AndyWatt
Member
- Messages
- 13
- Location
- East Lothian , Scotland
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Hearts
Thanks Spiker, i have had no Hypo awareness for a couple of years now, my wife even finds it quite hard to tell when I'm having a hypo, she used to appear with dextro tabs or glucogel and my blood machine but now she's as surprised as me when we sit down to eat and my blood sugars are anything between 1.1 and 2.6, which is quite a lot. When they are as low as that, I feel fine.Well they do in general lead to fewer hypos. That's from statistical evidence, but I don't specifically know why they give that benefit, and whether it would still apply with no hypo awareness.
If you have no hypo awareness you might be eligible for a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) which are otherwise rarely funded by the NHS.
Has your loss of hypo awareness proved to be not reversible? Often it is reversible if you can avoid hypos for a while. That is something else the pump can help with. It can also reduce hypos caused by the uneven action of basal insulin, because a pump can shape the basal dose delivery much more accurately and finely to what your body actually needs.
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Thanks Flowerpot, i would quite like to try the pump. My Diabetic team have assured me that the Islet Cell transplant will definitely give me back my hypo awareness but its the thought of taking anti rejection tablets for the rest of my life as well as still take insulin and check my blood sugars.Hi
I started to use a pump 12 years ago after beginning to lose hypo awareness. I tried all the usual tactics of keeping my blood sugar higher but to no avail, I kept going unconscious without warning and my life was quite terrifying. Using a pump didn't give me back any hypo awareness but it vastly improved my control, the obvious benefits are receiving only minute amounts of insulin every few minutes rather than injecting 4 or 5 reservoirs of insulin per day through MDI. Night times became safer as I wasn't injecting any long acting insulin and the pump can deliver tiny basal doses which is what I need to avoid night hypos.
I started going down the islet cell transplant route because despite infinitely better control with my pump I still had no hypo awareness. I was very fortunate at this point to start to use CGM continuous glucose monitoring which has proved invaluable and saved my life.
A pump is a fantastic way to get much better control over blood glucose due to the choice of modes and rates you can set to deliver insulin. Using a pump may or may not help you regain hypo awareness, in my case it didn't but I would definitely give a pump a try as it has helped me massively.
I wish you well whichever route you decide to follow.
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