Thank you for your replies. It’s just nice to know I’m not alone @Knikki out of interest, you don’t have any other side effects from the diabetes? I’ve never met anyone who’s had it as long as you and I do worry that it’s going to effect me when I’m older
hi there. I’ve been a type 1 diabetics since I was 7 (17 years now) and I’ve never really though much of it. Being at uni my levels were not monitored and I’d say I lost a fair bit of control. Since leaving uni and joining the real work Ive started testing a lot more and really trying to get things under control. I just find no matter how hard I try I can’t seem to find the balance and im fluctuating all the time. I’ve never really thought about it before but I’m going to have to deal with this for the rest of my life and I’m struggling with the possible long term side effects I’m likely to face. I have background retinopathy even though my hba1c is 63. Not really looking for diabetic control advice. Just more want to hear that I’m not the only person struggling with this awful disease and others are feeling the same as me
Hello Dora and Welcome ! I'm sure you will sort it all out with patience and commitment.hi there. I’ve been a type 1 diabetics since I was 7 (17 years now) and I’ve never really though much of it. Being at uni my levels were not monitored and I’d say I lost a fair bit of control. Since leaving uni and joining the real work Ive started testing a lot more and really trying to get things under control. I just find no matter how hard I try I can’t seem to find the balance and im fluctuating all the time. I’ve never really thought about it before but I’m going to have to deal with this for the rest of my life and I’m struggling with the possible long term side effects I’m likely to face. I have background retinopathy even though my hba1c is 63. Not really looking for diabetic control advice. Just more want to hear that I’m not the only person struggling with this awful disease and others are feeling the same as me
hi there. I’ve been a type 1 diabetics since I was 7 (17 years now) and I’ve never really though much of it. Being at uni my levels were not monitored and I’d say I lost a fair bit of control. Since leaving uni and joining the real work Ive started testing a lot more and really trying to get things under control. I just find no matter how hard I try I can’t seem to find the balance and im fluctuating all the time. I’ve never really thought about it before but I’m going to have to deal with this for the rest of my life and I’m struggling with the possible long term side effects I’m likely to face. I have background retinopathy even though my hba1c is 63. Not really looking for diabetic control advice. Just more want to hear that I’m not the only person struggling with this awful disease and others are feeling the same as me
Hi @Dora12 Like @Knikki I had Type1 for 54 years ending with a kidney/pancreas transplant in 2013. In 1971 I was regularly getting blurry vision, caused by persistently high blood sugar. I was told in 1973 that I was passing protein. At the age of 15 this didn't really register. At the age of 20 I had my first laser treatment for retinopathy. At 24 I had my final laser treatment. My kidneys staggered on right up till 2103. What you see in my avatar shows that I wear glasses, but only for reading. I can drive, and do whatever I feel like doing all these years later. The key is that since 1979 I was very strict with my blood sugar management and stuck rigidly to a fixed carbohydrate diet. When I was put on a minimal protein/phosphate diet, because of poor kidney function, I kept to it well enough to prevent the need for dialysis. Since you have done the best thing, which is to seek advice and reassurance, I feel you stand a far better chance of not travelling down my route. In spite of what looks like a catalogue of disasters, I have so far had a most fulfilling life. I wish you all the best with yours.Thank you for your replies. It’s just nice to know I’m not alone @Knikki out of interest, you don’t have any other side effects from the diabetes? I’ve never met anyone who’s had it as long as you and I do worry that it’s going to effect me when I’m older
Hi @Dora12 Like @Knikki I had Type1 for 54 years ending with a kidney/pancreas transplant in 2013. In 1971 I was regularly getting blurry vision, caused by persistently high blood sugar. I was told in 1973 that I was passing protein. At the age of 15 this didn't really register. At the age of 20 I had my first laser treatment for retinopathy. At 24 I had my final laser treatment. My kidneys staggered on right up till 2103. What you see in my avatar shows that I wear glasses, but only for reading. I can drive, and do whatever I feel like doing all these years later. The key is that since 1979 I was very strict with my blood sugar management and stuck rigidly to a fixed carbohydrate diet. When I was put on a minimal protein/phosphate diet, because of poor kidney function, I kept to it well enough to prevent the need for dialysis. Since you have done the best thing, which is to seek advice and reassurance, I feel you stand a far better chance of not travelling down my route. In spite of what looks like a catalogue of disasters, I have so far had a most fulfilling life. I wish you all the best with yours.
Hi @Vix85 I don't mind you asking at all. My kidney function had reached a bad enough level in 2000 for me to be referred from West Suffolk Hospital to Addenbrooke's (Cambridge University Hospital) they reckoned I would need dialysis by 2005 or even a kidney treansplant. Being afraid of anything invasive, including hypodermics, I did exactly as I was told. By early 2012 they were discussing a kidney transplant. One day a pancreatic specialist was also in the room with the head transplant professor (that sounds bad!) and they asked me what I thought about having a pancreas transplant in addition to a kidney transplant. It was as though I was woken up in the middle of an otherwise ordinary dream; as though everything I had accepted over the last fifty-two years had simply been a nightmare. These men were God. Up until that day I had been resigned to being diabetic for the rest of my life, but at least with a replacement kidney. My mind became a turbine. The unpalatable thought of being under the knife, at considerable risk to life, was far outweighed by the likely benefits. I never had any doubt that Addenbrooke's, one of the finest transplant centres in the world, would deliver the goods, or organs.Hi,
Thanks for this post, I love to see refreshing stuff like this!
Can I just clarify.. you’ve had a Pancreas transplant?? I’ve never heard of that before.. do you still take insulin? Can you share more with me? I hope you don’t mind me asking.
Vicky
Sorry, I forgot to add that although it is still relatively rare and I don't know how many have been done to date, over 100 had been done in the UK by the start of 2014. A fairly exclusive club!Hi,
Thanks for this post, I love to see refreshing stuff like this!
Can I just clarify.. you’ve had a Pancreas transplant?? I’ve never heard of that before.. do you still take insulin? Can you share more with me? I hope you don’t mind me asking.
Vicky
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