Another Newbie

Hi All,
My name is Joanne, and I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes about 7
months ago. The odd thing is, I was 37 when I was diagnosed, I
understand type 1 is usually diagnosed in children and teenagers.
I’m a pretty small person,(5′2, 110lbs), and already on a pretty high
dose of insulin for my weight and age. I’m also pretty active. I am
still not fully in the right range, so I guess the insulin will go
higher.
What I’m wondering is, has anybody tried any alternative practices to
compliment the insulin? I’m trying to avoid the weight gain that
comes with higher doses of insulin. I thought of looking for maybe a
naturopath? I’ve never used anything like that for myself before,
and my endo doesn’t feel it would help, but told me to fly at it if I
want to. I don’t expect to be cured at all, but I would like to keep
the insulin to a minimum. The next time I go for an appointment, I

will be put on 4 shots/day, if the numbers are not looking better.
I’m pretty sceptical of all these ’supplements’ I’ve seen on the
internet claiming to lower blood sugar levels - there sure seems to
be a lot of them out there!
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Joanne

6 Responses to “Another Newbie”

  1. Shelton Christiane Says:

    Hey Joanne! Welcome to the group! We’ve not tried any of the
    alternative treatments. I have hear of one of the herbs that is
    suppossed to help type 2s, never heard how or if it helps type 1s. I
    can’t remember the name of it right now, but it is a pretty common
    one, even in most multivitamins, I think. Maybe someone else will pop
    in with the name, or hopefully I’ll remember it later. Anyway,
    welcome to the group, and hope you get your numbers under control!
    Melissa

  2. Marlene Albertha Says:

    Hi everyone! I am new to the group…Joanne, you really hit home
    with me…I was 31 when I was diagnosed with type 1…..they really
    wanted me to be type2…tried all the oral meds..finally found that I
    was type 1…totally not the “type” for either type1 or 2. I am
    about 5 feet…and 96 pounds…too old for type 1 and too young for
    type 2…UGH! I was in wine country when my doctor called me with my
    test results..blood sugar was 757…HELLO! Welcome to diabetes…the
    bellman at our resort went to get my medicine..glucophage…of
    course, I nearly expired before they gave up and I started on
    injections…
    Like you..I am really concerned about the weight gain associated with
    insulin…it is a vicious cycle…take insulin..feel
    hungry…eat..take insulin..feel hungry…
    sigh…
    any suggestions from the veteran diabetics?

  3. Sheila Brennan Says:

    The advice is easy, but taking it may not be so simple. Take the
    right amount of insulin for the right amount of food. That’s the
    right amount of food for your body and your level of exercise. If you
    keep having low blood sugars, then you’re taking too much insulin. Of
    course it’s never easy, but you can work it out.
    Jerry
    Type 1 for 28 years

  4. Sheila Brennan Says:

    I had to smile when I read that “easier finger sticks” question. The
    answer is home blood glucose testing. It hasn’t been around that
    long, you know.
    Before that we had only urine testing we could do at home. Imagine
    what that means.
    Some doctors recommended you keep your blood sugar at a level where
    you would have some sugar “spill” into the urine, just so you would
    have an idea what your blood sugar was. Of course, that meant your
    blood sugar was too high if you did exactly what your doctor said.
    There was no test we could do to see if we were low, we just had to
    go by how we felt. I know now that I was probably wrong a lot of the
    time.
    Even when you got a result from a urine test, you had to consider
    compromising facts. How much sugar “spilled” into your urine depended
    on how well your kidneys were working. The concentration of sugar is

    affected by how much liquid you’ve had to drink. The sugar in your
    bladder may have just gotten there, or it may have collected over the
    past several hours.
    When I was first diagnosed, I got a urine test kit which consisted of
    a test tube with a stand, a dropper, a color chart, and a bunch of
    reagent tablets. You dropped a tablet in the test tube, added some
    water and some urine with the dropper, waited while this violent,
    bubbly, steaming reaction happened in the test tube, then compared
    the test tube to the color chart to estimate your urine sugar.
    In a short time, test strips became available, which made things a
    little easier, but you still had all of the problems I described
    above.
    Some fun, huh?
    So I guess the message from that is, test your blood sugar often, and
    be glad you can.
    Back to the original question about the biggest advancement, the
    second biggest advancement is my insulin pump, which I’ve only been
    using since Friday. I’m hoping that it will be as helpful as blood
    testing eventually, but for now, I still have a lot to learn.
    Jerry

  5. Sheila Brennan Says:

    Something I didn’t say here, and it may actually be more helpful, is
    don’t over-react to lows. I know it’s hard. You feel awful and you
    want to just gobble as many calories as you can until you feel
    better, but you should really try to just have about 15 grams of
    carbohydrate, that’s 3 glucose tablets or six ounces of juice, then
    wait 15 minutes to half an hour and check your blood sugar.
    That can keep you from getting into that “cycle” you were talking
    about.
    Jerry

  6. Bret Mckinney Says:

    Hi group,
    My name is Diana and I am 41 years old. I was dignosed when I was
    11 months old. I have been using an insulin pump since 1997. I
    learned about this group from Lisa ,who just joined today also(thanks
    Lisa). I am looking forward to getting to know all of you.
    Love&Hugs,Diana=^..^=

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