scorpius14
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 64
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
I guess Coca-Cola bought them out?I remember a sky blue can with a generic snowflake emblem?
A little like this..
after jogging my memory with a quick search.
View attachment 72185
Yes I did, and realised that it wasn't worth the digestive assault or the sickly taste. A Type1 who is a friend of mine had a father who would demolish 2 bars of Wander chocolate in one session with no ill effects!Did anyone else compare the sugar content of diabetic chocolate bars and some of the non-diabetic, laxative free bars? A lot of those expensive diabetic bars had more carb in them than cheaper non-diabetic options.
I’ve no idea..I guess Coca-Cola bought them out?
My wife got some low sugar biscuits once. Like a plain tea dunker.Did anyone else compare the sugar content of diabetic chocolate bars and some of the non-diabetic, laxative free bars? A lot of those expensive diabetic bars had more carb in them than cheaper non-diabetic options.
Any chance it was "Leo Retard" rather than Insulatard. I had experience of both and seem to remember I was switched to U100 Insulatard when they standardised. The "short acting" was Leo Neutral, with an activation time in what seemed like hours........I know the insulin I was on was insulatard 40 strength was on that til I ended up on the pen I think old age has made my memory in and out , compare to then these days is a doddle bearing in mind 45 years of experience is probably the ace in the hole
Hi,Any chance it was "Leo Retard" rather than Insulatard. I had experience of both and seem to remember I was switched to U100 Insulatard when they standardised. The "short acting" was Leo Neutral, with an activation time in what seemed like hours........
Cross posting T2 popping in & out again, is it sad that I’ve just sang the advert for orbit sugar free gum from beginning to end?i Remember apart from diabetic sweets which if you ate them you couldnt go further than 10 feet from the toilet , the only thing available was Orbit chewing gum ,
Is that the one that sounded like a Beach boys tune?Cross posting T2 popping in & out again, is it sad that I’ve just sang the advert for orbit sugar free gum from beginning to end?
PZI was protamine zinc insulin? I was definitely on that for a while. Pre MDI I was on animal insulins, a short and long acting insulin. Both went into the same syringe (my parents splashed out and bought disposables, which I did re-use a bit). You had to shake the cloudy one first? I also remember not bothering to keep my insulins in the fridge in those days. (At university I didn't have a fridge). Like eggs, it seemed to last forever out of a fridge. Are human insulins less long lasting?Was it glargine? PZI, that was the one the life-style-changing basal replaced for me.
That’s the oneIs that the one that sounded like a Beach boys tune?
Looks like PZI is used for cats and dogs now....
I really should have known that ! I worked for a packaging machine manufacturer and I can remember one of the service engineers saying to me after working on site for a big food manufacturer that the adding of the ingredients was a bit shambolic .I work for a large group that makes ready meals. Not sure I would trust the carb count on the side of the packaging. They fiddle that much with the sauce to get the right consistency by either adding water if it's too thick or starch if it's too thin.
I seem the remember the Pils slogan as “all the sugar brewed to alcohol?”I can remember Holsten Pils lager and Marston low C which only about 3 - 4 carbs a bottle , I don't know if there is anything that low nowadays is there ? I remember the Pils used to have a label on the side saying recommended by the British diabetic association .
Yes I remember that, it said all the sugar turns into alcohol ,I think they had to remove it as it seemed like they were promoting alcohol .I seem the remember the Pils slogan as “all the sugar brewed to alcohol?”
In the advertising..
I was diagnosed in 1966 aged 11 , and well remember those glass syringes and the “ blunt” needles . Doctors were quite pleased when I was diagnosed as diabetic after having been admitted to hospital with suspected leukaemia. Doctors cheerfully reassured my mother I might live 50 years ( now 57 years ago!) . On the day she came into hospital to learn on me to administer my infection ( I had already learnt by practicing on oranges for days and found it was far more fun to suck up the orange juice and shoot it across the ward!) she managed to stick the needle right through the pinch of skin ( I was very thin) and out the other side! Neither she, nor anybody else, ever administered my insulin injection ever again.I remember my mother buying me disposal syringes she asked why not on prescription was told cos they are a “ luxury” also with the old glass and metal syringes the needles in comparison to the 4mm ones we use today were like the Apollo 11 rocket and being told to change them when they were blunt. The only diet soft drinks were 1 cal and Tab cola both were rank. I do wonder how people today would manage they would of course as the alternative isn’t good but I wonder how
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?