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Newly Diagnosed Type 3C

Messages
2
Type of diabetes
Type 3c
Treatment type
Insulin
Hi everyone,
Recently had my pancreas, gall bladder and spleen removed which, whilst saving my life, has given me the gift of Type 3C diabetes. Finding it all very daunting and scary so I have joined every forum going to get as a much help and information as I can. Particularly interested in speaking to others with Type 3C as I’m beginning to see that we are a small and misunderstood group. Any hints or tips will be gratefully received.
 
Hi @Prime Monkfish , welcome to the forum.
I'm only a boring old late onset T1, so I'll leave the specifics on T3C to the T3C people out here.

The main similarity between T1 and T3C is not producing (enough) insulin. (You don't produce any because you don't have a pancreas, but many T3C's do still produce some insulin because their pancreas was damaged for other reasons than a total pancreas removal.)
This means that for learning about insulin adjustments, which you asked about in your other post, any T1 information is completely relevant for you, and there is lots more to find on T1 than on T3C.

From your other post:
Levemir is the shortest acting insulin as far as long acting insulins go, and it's very common to need split doses like you are taking.
You're correct, finding the correct basal dose is trial and error. In a nutshell: You start out with a rather random and relatively low dose in case you turn out very sensitive to insulin, don't want a bad hypo right away. Then you and your diabetes nurse review your numbers and adjust doses based on your daily readings. At first, this is usually as per instruction from your DN, after a while you'll become more confident tweaking your own doses.
The same goes for your NovoRapid, before and after meal numbers tell you something about your dose being right for a particular meal.
Have you started counting carbs yet to be able to adjust your insulin to what you eat?

As for the Libre, the first 24 hours aren't as reliable for many, and after that they may still not match fingerpricks perfectly.
How much higher are we talking? If it's way out, call Abbott and they will replace a faulty sensor.
While the Libre may not be as accurate as a fingerprick, it is amazing for seeing trends to help adjust your doses, and it's invaluable for warning you you are rising or dropping before actually going very high or low.

Keep asking questions, the more you know, the quicker you'll get the hang of this!
 
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