Wow, that is interesting - my endocrinologist at my last appointment noted my blood sodium was borderline low and told me to keep an eye out for Addison's symptoms. My insulin needs do vary day to day but I've put it down to my highly variable diet, exercise, stress lifestyle...This is 2023 --- Johnny may have found the real cause by now ---- hope his endocrinologist caught up with the times., I have the same problem and have found out that I have Addison's disease. The adrenal glands have been assaulted by the immune system, the same one that caused my diabetes---- more than half the people with Addisons have also diabetes 1.... my treatment is about to begin --- drugs that need to be adjusted and taken forever after, just like insulin.... still, glad that some of the symptoms will be gone... the constant exhaustion, the dizziness, the unearned tan on my legs (that comes and goes...
That is how life is for a type 1 , that is if you want to live a reasonably normal life !Wow, that is interesting - my endocrinologist at my last appointment noted my blood sodium was borderline low and told me to keep an eye out for Addison's symptoms. My insulin needs do vary day to day but I've put it down to my highly variable diet, exercise, stress lifestyle...
The EXTOD conference does a good job of introducing people to the subject, I'd recommend it for that, and for those who already know their way around exercise for the opportunity to chat with other T1 diabetics who exercise to see what they strategies are: https://abcd.care/events/extod-conference-adults-type-1-diabetesOne thing that the diabetes educators don't do well is explain how exercise - or more accurately energy-burning activity - does to BG and how this works with insulin. I am an engineer so look at energy balance in a different way. So all energy expended through activity or heat-loss must be paid for by a balancing input of energy.
Are you Type 1? If so, how long have you been diagnosed. I certainly agree with your points about energy in/out (I'm also an engineer) and that exercise reduces insulin needs, however, I'd be very surprised if someone could live without any insulin (i.e. if someone is not producing any insulin at all).So it is not unreasonable to be able to run on zero insulin when active.
It's not so much the basal as the lack of bolus afaiu - there is a concentration effect: high insulin concentrations prevent lipolysis (i.e. breakdown of fat) and increase the storage of triglycerides, so lower levels of (or no) insulin allow fat to be used by the body as energy.My belief (although I can't find written evidence for this) is that long-acting insulin does more for the slow release of energy by fats than it does for carbs, which tend to be short-acting.
Insulin does things other than controlling blood glucose levels - surviving without it is not practical. We use the chemical bond energy rather than converting mass to energy - atoms in and atoms out (actually molecules in and molecules out) we don't convert atoms (mass) into heat. A simple energy balance model is not accurate - we are not bomb calorimetersOne thing that the diabetes educators don't do well is explain how exercise - or more accurately energy-burning activity - does to BG and how this works with insulin. I am an engineer so look at energy balance in a different way. So all energy expended through activity or heat-loss must be paid for by a balancing input of energy.
Basically, any ingested carbs end up as glucose in the blood and there are two routes for glucose to get out. One is being metabolised by insulin to produce glucagon (stored energy) and the other is to be directly 'burned' by exercise. Hence if the energy in is less than that burned, plus that converted by insulin, then you have a problem. So a job where you are active all day, and probably losing body heat too is continuously taking fuel out of the tank. Long-acting insulin does the same thing so there is a constant drain that has to be topped up. So it is not unreasonable to be able to run on zero insulin when active. I do this when out on in the hills walking and climbing.
It doesn't explain however why you would progressively need less insulin, but I have found that I get phases of being super-sensitive to insulin and phases of needing lots (or just being super un-stable). Usually a good day out on the hill sorts that!
Another thing to bear in mind is that fat also gives energy, and the route to storage is via BG, albeit that the conversion process is more involved and takes longer. My belief (although I can't find written evidence for this) is that long-acting insulin does more for the slow release of energy by fats than it does for carbs, which tend to be short-acting.
Sorry for the burbling! Perhaps its all nonsense!
There's a whole section about this in the EXTOD talks and handbook.Physical activity increases insulin sensitivity. Some people find short term exercise reduces blood glucose others find it increases blood glucose concentrations - simple models I have encountered do not fully explain these effects.
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