EllsKBells
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 362
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
You need to be referred to a clinic then. Maybe try phoning 111 for now to get help? (I assume you're in the UK).I don’t have a DSN to contact, and my GP is...an idiot who is “scared” of insulin.
Hi
The last three or four days, in the late afternoon my blood sugar has been shooting up into the mid to high 30s, and refusing to come down again. For example, at 8.30 this evening it was 31.9. 6 hours and 34 units of insulin later ...29.9. I suppose I should be grateful it’s actually gone below 30. The mystery continued because it’s been fine on waking (6.4 today, 6.5 yesterday). I’ve changed both insulin cartridges, and needles. Neither has helped. On the urine strips, ketones are reading as ‘faible ‘ (?sp). Unsurprisingly, I feel like death.
Any advice on what to do next? I don’t have a DSN to contact, and my GP is...an idiot who is “scared” of insulin. It’s getting difficult to do my job, I can’t sleep because of constant toilet visits, and I’m scared to eat.
Help!
@EllsKBells I didn't realise I had lipohypertrophy because I too rotated my sites regularly and had a lot of sites to rotate. However, after 30+ years one area has simply had enough. Nevertheless, that didn't result in the kind of sudden and extreme rise you describe, though as we're all different, that may happen with some people I guess. Is there anything at all different happening after lunch recently? Do you use the same pen for all your bolus injections? I also agree with the advice to seek medical advice about this, it's way too high to let this run on. Best wishes with getting it sorted and do let us know how it goes.Hi everyone,
Thanks for your advice - it's kind of reaffirmed what I already thought, but really didn't want to go if it was just going to be wasting their time.
If (when) the pattern repeats itself this evening, I will give 111 a call. My injection sites are fine (mega paranoid about rotating them properly so I have a little diagram). I have the same lunch every day, and about 4 dinners that I rotate through, neither of which have changed. None of my other medications have changed. So it's a puzzle!
So glad @EllsKBells, so I assume the leak led to inadvertent under-dosing. Another one to add to the list of cause and effect. Well done. Things were getting quite worrying for a while. Please still find a braver GP, and a DSN though !!Hi everyone! The mystery is solved.
When I was having more injections at 3 am, I realised I could smell the insulin really, really strongly - lo and behold, there was a crack in the humalog cartridge. There was also a crack in the first cartridge, which I changed, assuming it would fix it. This is across two different boxes, the second of which I have only had for a few days. Needless to say, I will be filling out a yellow card.
Basically, beware! Possible fragile/broken humalog cartridges in circulation - I need to check the batch numbers!
Thank you so much for all of your support - I was at my wit's end yesterday.
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