How is one diagnosed as Type 1.5 and what are the differences from Type 2?Hi everyone, I am back with more questions, thanks for your support.
I am LADA 1.5 and been taking Levemir once a day at 10.30PM
I started on it 6 months ago when my diagnosis was switched from T2 to T1.5
I started on 2 units, then went to 4 and now on 6 but close monitoring of my BS over last 3 weeks is showing that my control is poor even though I am eating properly and exercising. I usually wake up with an 8, sometimes will spike at 10 2hrs after eating but then at other times will see 5's, 6,'s 7's - there is no pattern I can determine by analysing my diet/BS scores
I have 2 questions: 1, the markers on my pens go all the way up to 60 and my diabetic nurse is always asking me to try 1-2 more units until I get things under control. Is this what others were advised? 2, at what point have people been told to switch to meal time insulin and what are the deciding factors?
I can see that for last couple of months that I have been kidding myself that the great BS scores I get when I do loads of exercise are reflective of good control when in fact this may not be the case.
thanks for listening
http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/thr...ver-genetic-features-of-lada-diabetes.120410/How is one diagnosed as Type 1.5 and what are the differences from Type 2?
Thanks for sharing this. Sounds like your control is super tight - congratulationsHi Sololite,
I see myself as a T1, but I still have create some of my own insulin which was confirmed by a C-peptide test. That was three years ago now though. Anyway, some might consider me a 1.5 or LADA as I still create some insulin, but not enough to maintain what is considered normal blood sugar levels.
Anyway to your questions, I take 4 units of Levimir in total and I split this into two injections of 2 units. One before bed, normally around 11pm and one injection upon rising normally around 7am. This seems to work well for me, but of course our individual insulin needs are very different. The key thing I believe with the basal insulin dosage is whether or not the dosage you take keeps your BS levels stable through the night. With my current dosage, my variance between my last reading at night (before bed) and upon rising is usually within 0-0.5 mmol/l , I am happy with that.
Of course if I eat late or do exercise late in the evening, this is also going to affect by blood sugar levels overnight.
Thanks for sharing this. There is certainly huge variation in what we are all taking isn't there. I switched from top of leg to my stomach as I didn't seem to have enough flesh there. I too have the slim thing. I don't get lumps just an occasional bruise and once scarily a bit of blood but maybe I just hit something like a small vessel.I'm taking 44 units at 2030 each night and I am also taking novorapid before each meal and I wait for 30 minutes after I take it to have something to eat and when I place it in my thigh I get a slight lump for a hour or so which is the insulin and when I check the lump it has gone and it is not a insulin on insulin lump it's the injected insulin and I have had the lumps of over use of the same place before and I will try not to use the same spot for a few days so that it can heal and I will use it again after that and I am always trying to sort out the best places to inject each night as I don't have much fat to inject in to as I lost all my weight over a few years and I am slim and only have the option of my stomach and leg's
Thanks for sharing this. Sounds like your control is super tight - congratulations
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