Hi, I was diagnosed with type 1 this week, so still reeling from the shock and trying to understand everything. I just got my hba1c results back and it's 145. So apparently that's really high and it's going to take a while to bring that down. My BG was 29 on Monday, now it's hovering around the teens. Am I at high risk while my hba1c is so high? Do I need to do or not do anything to try and mitigate those risks? I have an identical twin. Would it be possible to have a blood transfusion to try to bring down my hba1c quicker? Would that help reduce some risk? I should be hooked up with community DB nurse from Monday, but wanted to ask some questions before then. Thanks in advance. Jim
Hi
@NoopNoop and welcome to the DCUK forums.
Your biggest risk with undiagnosed T1 and a very high blood sugar is diabetic ketoacidosis, which is caused by lack of insulin in your body leading to high blood sugar and high ketone levels in your blood
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/diabetic-ketoacidosis/
As your blood sugar has started to come down then I assume you have already started insulin and therefore that risk is mitigated.
Other problems to do with high blood sugars are long term and not something to worry about at this stage. (Disclaimer, I'm not a doctor just a long term T1 diabetic).
Your team may want to bring your levels down slowly because too fast a drop can cause short term complications. (Plus insulin doses very drastically between different people and have to be increased slowly because too much insulin can lead to hypoglycemia.)
My advice would be to try not to panic. The treatment for T1 diabetes has improved drastically over the years and there is no reason why you can't live a long and healthy life. But it takes time to learn how to manage it. The phrase, diabetes is a marathon not s sprint comes to mind.
I'm sure you will have many many questions. Please feel free to post here for support and advice.
Once more, welcome.
ps and yes unfortunately
@Zhnyaka is right , your identical twin is at risk of developing T1 (but only about 6% I believe
https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/91/5/1654/2874215 it would be a
lot higher if you had developed T1 when younger.)