@Proud to be erratic especially - I apologise
Thank you, apology not particularly needed. Unluckily you caught me post surgery, with hospital won Covid and generally not feeling great.
- I freely confess that the whole idea of treating T1 diabetes to me is to try and replicate what a normal body does as close as I possibly can - ie
@everydayupsanddowns phrase of 'impersonating my pancreas' and since the body absolutely NEVER chucks out a regular amount of insulin 24/24 - whyever would, however could, Tresiba - which apparently does that very thing - be a truly viable longterm solution?
I guess, as a relatively new insulin, Tresiba provides a different approach. I stumbled into it by accident; I just wanted to reduce my daily Injections.
Whether because of Covid and lack of face to face or just plain laziness no D Specialist had told me that my Levermir basal was one of the weapons available to me to use in different quantities as part of the D management process. It was just a fixed dose thing twice daily. And, I hadn't read anything to guide me differently. Meanwhile I roller-coasted for almost a year from hypo to hyper and back again with no external help and being told I could only finger prick 4x daily. I felt horrible and felt imprisoned at home, unable to go out for fear of going hypo while out. Even a 10 minute stroll into our village would need JBs before I could get home. In truth I'm pretty bitter about how little medical help and support I got. Being a T3c with no panc'y was challenging.
Anyway, I set about learning and teaching myself.
Only time will reveal if Tresiba will be a viable long term insulin; meanwhile it, aided and abetted by Libre 2 has brought me a stability I didn't previously know was possible. It has reduced, almost removed, the night time 'imponderables'.
I have 6 night low glucose events in the last 90 days, 5 are false Libre low readings (2 last night); not compression lows, just Libre displaying readings 2+ pts below actual; one might have been a real drift just below 4.0. 4 days in and I'm today going to have to fit and bed in a new sensor; not the end of the world, but yet another D interruption to my daily living.
We've moved forward A Lot in recent years with T1, with pumps and CGM with closed loop 'Control IQ' and similar whether it's a matched thing some pump and CGM systems enable hand in hand, or a more DIY system of the same thing which people have adopted off their own bats for umm, at least the last 10 if not 15 years, by now.
Yes, you have remarked elsewhere that if you're going to join this insulin dependency club, no better time than 2022 - rather than even 2012, never mind 1972.
I merely wish to encourage the latter thing as I see it being far, far more natural and healthier solution enabling T1 folk far and wide to live long and (hopefully) prosper.
This is all getting too technical for someone newly diagnosed - it's far beyond the A level diabetes course for a kid who's only just taken his 11+.
Yes. I taught at post-grad level for 4 years and while I know my brain has slowed down, I find the complexity of D almost overwhelming.
I try to "eat the elephant" one bite at a time, but regularly trip over 2 or 3 different things happening simultaneously; right now post op medical stress along with wonderful but overbearing hot weather are 2 contra factors that I'm trying to pilot my super-tanker between!
I sometimes wonder if it is almost unhelpful to know so much about D's complexity; could be better to just manage each day - but I think I'd make poorer daily decisions.
My late brother ignored it all until it was too late and he became a T2 double amputee. So his precedent stimulates me - I won't be following in his footsteps!