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Type 2 Diabetes/Insulin /and COPD/Lung Fibrosis

robert382

Newbie
Messages
2
I have been on Metformin 500mg for 2 years without succeeding in keeping blood sugar levels below 7, and sometimes up to 15 in the evening after 2 hours since eating. Now I am told by the Diabetic Nurse and my GP, that I must have Insulin injections daily starting on January 2. If I do not do this, my kidneys will eventually sieze up and malfunction leading to kidney disease and blood problems etc.
On top of the foregoing, I also have COPD (Pulmonary Disease) and Lung Fibrosis (thickening and malfunction of the lung lining), both incurable.
So what should I do, start with the Insulin and hope for the better, or ignore the above and wait for the inevitable (which according to my Consultant could result in a rapid deterioration of all bodily functions, without warning. ! ????}
seems I am caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, damned if I do and damned if I dont.!
What is the best course of action in my case. ??
many thanks
Robert 382
 
Welcome to the Forum Robert.

Although you are not a new Diabetic it sounds like you are struggling with dietary control. Below is the advice we give to new Diabetics which may help you bring down your levels and perhaps even avoid going onto Insulin as well.



It may also be that some non-diabetic drugs ( if you are on any) could interfere with your blood glucose levels as well but this you would have to discuss with your doctor.
 
Seems a bit strange that they would go straight from 500mg metformin to insulin, I was on 2000mg metformin, max dose pioglitazone and glitazide, and they hadn't mentioned insulin at all and said there were other things to try first before insulin (and then they realised I had had type 1 all along so I had to go on insulin anyway...).

When I went to the diabetic clinic the other day, both the person with the appointment before mine and the one with the appointment after were on dialysis due to complications with diabetes, so do watch out.

The insulin injections aren't a problem at all, can't even feel the needle sometimes, so if the injections are putting you off don't worry if you do have to go onto insulin. Was it the thought of the injections that were the problem?
 
Thanks HLW. maybe you are right about the fear of insulin injections in my case, but even more is my fear of complications arising, despite what the Diabetic nurse saying you will feel better after insulin tratment. However the constant checking of blood sugar with the Accu-meter is annoying me, and sometimes I dont want to bother with it. but of course, without testing how does anyone know what blood sugar levels are doing each day.? It seems like a battle of wills now, and I really would like to bash the Diabetes defective gene in my system to death, b y slow torture if possible !!
Why do some people have it , and others not, nobody has yet come up with a convincing answer. Que sera ! Que Sera!
Robert
 
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