No, because I feel the same way. I just hope we both feel that way in 10 years.Is it a push to say that T1D was a blessing in disguise for me?
I'm mentally preparing myself for when it does become difficult to manage my diabetes.
Hi Azure, nice to meet you and thank you for the thoughtful reply.Edited to add that I eat approx 180g carbs a day and I have good control.
Hi Michael, welcome to the forum.
As others above have suggested, what you have mastered so far is the 'easy mode'.
In my experience the difference between producing some of your own insulin and none is not just a matter of quantity.
Injected insulin is crude, imprecise, unpredictable and most of all slow to start and stop compared to your natural endogenous insulin. My understanding is that during the honeymoon period your pancreas still produces significant quantities of insulin, reacting as rapidly and automatically to changes as it should, but it just can't quite output enough in total. Helping it out with a daily basal could be the only reinforcement it needs at first, and allows it to keep taking care of the really tricky fine and rapid adjustments.
Over time though it will gradually change from being like an automatic self-driving car with a slight tendency to drift left, to one where you have to steer along the twisty road completely manually
and you can only see the road a few metres behind you, not where you actually are now
and sometimes turning the wheel by ten degrees will turn the car by eleven degrees, but sometimes by six
and when you turn the wheel it takes half an hour to start changing direction and four hours to stop changing
and you can't even rely on those delays being consistent...
I think my own honeymoon period took several years to fully fade out. I have much more experience now, but managing it is still a lot harder than it was in those early months.
It seems Bernstein and others believe that the honeymoon period can be prolonged by keeping insulin requirements low through low carbs (though you'll find that you can sometimes get surprising spikes from your liver and from protein, even without carbs).
I hadn't heard of this back when I was diagnosed, but if that is the case then I'd say it's well worth working hard to keep it going as long as possible.
Hi Azure, nice to meet you and thank you for the thoughtful reply.
I'd like to add that whilst in a state of ketosis (adapting the body to running on ketones instead of glucose) means that extreme glucose fluctuations are rare, even shown in those post-honeymoon (got to love these terms they come up with right!)
Simply put, consuming glucose in food raises blood glucose. Low glucose consumption (sub 50g per day) will fail to spike blood glucose above base range (base range being glucose produced from gluconeogenesis in the liver, the process of producing glucose from protein).
Regardless of being in the honeymoon or not, if there is low consumption of carbohydrates then there is no need for the pancreas to produce increased levels endogenous insulin as there is nothing to counteract, and little need for high levels of exogenous insulin for the same reason.
or
maybe I'm just being naïve!
I don't want to take anything away from you and maybe things won't get more difficult. Either way, I know it's hard work and your success shouldn't be discounted.Firstly, I'm curious as to why you think that there is likely to be an impending demise in our diabetes control over time? I am aware of the so-called "Honeymoon period", yet I fail to see how this coming to an end would cause any detrimental health defects, given that you accommodate by increasing your insulin doses slightly. (This is in the scenario that I am eating a ketogenic diet (<50g of carbs/day like you mentioned).
Whilst you are in the honeymoon, yes this is all valid, however, a word of caution. Eggs. As your endogenous insulin levels drop, protein starts to have much more of an effect than just background gluconeogenesis. One of the things your endogenous insulin does is help to suppress the action of glucagon on your liver (as it is taken up directly by the liver), reducing both the liver dump effect and also enhanced gluconeogenesis. Below a certain insulin threshold, the glucagon that your body releases in response to certain food types needs to be countered with exogenous insulin, to a surprisingly high level. The biggest issue being that currently, almost no exogenous insulin makes it to the Liver, unlike endogenous insulin, where it all does!Hi Azure, nice to meet you and thank you for the thoughtful reply.
I'd like to add that whilst in a state of ketosis (adapting the body to running on ketones instead of glucose) means that extreme glucose fluctuations are rare, even shown in those post-honeymoon (got to love these terms they come up with right!)
Simply put, consuming glucose in food raises blood glucose. Low glucose consumption (sub 50g per day) will fail to spike blood glucose above base range (base range being glucose produced from gluconeogenesis in the liver, the process of producing glucose from protein).
Regardless of being in the honeymoon or not, if there is low consumption of carbohydrates then there is no need for the pancreas to produce increased levels endogenous insulin as there is nothing to counteract, and little need for high levels of exogenous insulin for the same reason.
or
maybe I'm just being naïve!
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