Hi Fenn,Hi, I have no idea about the process of insulin with regrds to MODY but from a injection point of view if that is part of your concern, its very easy, its less painful than a fingerprick bg test, they will teach you how to do it, dial the pen etc, I worried about it for 6 months, then the act of doing it for the first time, I was holding it in the jab position with an invisible forcefield stopping me jabbing it in, took the plunge (quite literally) and realised it was nothing to worry about, I then spent every moment worrying about hypos, didnt hardly sleep that night but that didnt happen, best of luck, if you need it, you need it, you will be fine im sure, best of luck, hope this was helpful.
I get you, my diabetes is different but they started me off on a small dose, 3 weeks in now and ive only seen 4s one night, the rest of the time im still way above hypo territory, so maybe they will do the same? Im sure they wouldnt do anything too drastic straight awayHi Fenn,
Thanks for your advice.
I think it's the hypo aspect I'm more worried about, I rarely have readings under 14 on the Gliclazide so not really had to deal with it. Growing up my Dad had severe hypos quiye often but he didn't look after himself - think thats where the worrying stems from!
@helensaramay I think you've made a typo, shouldn’t your first sentence say “fast acting glucose”?My advice re hypos is to make sure you always have fast acting insulin to hand. I think many of us colanders have dextrose or glucotabs in every bag, pocket, drawer at home and at work ... just in case.
The other advice I was given by a fellow insulin taker when I first started was to take a little too much insulin one time when you are in a controlled environment, with hypo treatment close to hand and not alone.
Hypos are not pleasant but one of the worst things about them at first is the fear of the unknown. Once you have experienced a hypo, you may be less afraid.
I am not sure a doctor would recommend this but it helped for me.
Thank you. I have corrected my original post@helensaramay I think you've made a typo, shouldn’t your first sentence say “fast acting glucose”?
I think it's the hypo aspect I'm more worried about
@EmmaLK - I have to agree with @Antje77 here. You need to ask your GP to refer you to a hospital, preferably one specialising in MODY. YOu can be referred to any hospital that you choose, and for MODY, you really should be seeing a specialist in secondary care.Is there a reason you're under GP care with a relatively rare condition like MODY? An endocrinologist would seem a more logical place to me.
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