BlackEdelweiss wrote: » It was only when I took the needle out of my leg that I realised that I had given myself 18 units of Novarapid along with my 3 unit corrective dose so I now have 21 units of Novarapid in my system at 10.45 at night. Great night ahead and of course tomorrow is no normal day where I have nothing to do, I have my graduation from college in the morning and lots to get ready before that. Sitting down now with a hunk of wholemeal bread and jam waiting to see where this is going. The most I have ever taken before is 11 units before a big dominos meal for 3.
BlackEdelweiss wrote: » Its Thursday night and we do our shopping on Friday so the cupboards are bare tonight, nothing nice in at all. I was half thinking of ordering a chinese but I could probably do without that at this time of night. The bread is doing ok so far, probably the healthiest thing I could have to combat it. I have the lucozade at hand and the wife had a refresher course on the Glucagen kit. I wouldent mind as much but I was going to go to bed, now I have to stay up for a few hours. Never a dull day with diabetes!:)
calfmuscle wrote: » Drink two small bottles of lucozade and get yourself to bed
BlackEdelweiss wrote: » Not going to bother with the graduation. I still had a reading of 8 units of active insulin at 3am so I couldent go to bed with that. I eventually got to sleep at about 4.30am then was woken by the baby at 5.30 looking for a bottle. Then my 4 year old son came in at 6.30 and said he had wet the bed so I had to get up and deal with that, then at 7am my daughter came in and told me the 4 year old had just puked in his bed. My wife went in to him and found he had puked, peed and pooed in his bed so that was the end of any sleeping. He was up puking and pooing for the next hour while I was downstairs getting my daughter ready for fancy dress day in school. I am so tired the last thing I want to do is go down and stand in a queue for half an hour to get my gown then sit in a boring hour and a half ceremony waiting to get my award. I would like to have gone but not enough to drag myself down there now. It is a bit disappointing but such is life, especially the life of a diabetic mature student with 4 kids!
BlackEdelweiss wrote: » I caught my sons tummy bug, curled up in pain all day. Great weekend from start to finish. Does anybody else catch everything going? In the past few months I have had the worst flu of my life, a bad cold and was getting another one before this bug hit me. Is it a diabetic thing and if so is there anything I can do or take to build up my immune system? My mother swears by ecinichea drops but I read on the bottle it is not to be taken if you have an auto immune disease. I'm fed up being sick at this stage but maybe it is more to do with having 4kids who are mixing with other kids in school and bringing god knows what home. We fall like dominos in this house when somebody gets something.
gctest50 wrote: » Moderate alcohol consumption is associated with improved insulin sensitivity, reduced basal insulin secretion rate and lower fasting glucagon concentration in healthy women .........
Royal Legend wrote: » By the way the doctor talked about Macro something and Micro something as types of diabetes, one affects limbs, eyes etc and the other kills you? Can anyone enlighten me on this.
Bannasidhe wrote: » After 2 years waiting for appointment at Diabetic Clinic I finally got a letter last week telling me my appointment has been re-scheduled - moved from Dec to Jan -and that I should bring along the the things they told me to in my original appt letter. Problem is, I never got an original letter so have no idea what I should do/bring etc. Could any one advise me what I need to do to prepare and what I need to bring?
CramCycle wrote: » I presume he meant complications rather than types, a micro complication is a minor one, and a macro one is a major one. I hope he didn't explain it as he did to you there. Basically a micro complication is typically localised and despite its causes they haven't caused any other issues. this said, and its something that bugs me, if you have a micro complication with T2DM, it can be (not always) a symptom of a greater issue which could go onto to develop or encourage other complications. Hope the meeting goes well, as well as the test results,
Royal Legend wrote: » Seeing as there is a 2 year waiting list in my local hospital for the diabetic clinic, I have taken the plunge and signd up to a private one. Its not that I can afford it, but the wife says its my health stupid so it worth doing (although paying €55 just to have a chat with a diabetic doctor is a bit of a joke) Anyway, next week I have an appointment where I will get a full medical and assessment, (Another €110, but at least they are doing something) bloods, urine, ecg, legs, feet, etc. I am actually looking forward to it. Plus afterwards they will discuss results, also there is supposed to be a bit of diabetes eductation with it as well. I explained to the doctor whay I was attending him in the sense that I had been told he was a diabetic doctor, his reply was that Diabetes was his passion, which sounds good to me. TBH what prompted me to go private was that I picked up a bug that has hung around me for the last few weeks, I also have a scrape on my leg that just will not heal and i got serious night sweats about three times this week, happy to say that has cleared up now. Seeing as the HSE is doing sweet f a for me, and the only info I have on type 2 diabetes is what I read or more importantly what I learn for all you guys on here, I really hope more of these private clinics pop up elsewhere. By the way the doctor talked about Macro something and Micro something as types of diabetes, one affects limbs, eyes etc and the other kills you? Can anyone enlighten me on this.
darkhorse wrote: » I just want to say that I think it is a disgrace in this day and age that a person should have to wait up to two years for a diabetic clinic. As dr mccoy from star trek would say, its barbarian.
BlackEdelweiss wrote: » Does anybody have any problems with their nails as a result of diabetes? The nail on my index finger has gone a bit out of its normal shape recently and I just looked it up on the internet and sure enough there is a name for it and diabetes is one of the causes. Koilonychia is what it is called but I only have it on one nail so I am wondering if it more to do with an injury than with diabetes. My 20 month old daughter bit me fairly hard on the nail one day, I thought it was cute until she locked her jaws and nearly took the finger off me. She thought it was very funny.
pmy.murphy wrote: » How long before they can find a cure? Any type 1 diabetics on here. I would like to hear how you guys have been dealing with the disease