Hi Levi, welcome to the forum 🙂 How did your diagnosis come about? What insulin were you given initially? There's a theory that when you are given insulin it allows your beta cells to take a bit of a breather and restore their capacity to produce insulin again, at least for a while. I'm a rather strange case myself (but not unique) - I was put on a TDD (Total Daily Dose) of 65 units of insulin initially. This reduced fairly rapidly in the weeks following, but then my need for basal insulin (lantus in my case) continued to reduce over the following months and years. Eventually, after 4 years I had to stop the lantus altogether because I was still waking very low and having the occasional night hypo - I now haven't needed basal insulin for over 5 years 😱 I still need novorapid for my meals, but this has also reduced significantly, I now need a TDD of around 12-20 units.So newly diagnosed on the roller coaster of ups and downs of diabetes. Honeymooning already and now 38 days insulin free.. Anyone else having same experience?
Hi Levi, welcome. Just saying hi as I’ve no experience with honeymooning but others here do, hopefully they will be along soon.
Hi Levi, welcome to the forum 🙂 How did your diagnosis come about? What insulin were you given initially? There's a theory that when you are given insulin it allows your beta cells to take a bit of a breather and restore their capacity to produce insulin again, at least for a while. I'm a rather strange case myself (but not unique) - I was put on a TDD (Total Daily Dose) of 65 units of insulin initially. This reduced fairly rapidly in the weeks following, but then my need for basal insulin (lantus in my case) continued to reduce over the following months and years. Eventually, after 4 years I had to stop the lantus altogether because I was still waking very low and having the occasional night hypo - I now haven't needed basal insulin for over 5 years 😱 I still need novorapid for my meals, but this has also reduced significantly, I now need a TDD of around 12-20 units.
Diabetes is very strange and unpredictable and, it seems, can be quite different according to the individual. Some people honeymoon for a few weeks, some for months, and if you are especially weird like me, sometimes years! It can make it difficult when/if you start needing insulin again because it's hard to predict when your pancreas might decide to squirt out a helpful dose of its own, making dose calculation difficult and you need to be on your toes with testing 🙂
What are your levels like now? I'd really recommend getting a copy of Type 1 Diabetes in Children Adolescents and Young People by Ragnar Hanas. It covers all aspects of living with Type 1 and I still find it helpful on occasions, 9 years after my diagnosis.
Please let us know how you get on, and if you have any questions or concerns, please ask away 🙂
Hiya Levi and welcome.🙂 My honeymoon was much more subtle than yours...I was never in a position to lay off the insulin for a while. 🙄 It must be a mix of a relief/stressful waiting to see what happens next. What did the doctor say (apart from "wow!"😉)?
I’m afraid you will get some professionals who will try to bang a square peg into a round hole.Hello and thankyou.. Most certainly a relief in terms of not having to have injections (the worst part for me) but stressful also as when checking my bloods I'm waiting for good numbers to come up , hoping there not too bad. Didn't really get the wow from doctors as I hoped!! More of a under guidelines I should be taking insulin but my argument is my levels are within reason and target to which they have now agreed with me.
I’m afraid you will get some professionals who will try to bang a square peg into a round hole.
One concern I do have is, I hope you’re not having to cut down your carbohydrate intake too much to obtain good levels without insulin.
When I told my consultant that I had stopped needing lantus, 4 years after diagnosis, he said that it would probably only last a month or two, and that I'd be back needing it before long. That was over 5 years ago 🙄 This is what my overnight levels looked like yesterday, can't really argue with this! 🙄Hello and thankyou.. Most certainly a relief in terms of not having to have injections (the worst part for me) but stressful also as when checking my bloods I'm waiting for good numbers to come up , hoping there not too bad. Didn't really get the wow from doctors as I hoped!! More of a under guidelines I should be taking insulin but my argument is my levels are within reason and target to which they have now agreed with me.
I still need novorapid for meals with carbs in, although that has reduced considerably since diagnosis (down from 45 to around 12-20 units a day).Yeah your right there could be they've never experienced such cases as I know all don't go through and seems only a few of us do. 5 years doing well ;-).. Must be loving it haha. I hate doing the injections. Not something I enjoy at all.
You say you stopped Lantus are you not on anyform of insulin at all?