DeusXM
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Testing throughout the night will help to understand whether it is DP or LA running out and the specific timing of this is paramount so the more tests the more information is provided. If its DP there may be a need for a pump - if LA there may be a need to alter the timings - so it is important and will make a difference to treatment.
I suspect it's very unlikely the basal is running out as the OP is already splitting their dose. I also don't think DP always requires a pump to treat (although granted, it makes it easier). I still think we need to rule out nypos though before we start messing around with insulin doses.
This is the point I was trying to make - saying that the liver 'saves' people is not always an accurate reflection of what actually happens as this ability is mostly lost the longer one has diabetes.
Hang on.
Your previous position is that the liver DOESN'T dump glucose into the blood in the event of an untreated hypo, and that this particularly affects young people.
Now you seem to be saying that actually the liver DOES dump glucose, but this ability fades the longer you have diabetes.
These statements contradict each other completely - if we now accept that that the liver does dump glucose in response to low BG levels AND this ability diminished the longer you have diabetes, then logically you can't then claim that teenagers are disproportionately affected by the failure of the liver to respond! Particularly as I'm not seeing a source for the original point the first place - simply saying "Diabetes UK say so" isn't actually good enough. I'm sorry, I know I'm coming across as rude and I really don't mean to. But what I want is facts, not hearsay and conjecture. Otherwise it sounds more like a diabetes myth. Let's base this discussion on evidence.
But now I'm interested - why would having diabetes for a certain length of time diminish the liver's ability to response to low glucose? What's the biological basis for this?
The best paediatric teams in the UK do not believe in somoghyi. If it existed why would Medtronic have made the VEO that cuts out if levels automatically rise?
Umm...that's very, very defective logic there. That's like saying 'why do cars come with impact bars and airbags?'. Relying on your liver to tackle nighttime hypoglycaemia is not safe and I don't think at any point I implied it was. All I was suggesting is that the liver has the capability to respond to low blood glucose levels while you sleep and this can and does happen. Having a pump that can respond to dropping BG levels is no bad thing - all it's doing is mimicking what a normal pancreas would do. Just because there is a pump that can reduce its insulin output in accordance with blood glucose levels is nowhere near proof that the liver has no ability to response to low blood glucose level. As for whether or not the best paediatric teams in the UK do not believe in the Somogyi effect, I think all of us here are familiar with knowing more than our doctors about the condition and in any case no paediatric team in the country could be seen to endorse such an effect as it might encourage irresponsible diabetes control. And this is before we even get to the elephant in the room which is that children have smaller livers and thus smaller glycogen stores than adults, which could mean that even if their livers do release glucose to combat a hypo, they might simply not have enough in the tank. This would also then explain your currently unsourced stat that young people are disproportionately affected by fatal nighttime hypoglycaemia.
Unfortunately, we're not talking about a child here. As you've pointed out before, I shouldn't necessarily apply to children what works for adults. Perhaps now would be a good time to make the point that this logically works both ways?
As the parent of a child who uses full-time CGMS it is clear to me that somogyi does not happen - at best levels will rise to 9ish - but not the 18's that is reported. There are hundreds of children on CGM's on the CWD list and their data shows no such effect either - we cant all be wrong?! The somogyi was named after its founder in 1938 and has not actually been proven with any studies to happen - the latest data does not support it.
And I guess I've now addressed this too - you can't apply children's data to adult circumstances. Where is this data anyway? Where is this data conclusively proving somogyi doesn't happen in adults?
the latest thinking by the worlds experts in Type 1 (who I have met) do not believe it happens and refer to it as a 'myth'.
And that's fine...but can we at least test to rule it out first? Most 'world experts' in T1 are still pedlding the line that we need to stuff ourselves with carbs every day - they can and do get things wrong. I know Bernstein doesn't believe in it but there are also plenty of T1s out there (myself included, I must stress) who have experienced this. Statistically, that's just as valid as you saying because it doesn't happen in your child, it never happens.