Jude said:
I havent been prescribed any needles - I already have 5mm which have been using with the Lantus - are they the right ones do you know?
Hi Jude,
I don't carry a great deal of fat but nearly all of what I have is round my midriff :roll: I personally prefer the 8mm x 31g Microfine needles, but I do occasionally give my stomach a rest and inject in a thigh. As my thighs are pretty lean I use a 5mm needle there. I'm not an insulin expert but I believe that it is injected subcutaneously, the same as Byetta. If you have found the 5mm needles are ok for your lantus then they should also be ok for Byetta.
You have already given me advice about the byetta but I would you be kind enough to just list the main points to help me and any foods to avoid or keep minimal.
I know you have been researching so you will already be aware that the most common side-effect is nausea. Sometimes this can be just a nauseous feeling but sometimes the full works. The best way to avoid this is
- eat as soon as possible after the injection
- avoid highly spiced food
- avoid greasy food
- if you feel nauseous, eat or drink something containing ginger - it seems to calm the nausea (a ginger biscuit or very diluted ginger cordial or Bottlegreen's ginger & lemongrass cordial).
This is only until you are past the nausea phase - can be anything from 3 days to 3 weeks. Once you are over the nausea stage then you can eat pretty much anything that you could before, providing of course that it doesn't damage your BS control. I know you are looking at a diet restriction and this will certainly help the Byetta to give you great control, but I wouldn't try any diet changes until you are fully acclimatised to Byetta - if anything goes wrong you wouldn't know whether the Byetta or the change was the cause.
If you are taking any other oral meds then it is best to take them at least an hour before the Byetta because Byetta slows down the passage of food in the stomach and this slows absorbtion (sometimes to the point where it renders the other med completely ineffective). This doesn't affect metformin, which seems to work just as well when absorbtion is slowed down .
When you get your first Byetta pen have a good read of the information leaflet that comes in the pack. It is well written and informative.
Oh, and make sure that they start you on the 5mcg dose! I have come across a few people who have been started on the 10mcg dose (contrary to the manufacturers warnings) by GPs (and in one case a consultant) who think they know better and in every case the patient was so violently ill they had to be hospitalised.
I'm not sure whether they intend to switch you from insulin to Byetta or to use the two in tandem. If you are saying on Lantus for the present then it will need to be reduced by up to a half, otherwise you will hypo. Personally I think it is better to wean a Byetta patient off insulingradually, rather than just drop it completely.
I can't think of anything else that you need to know up front, but if you think of any questions please fire away. Keep us informed on how you get on, and good luck.