HannahL's_mum
Newbie
Hello everyone.
My 5 yr old daughter was diagnosed with type 1 in August 2010. She copes quite well, the only thing she really hates is having her levemir in her bottom. She likes to be able to see and of course it is a struggle to see there. Other than that she has surpried me how well she copes.
For a few months the doctors kept us on a nominal dose, to keep her sugar's in reasonable control to let us get used to things and to learn to carb count.
I must admit when we started adjusted the insulin ourselves I would cheat by not counting sugar on her weetabix and little things like that as I was scared of her going hypo, but in Dec the doctors got rather strict and I am too honest to lie to them so I am doing what I am told at the moment.
However, we are living in hypo land at the moment. They increased her insulin/carb ratio in Dec and this-coupled with me now being honest with the meter (we have an expert meter which calcs the insulin for you) she is having hypo's most days - probably 5 days a week - and its never just one, sometimes as many as 3 in a day.
Our nurse in visiting in a couple of days and we are back in clinic next month so hopefully things will be sorted soon.
Has anyone got any tips on treating hypo's? Todays hypo lasted almost 2 hours. Having 1 glucose tablet at a time didn't bring her back up (the lowest reading was 3.2 so it was hardly a bad hypo), but the hypo happened only 1 hour after dinner because we put the kinect on, so by the looks of it the combination of exercise and perhaps her dinner carbs hadn't kicked in caused it to happen, because a couple of hours after I sorted the hypo she was at 19 so I guess the dinner carbs and the carbs I had given during hypo treatment all acted together later on.
Also, can anyone advise me what are slow acting carbs and fast acting carbs? Can anyone recommend a good book?
Thank you all for reading.
x
My 5 yr old daughter was diagnosed with type 1 in August 2010. She copes quite well, the only thing she really hates is having her levemir in her bottom. She likes to be able to see and of course it is a struggle to see there. Other than that she has surpried me how well she copes.
For a few months the doctors kept us on a nominal dose, to keep her sugar's in reasonable control to let us get used to things and to learn to carb count.
I must admit when we started adjusted the insulin ourselves I would cheat by not counting sugar on her weetabix and little things like that as I was scared of her going hypo, but in Dec the doctors got rather strict and I am too honest to lie to them so I am doing what I am told at the moment.
However, we are living in hypo land at the moment. They increased her insulin/carb ratio in Dec and this-coupled with me now being honest with the meter (we have an expert meter which calcs the insulin for you) she is having hypo's most days - probably 5 days a week - and its never just one, sometimes as many as 3 in a day.
Our nurse in visiting in a couple of days and we are back in clinic next month so hopefully things will be sorted soon.
Has anyone got any tips on treating hypo's? Todays hypo lasted almost 2 hours. Having 1 glucose tablet at a time didn't bring her back up (the lowest reading was 3.2 so it was hardly a bad hypo), but the hypo happened only 1 hour after dinner because we put the kinect on, so by the looks of it the combination of exercise and perhaps her dinner carbs hadn't kicked in caused it to happen, because a couple of hours after I sorted the hypo she was at 19 so I guess the dinner carbs and the carbs I had given during hypo treatment all acted together later on.
Also, can anyone advise me what are slow acting carbs and fast acting carbs? Can anyone recommend a good book?
Thank you all for reading.
x