kellie lees
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 67
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
@kellie lees , maybe best that you contact his diabetes clinic or gp practice and ask for advice, it's only 5.30pm so you should catch one or the other.
Both are shut thank you
As a result I have a Glucagen Pen - that allows you to introduce sugar directly in to your body bypassing that affected digestive system.
Usually, the stress illness causes to your body results in a need for more sugar so, usually, when I am ill, my BG rises. The only exception to this is vomiting or diah... (I won't attempt to spell it).
Whilst I cannot advise your husband, if I was ill but not experiencing either of these, I would definitely continue to take my basal insulin.
Thank you. My husband does have severe diarrhoea at the moment which is why I'm wondering about the long lasting?!
No it doesn't. A Glucagen hypostop kit has a pen that lets you mix up glucagon to inject. Injecting glucagon isn't injecting sugar directly into your body. Glucagon is a hormone that tells your liver to release glucose. So glucagon doesn't work to rescue you from hypos if you're drunk, if you've got liver problems, if you've already exhausted your liver's glucose stores with previous hypos/recent use of glucagon/endurance exercise. It's good to be aware of what it is so you can be aware if it's limitations. And the flood of hormones can also make you feel pretty ropey after using glucagon. .
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