low carb diet helps them reduce their blood sugars and lose weight. Take care!Hi, I'm a 2 day old type 1 diabetic. Actually I'm 63.
I'm totally confused with all the information. I don't know if I should be watching how many carbs, calories or sugar I eat. I don't get to see the specialist clinic until Monday and I'm in a fearful limbo
Last night I tested my blood sugar and it was 19.00 but ketones had dropped to 0.7. This was from the orginal 4.8 (sent straight to hospital and diagnosed)
When to panic? 19 I know isn't good
Thoughts anyone please?
s
Hi, I'm a 2 day old type 1 diabetic. Actually I'm 63.
I'm totally confused with all the information. I don't know if I should be watching how many carbs, calories or sugar I eat. I don't get to see the specialist clinic until Monday and I'm in a fearful limbo
Last night I tested my blood sugar and it was 19.00 but ketones had dropped to 0.7. This was from the orginal 4.8 (sent straight to hospital and diagnosed)
When to panic? 19 I know isn't good
Thoughts anyone please?
s
No problem. I'm guilty of the same problem. I admire the time and effort you obviously are prepared to give to help all of us.I always tend to be hasty in my replies and am more eager to get reassurance out there than check the proper facts. I'm sorry!
But, yes, remission is a T2 thing - I more wanted to highlight the power of a "good" (what works for an individual) diet - I just can't speak for what T1's qualify as a successful diet regime, and should have been clearer about that.
Hi @SueJB. Welcome to the forum.
First of all. Don't get yourself all stressed and upset, it will not help.
You haven't mentioned any medication, so I'm assuming as of yet you're not on anything that will control your blood sugar. Yet you are in a position to test your levels. Have you self funded a meter or has it been prescribed to you? Either way you are causing yourself undue stress by getting information you don't fully understand. I suggest you leave the meter alone until you have been seen at the specialist clinic on Monday and they can give you information relevant. Yes 19 is high , but you've probably been a lot higher recently prior to diagnosis and never really realised. Your 19 could be the result of so many factors but ultimately the only way can lower it in the short term is through food/ drink and exercise.
Going for a walk will drop the reading, drinking water will also help and ultimately what you eat will effect the level your blood sugars reach. Try to avoid anything that is high in sugar , sweets, chocolate, cakes, pastries basically anything that you feel contains refined sugar. Next you need to consider sugar found in foods such as bread , pasta ,cereal, they don't taste sweet but still raise sugar levels.
I have no idea of your diet at the moment, but please don't go starving yourself over the next few days.
If you like tea and biscuits, then maybe go for a rich tea biscuit and only one or two.
If dinner is traditional meat and two veg, cut back on the potatoes and add a bit more veg.
If puddings are a must, try cheese and crackers instead of custard.
This is only information to give you an idea until you see the specialist on Monday when you should get more help and most importantly relevant medication to treat your diagnosis. Once we know what medication you are on we can help a lot more.
In the meantime PLEASE don't worry.
If at anytime you feel ill and unable to cope call your local hospital or 111 and explain your situation and they will help and advise.
Good luck on Monday and let us know what happens.
I was also diagnosed in August at the age of 43. I'm on only 6 units of lantus and have anything from 0.5 - 3 units of novorapid before a meal. The higher end is for pasta / spuds etc. I suspect we're on low doses because we're typical LADA who have a pancreas which is still operating and kicking out a bit of insulin. I have been told that my insulin doses will likely increase as the years go by.Hi everyone,
Thanks for the calming words back in Aug this year. 3 months on from T1 diagnosis, I still wonder if they've got it wrong though. My present regime is
Basal, 5units Levemir (morning and evening)
Bolus 1 to 2 units Novorapid before meals. Generally my BG is so low (4.5 to 6mmols) and I eat very few carbs out of preference that I rarely do Novorapid.
So what's my question?
Have they got it wrong? Can I reduce the Levemir?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?