lolabunny876
Member
- Messages
- 20
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
What was your T1 diagnosis based on? What tests did you have done?
Did you used to drink a lot of sugary fizzy drinks?
Ha! You were probably causing the kidney and urine functions to be honest with the food, and fizzy drinks...
Infections are more common whether urinary, kidneys, cystitis, thrush, etc when levels are high.
I was a high fizzy full sugar drink child and I always put that as a contributor to my being T1. Doctors always told me "no" it wasn't the fizzys but Even 30 years on I still think they contributed to killing my islet cells off...apart from those fuzzy drinks I waa a bad eater till 8 years old surviving on gold top milk and complan and sausages. Then I started to eat better but was never a high carber-but the fizzy drinks prob to me just overloaded..
I hope that maintaining low carbs and healthier eating keeps T1 from crashing in on you... I hope you can find the foods etc to enjoy but maintain low levels... Xx
Hi @lolabunny876 Definitely keep testing so you can keep an eye on your blood sugar, especially after meals.
Perhaps you were lucky and they caught your diabetes early enough that you still have some functioning islets and so a longer honeymoon?
Are you having follow up appointments with your doctors so they can see how you go over the next few months?
Not too different to what happened to me, I was diagnosed aged 30 after losing a stone in weight and always being thirsty. Bloods were somewhere around 33. I was drinking loads of orange juice to quench my thirst, (which is full of sugar) My honeymoon phase lasted around a year. Basically your immune system has wrongly attacked and killed most of the cells that make your insulin, you may have a small percentage left now, and these may keep your blood sugars in the right range as long as you are on a reduced/low carb diet. If you have a lot of carbs they may not be able to cope in the long term.
Imagine pre-diagnoses that you had a 100 soldiers doing the job of keeping your sugars balanced, now you have 3. These are having to work really hard now, and eventually they will probably be overworked and die too. Or your immune system might finish them off as well. The longer you can stay in the honeymoon phase the better as once it's over it is much harder to control. But don't worry, you'll soon get used to it. It so hard to know how much to jab initially as your body is still doing some of the work, that's why you might be having hypos. (Especially if you are having a long acting insulin too like lantus or levemer). That will still be working alongside what your body is doing.
The best thing to do in my opinion is try and reduce carbs, and keep a record of what you are eating and injecting. It is the only way to learn what is happening inside your body. Trial and error. And don't beat yourself up, it's so overwhelming and hard at first and there is so much information to take in. I used an app called "glucose buddy" at first. It was a pain but it really helped me see what was going on with my sugars. Sorry if I've said stuff you already know.
Hi, I was only diagnosed type 1 last December at 30 years old! My first 5 months I had very little insulin (honeymoon period) I was able to eat up to 80g of carbs with no novo rapid at all and only using 4 units of background insulin! This is not the case now however. I now use 12 units of background insulin and at least 1 unit of novo rapid rapid for every 10g of carbs! Having between 4 and 8 injections a day now lol! It does come to an end and when it does being ready for it is a massive advantage!
Hi. As a wild guess Is suspect you are T2 and not T2 but suffering from that wrong diet? I can understand why the docs might be confused. BTW the 3 month blood test (HBA1C) only measures your average blood sugar level and not the cause. I would keep up the good diet and only have the meds (tablets) if any that you need. The insulin is probably not needed?
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?