handicapable
Active Member
- Messages
- 26
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Age 30, weight 70kg (was 80), my daily diet has been a lot healthier since being diagnosed but it's not a crash diet or anything, been lefting weights 3-4x a week to try and bulk back up. I was supposed to be on 10 units Lantus and 3x4 units of NovoRapid, instead I was told to take 24 units Lantus and 3x6 units NovoRapid. Nobody told me I could alter the NovoRapid dose myself until last Wednesday, I've now taken it upon myself to alter the Lantus too. All I took yesterday was 9 units of that and no NovoRapid at all, was a rest day from lifting and over 7 readings the average was 7.9mmol/l. As I was training this afternoon (only for 40 minutes) I took 6 units of the Lantus at 6pm and I've just recovered from another mild hypo. Getting tired of them already and I'm about ready to reverse most of the lifestyle changes I've made, perhaps that will stop it from happening.Hello @handicapable it depends what you call a large dose and in comparison to what ? Your team should take into account your build/weight and based on your daily diet. Did they start you on a basal bolus regime ? Also did they advise you to contact them if you were suffering hypos, as this is an obvious sign your insulin doses would need adjusting and as you are newly diagnosed too they would want to monitor you carefully.
The first two weeks I was having to eat my breakfast, lunch, dinner and then a bigger meal 2 hours later. It sounds a lot better than it is...Age 30, weight 70kg (was 80), my daily diet has been a lot healthier since being diagnosed but it's not a crash diet or anything, been lefting weights 3-4x a week to try and bulk back up. I was supposed to be on 10 units Lantus and 3x4 units of NovoRapid, instead I was told to take 24 units Lantus and 3x6 units NovoRapid. Nobody told me I could alter the NovoRapid dose myself until last Wednesday, I've now taken it upon myself to alter the Lantus too. All I took yesterday was 9 units of that and no NovoRapid at all, was a rest day from lifting and over 7 readings the average was 7.9mmol/l. As I was training this afternoon (only for 40 minutes) I took 6 units of the Lantus at 6pm and I've just recovered from another mild hypo. Getting tired of them already and I'm about ready to reverse most of the lifestyle changes I've made, perhaps that will stop it from happening.
I have had that hypo feeling before the figures reach the oft-quoted expected number.(say 3.6 mmol/l) For me that indicates both that I am hypo aware and that my numbers are falling fast. Whereas a very gradual decline in my bsl might reach 3.5 mmol/l before I can physically detect the 'low'.Yeah you're right about burying the hatchet, it's a new day and I'm over it already. As for insulin sensitivity and dose requirements I figured that one out for myself but it seems that when my basal dose peeks I have a hypo, even if I've recently eaten.
I'm only 3 weeks in and so I still start getting the symptoms when I drop below around 6 mmol/l, I've also just seen a nurse at my local GP's to take my bloods and requested a c-peptide test because I'm fairly certain it's T1 (LADA) and the NICE guidelines were changed in 2015 telling A&E staff not to do these tests on people hospitalised with DKA.
The nurse has made me an appointment with my GP on Thursday to try and get this done because apparently they're the only people with the authorization to make such a decision due to funding.
When things like hypo's happen and it's because of somebody else's mistake I become cynical and need somewhere to vent my frustration, as I had already defaced the booklet I was given regarding hypo's this seemed like the place to do it.
A little childish but occasionally it needs to be done.
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