Yes, inadequate insulin can impair performance. When I was younger I used ti inject and eat before exercise so I didn't run out of energy. The alternative is to become fat adapted. Takes some getting-used-to but that way we don't need insulin to fuel exercise. I now eat ketogenically and I don't eat before exercise.
I'm very interested in your ketogenic meal control. I tried the Atkins diet about 25 years ago but didn't have the knowledge or the internet to find out how to manage my diabetes and no doctorwas interested in helping me. I remember my need for insulin increasing which, at the time, I thought was very odd.Yes, inadequate insulin can impair performance. When I was younger I used ti inject and eat before exercise so I didn't run out of energy. The alternative is to become fat adapted. Takes some getting-used-to but that way we don't need insulin to fuel exercise. I now eat ketogenically and I don't eat before exercise.
I find that having a roll of fruit pastilles in my bag helps. If working or walking I find every 2 miles or about 20 mins 2 pastilles worksHi all, I keep hypoing after my daily 40 minute dog walk! This is the only execersize I am currently doing (other than housework) as I was only diagnosed a few week ago and just getting used to my body and insulin.
Any tips??
I cleaned the back garden yesterday and had a hypo!! I was 8 when I started
Circus that's basically my experience, any kind of serious exercise just makes you feel awful after a few minutes. It is really annoying to realise that it isn't even diabetes that is causing this, exactly the opposite, it's the TREATMENT for the diabetes which is causing this, not that we have any choice.
I usually take 0.5 to 1 unit with breakfast because I am trying to eat low (well no) carb and I have to admit some sort of carb content for the peppers and onions in a vegetable omelette or whatever it is. Probably half a unit is still too much but I would rather be low than high given the long term risks. Before running I have tried eating apples (14g each) and so on but either it isn't enough or it isn't fast enough. Sometimes if I am below 6 before bed I will eat a couple of crackers (5.3g each) and they go in far faster but I would be terrified of trying to do that as a way to fuel running because you'd end up at some scary number before you knew it.
It just doesn't seem like there's any way to have enough fuel on board to actually do a half hour run, without the drugs ruining it. That's probably about what I used to do, half an hour each way. The only backup plan I have is to just keep sipping glucose drinks as I go but that seems very easy to get wrong and end up damaging yourself. At the end of the day it feels like there are a lot of things you can in theory do with diabetes, you can eat big slices of chocolate cake and meals with chapatis and white rice and you can go running. While I wouldn't want to speak for anyone else, for me the risks of doing these things outweigh the reward. And I do not say that lightly.
I never called myself a runner when I could just run whenever I wanted, I was just someone who went running, however I have been saying "I was a runner" quite a bit. Totally a case of not realising what you have until it is gone. It wasn't really about fitness (though I was fit), it was about head space and getting some time to think. I used to do it to process ideas like "should I make this big financial commitment" or "should I move into that flat" or "I have type 1 diabetes and that is horrifying." So I basically can't do the thing that I usually would do in order to deal with the problem and I didn't really know I was using it like that.
I have tried to go running, I have not been able to do it without feeling really bad. Right now as I sit here I feel like I am just getting over a bout of flu as I have for weeks, and if I run I can only go at half speed and one quarter distance and the feeling gets worse until I get the shakes and have to stop.
If I can only run if I do a bunch of preparation and mental arithmetic and risk feeling bad, then I will just be thinking about those things all the time and it will defeat the purpose of doing it. Looking back I realise that the purpose of running was to be free of day to day cares and spend some time going over things in my head, and if I can't do that then frankly it is totally pointless.
To end on something useful if not positive, anyone who suspects they have this disease needs to see a doctor absolutely immediately because part of my problem is ketoacidosis which has completely torn up any level of fitness I had. Do not delay, I could have had it for WAY less time and been WAY less damaged by it.
Hi all, I keep hypoing after my daily 40 minute dog walk! This is the only execersize I am currently doing (other than housework) as I was only diagnosed a few week ago and just getting used to my body and insulin.
Any tips??
I cleaned the back garden yesterday and had a hypo!! I was 8 when I started
A number of members have posted recently about sport and exercise and ways to manage blood glucose levels before/during/after the event, and as someone who rides a bike, swims regularly and since 2 months ago has started running twice a week (with the help of a libre sensor), i'd be keen to hear from others about what exercise you do, what achievements you've had, what tips you have for exercise/sport and just a general chat about how you manage it.
Personally I do it to stay well and fit as well as to challenge my t1 status and to prove that nothing can stop me from living a 'normal life, and each time I feel like slowing down or stopping I grit my teeth and keep going..
A number of members have posted recently about sport and exercise and ways to manage blood glucose levels before/during/after the event, and as someone who rides a bike, swims regularly and since 2 months ago has started running twice a week (with the help of a libre sensor), i'd be keen to hear from others about what exercise you do, what achievements you've had, what tips you have for exercise/sport and just a general chat about how you manage it.
Personally I do it to stay well and fit as well as to challenge my t1 status and to prove that nothing can stop me from living a 'normal life, and each time I feel like slowing down or stopping I grit my teeth and keep going..
@Juicyj & @NicoleC1971
Hi girls, I am planning to go to a yoga class before teatime tonight. Do either of you have general experience of whether this type of exercise drastically lowers BG. For an active workout I tend to lower basal by 40%
Thanks
Thanks Juicy J appreciate your help. Will give it a go!My tip is to have around 15-20g of carb with no bolus and try starting the class with an aim to have your BG levels higher than 8/9 mmol/l, I would also drop your basal further too and an hour beforehand to ensure you have less bolus in your system. I prefer to run high for yoga as I find I also drain glucose really quickly when doing this.
Hi and I hope you enjoy it.@Juicyj & @NicoleC1971
Hi girls, I am planning to go to a yoga class before teatime tonight. Do either of you have general experience of whether this type of exercise drastically lowers BG. For an active workout I tend to lower basal by 40%
Thanks
Thanks for your help Nicole.Hi and I hope you enjoy it.
Depends on the yoga. For example I do a class which is 'hot' thus making my insulin work faster but typically I would not need to lower as much as I would for Group Cycle. Yoga can be challenging but is bodyweight and static typically so may even push your blood sugars in the other way.
Bottom line is to be conservative until you know how you will respond!
Enjoy your class!
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