NowClosed11
Well-Known Member
Ok daft as it may seem - but what where you signals that u have entered the hoonymoon phase ?!
Honeymoon phase is usually already happening when you are diagnosed. Its different for everyone, and some don't have one at all.
Typically its just that your body is still producing some varying amounts of insulin. I would say you are in honeymoon if your carb ratios are very high, like 1 unit of insulin for 25g of carbs.. Its also erratic, so one week you are 1:25, the next week you are 1:15, and then back to 1:25.
Some theories say that if you are on your honeymoon you should be eating as low carb as possible, and doing everything you can to keep your sugars below 7.8mmol/L as high levels are toxic to beta cells and will shorten your honeymoon.
I have heard people being in honeymoon for years. Mine lasted just about a year I would say. Essentially if you are in Honeymoon, do everything you can to keep it! lol
Now I don't feel hypos .....till in 2s
errrrr...ok will put hands up ......i told the D team to ...to....go forth and multiply by them self, after our last meeting!!Oh boy - that must be fun !! Bit like fumbling around in the dark.. hopefully once you report your next to nothing hypo awareness they will get you into a team asap - one thing i've learned with this condition is it helps to shout loudly when you need something, can't wait around for someone to call you, you have to be assertive and scream !!
had been to go on that ...twice and both canx...have to wait up to 6 months for next one..... and the rest i don't really get what you saying ...new at this.....i take inslatard twice day 7units morning and night and nova rapid when i eat ... 5 times a day with Antibiotics at mo ....so can only have 170 carbs but have to break that in to 5 times a day at mo ....... and i thnkt he Antibio' are making me less able to feel it ... but could of been form the honey moon that i now dont feel them as well.I would suggest waiting for the dafne course.
An idea would be to do a basal test. I was told to keep 5 hours clear between eating and bolusing.
If you are going low without a bolus for eating... This would indicate that your basal insulin is too much.
well all i can say to that ...is you don't know the full story nor that full facts -and apologies where done....... so like the group says try not to judge eh...in regards to basal - and bolus still no idea what you mean by that as not a term used with me nor when told i was T1Basal testing is when you go without food or any bolus.
Basics are of basal testing:
1) you need to get up in morning with levels between 5-8.0 bg.
2) give your normal basal insulin and then not eat for 5 hours and test yourself every hour to see what happens to your blood levels.
If you need to basal test for an afternoon... You would get up.do normal basal. Eat and bolus for breakfast but then nothing else for 10 hours. That would test your bolus ratio.. For those 5 hours initally for your breakfast and then all your food and bolus should be then clear for your 5 hours of basal testing where you would eat and bolus for having no food.
You must stop testing if you go low. You can still basal test up to a level of 10.0... At 10.0 you should give a correction dose of bolus and wait 5 clear hours to see how that correction dose pans out....
It. Is important that you test yoyrself every hour whilst basal testing.
You need to go online and register and complete the bdec course.
To be honest bad attitude towards healthcare persons is not acceptable...it would not be the DSN fault that your dafne course was cancelled twice or that it is now another 6 months to wait.
AAHHHHHHH@MrBloominggrumpy Basal insulin is also known as background insulin. If you're on multiple daily injections, it'll be your long acting insulin. Bolus insulin is the one you take before meals - the fast acting one that's just to cover what you eat.
Basal testing is a way to test if your background ie long acting insulin is at the right dose.