kitedoc
Well-Known Member
Hi @helensaramay, I added a new post the the "Ideas for the Lean Pumper' yesterday. Could variable absorption of the Fiasp be the problem.? (something the annual review doctor should have been helping you work through (amongst other possibilities), rather than the old school master routine which went out with the Ark, (supposedly). Next time maybe consider taking along an old pair-of shoes and ask him to put them on before speaking.Good morning,
Last night I had one of my rare "I have had enough of diabetes, it is someone else's turn to have a go" moments.
I am currently blaming Fiasp for not working, not working, not working, not working, not working, making me change my pump set, not working, not working, making me go to a new vial of insulin, working, feeling fine, feeling fine feeling fine, working overtime.
Or to put it another way, my day was one of >15mmol/l readings followed by pump change, insulin change, non carb dinner, no bolus and a night of massive hypos. That's the type of hypos which results in hot sweats, cold sweats and a change of bedding in the morning.
I have my annual review this afternoon. I find them horrendously judgemental ("I see you had a reading of 12.0 3 weeks ago, you know you should try to avoid these") but perhaps this one is well timed.
I am torn with Fiasp; when it works it is great but it seems to suddenly stop working which is not acceptable. But I don't want to go back to 45 minute pre-bolusing with NovoSluggish. At least, I assume the problem is with Fiasp because I didn't experience these highs as often with NovoSluggish. I was hoping the problem was time out of the fridge but the latest vial was only out of the fridge for 5 days.
Let's see what the "experts" have to say.
Apart from that I have to work out how to cancel a non-refundable flight because my managers said "book your trip and book it as cheap as possible" and then four days later said "hold on, we might not want you to travel then ... but we don't know when we do you want you traveling".
Hope y'all have a great day and enjoy the sun.
I certainly had trouble late last year which seemed to settle once I varied the sites more and used slightly longer cannulas of steel rather than plastic to miss the supposedly fibrosed sites of the past (may be DSN and doctors in this area need to study archeology, well, definitely in my case)!!
My Nurse and endo doctor both mentioned to me recently that many of their pump patients (in Oz) were changing to steel cannula infusion sets because of continual problems with variable absorption, kinks, bends etc with the plastic cannulas. They also pointed out that Medtronic make a lot of the infusion sets on the market, even for other brands of pump. And the word, for whatever reliability that may carry or not, is that said company is having quality control issues.
Just to note I change my steel cannulas every 2 to 2 1/2 days rather than 3, firstly because my nurse said that the steel tends to be rejected by the body sooner than the polyethylene cannulas and secondly I found a slight fall off in control if I left the steel cannula change below 2 1/2 days and certainly after 3 days!!
I am planning a 6 mm 90 degree cannula set use for the next experiment (with the 1 to 2 mm thick dressing patch). However I will not be wall climbing or cycling so it will not be fully tested under 'field conditions' so to speak !! "Commando course anyone '!!??)
The steel cannulas infusion sets have the neat advantage over plastic ones because the connection point in the former is situated on a separate white 'sticky' pad from the cannula itself,(see Ideas for Lean Pumper post) thus avoiding movement of the cannula when disconnecting and reconnecting the tubing. Best Wishes !!!