Sid Bonkers
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,976
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- Customer helplines that use recorded menus that promise to put me through to the right person but never do - and being ill. Oh, and did I mention customer helplines :)
Hi Sid,
Thanks for your thoughts. Unfortunately (for us insulin users!) I don't think that is the most likely interpretation of the study results, for the following reasons: 1). people in all comparison groups were 'incident cases' (that is, the authors used a criterion that to be included people had to be recently diagnosed and diagnosed for the first time), so in theory at least they won't have been people who had failed to comply with any therapy for years and gone through an escalation of medication...............
Hi, for the sake of space I have only posted a small quote, I am not trying to quote you out of context or anything
I dont understand your answer really as if all the teat subjects were newly diagnosed and as you say not those who have disregarded advice for years how can any conclusions be drawn from the data? I thought that intensive insulin treatment for T2's was a relatively new idea so I dont see how any long term data could have been collected.
I was placed on multiple daily injections (mdi) plus 4 x Metformin after diagnosis I started out using 10 units of Humalin I at night to stop my insulin rising over night and 10 units of humulin s before meals, this quickly escalated to 12 units across the board to get my bg to what I considered to be a safe level, then as I started to lose weight I slowly reduced my insulin accordingly until roughly 12 months later I stopped using insulin altogether and just relied on the Metformin to hold my bg in the 5%'s (HbA1c)
After another 4 years and after losing another stone or so I have reduced my Metformin to just two a day now, so I conclude that early intensive insulin treatment helped me a great deal.
I wonder if I am included in the data you quote? First 12 months of intensive MDI treatment and then the following 4 years without problems, I can only say what I see and for me insulin has almost certainly had the opposite effect for me at least, but I was very pro active, I lost the weight that I needed to loose and have maintained that weight loss, I did not increase the fat in my diet so my trigs have stayed low .5 at the last check as I remember and all my other markers have been in range for the last 5 years.
Heres a pic of the first page of my insulin log book from 5 years ago when I started insulin treatment in hospital after diagnosis, notice the first recorded bg level of 14mmol/L. The hospital had reduced it down from 29 mmol/L with an insulin/glucose IV drip.

My initial target (top right) was to get my bg level to under 10 mmol/L which I managed in 5 days.
Been off insulin now for 4 years so when used as an initial intensive treatment I found it to be very effective indeed.
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