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Type 1 Diabetes
parents of children with type 1
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<blockquote data-quote="suzi" data-source="post: 85583" data-attributes="member: 11767"><p>Hi Emma, Hi Charlie</p><p>Andrews hypo awareness differs, especially if he's been running about so much that he's dropped quickly, luckily i only have to look at him to tell, he always goes deathly white, glazed eyes and would argue a black crow white :lol: He's only had one major hypo where he's registered below 1 and it took a considerable amount of lucozade and toast plus an hours nap to get him back to normal, he was really drained, thankfully it happpened at home. </p><p>He did suffer one at school, but he wasted the test strips (all 10 of them) he couldn't function properly and the school called an ambulance, by which time after he'd thrown most of the lucozade round his teacher and stripped to his pants, his blood sugar had raised to 7 but he was still confused. We can laugh about it now, but i make sure we always have spares of everything at school now, plus in the car, at his Grannies and if you look through all my handbags you'll always find lucozade tabs lurking in the pockets. </p><p> Charlie, i hope Emma's arm is healing nicely, did they say if it would take longer than normal? just wondered, as i always find Andrews cuts take forever to heal, and wondered if breaks/fractures where the same.</p><p>Best wishes to you all,</p><p>Suzi x</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="suzi, post: 85583, member: 11767"] Hi Emma, Hi Charlie Andrews hypo awareness differs, especially if he's been running about so much that he's dropped quickly, luckily i only have to look at him to tell, he always goes deathly white, glazed eyes and would argue a black crow white :lol: He's only had one major hypo where he's registered below 1 and it took a considerable amount of lucozade and toast plus an hours nap to get him back to normal, he was really drained, thankfully it happpened at home. He did suffer one at school, but he wasted the test strips (all 10 of them) he couldn't function properly and the school called an ambulance, by which time after he'd thrown most of the lucozade round his teacher and stripped to his pants, his blood sugar had raised to 7 but he was still confused. We can laugh about it now, but i make sure we always have spares of everything at school now, plus in the car, at his Grannies and if you look through all my handbags you'll always find lucozade tabs lurking in the pockets. Charlie, i hope Emma's arm is healing nicely, did they say if it would take longer than normal? just wondered, as i always find Andrews cuts take forever to heal, and wondered if breaks/fractures where the same. Best wishes to you all, Suzi x [/QUOTE]
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