Goodness I know that feeling. I like it when you go to the GP about something and they tell you "well the good news is it isn't because of your diabetes" and they want you to toddle off merrily as if the problem is then solved!Since I was diagnosed 15 years ago I have come to notice that as soon as I mentioned I am a diabetic at appointments then suddenly what ever I am being treated for is because of my diabetes or I am at a higher risk.
Any problems with my spelling or grammar it's probably because of my diabetes and not my dyslexia
And apart from being at increased risk for stuff because of our diabetes, we're also at increased risk for missed diagnoses because whatever we came in for is blamed on our diabetes.Since I was diagnosed 15 years ago I have come to notice that as soon as I mentioned I am a diabetic at appointments then suddenly what ever I am being treated for is b
Grammaritis induced by diabetes? Off to Google everything again I go :-DYou mean you haven't heard of diabetes induced grammaritis?
Seriously, you've covered the major "you are at more risk" ones that I have had (frozen shoulder and cataracts), but there's the obvious ongoing ones like thrush and UTIs (Males, you are about to get too much information, but I swear I went though a phase when every time I went for a smear test I got told that I had thrush).
Still, like @Antje77 , I eagerly wait to hear the delightful complications which I have to look forward to having in future.
52 years T1, still mostly in good order, though the on again off again background retinopathy seems to be more permanent now.
Edited to add, having read @sleepster 's post, gum disease can be a big issue for diabetics (my T1 mum lost her teeth at 40 but she was pre glucometer). It's worth keeping up with your dental hygiene and visits to the dentist.
You watch whatever you want to. Unless it's paint drying. That's for really nutty peopleNot funny-funny, but still funny!
I'll read along, can't hurt to be pre-warned.
Are your doctors alittle bit crackers or just not fully up to speed on the whole doctoring stuff?Oh my God, how actual it is! My trips to the doctor often look like this
"Doctor, I'm worried about this"
"Don't make it up, you're young, what can bother you?"
"But I have diabetes for 18 years"
"Oh, well, then it's all from diabetes"
or even more interesting
"give birth and everything will pass"
"but I have diabetes, I'm not going to give birth"
"well, then I can't help anything. But you think about giving birth"
what a good question! It really costs me a lot of work to find doctors who could provide normal careAre your doctors alittle bit crackers or just not fully up to speed on the whole doctoring stuff?
Normal care except for Gestational Diabetes?!what a good question! It really costs me a lot of work to find doctors who could provide normal care
I don't understand in any way what gestational diabetes has to do with it, because by definition I can't have it (haha, what is dead may never die). It's just hard for me to find doctors who didn't attribute any of my ailments to diabetes. My ophthalmologist has already changed three jobs, and I follow her around the city, because no one else normally considers it necessary to check if I have rhinopathy.Normal care except for Gestational Diabetes?!
My ophthalmologist has already changed three jobs, and I follow her around the city, because no one else normally considers it necessary to check if I have rhinopathy.
sometimes it seems to me that my relationship with doctors is strange, because we have each other on social networks, I know when their children's birthdays are and I congratulate them on all holidayssometimes I post stories on Instagram where I drink sweet cocktails with friends, and then my endocrinologist writes a reaction to this story a la "and you will tell me at the reception that you are following a diet ?" I don't know how we have such a relationship, but after 18 years of diabetes, it's probably logical
Are there any other surprises I need to look out for cause I can't wait for the next issue and would love a heads up.
sometimes it seems to me that my relationship with doctors is strange, because we have each other on social networks, I know when their children's birthdays are and I congratulate them on all holidayssometimes I post stories on Instagram where I drink sweet cocktails with friends, and then my endocrinologist writes a reaction to this story a la "and you will tell me at the reception that you are following a diet ?" I don't know how we have such a relationship, but after 18 years of diabetes, it's probably logical
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