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CT scan ?

The reason I asked is that mixed insulins are usually injected twice a day, before breakfast and then before evening meal.

Is toothpaste supposed to prevent bleeding/bruising? I have never heard of that! Do you use it before or after injecting?
 
@jtg1964 , I'm also on clopidegrol after a TIA 12 months ago. I bruise from anything I come closer than a metre to!! Not just needles. My longer term concern is that I might progressively lose usable injection sites, with my 4 or 5 times daily injections. Each bruise seems to need a month + to recover, some take longer.

When I first started injecting insulin I was, not surprisingly, ultra cautious. More recently I'd become pretty relaxed and content to inject quickly, but those rapidly taken doses certainly cause bruising - from a rushed job/jab. I have no magic solution to prevent bruising. Nowadays I try to be very steady while injecting and certainly avoid getting jostled in any way.
 
Hope the CT scan goes well @jtg1964

Glad to hear you are putting weight on. Fingers crossed for your results.
 
@jtg1964 , I'm also on clopidegrol after a TIA 12 months ago. I bruise from anything I come closer than a metre to!! Not just needles. My longer term concern is that I might progressively lose usable injection sites, with my 4 or 5 times daily injections. Each bruise seems to need a month + to recover, some take longer.

When I first started injecting insulin I was, not surprisingly, ultra cautious. More recently I'd become pretty relaxed and content to inject quickly, but those rapidly taken doses certainly cause bruising - from a rushed job/jab. I have no magic solution to prevent bruising. Nowadays I try to be very steady while injecting and certainly avoid getting jostled in any way.
I agree im cautious injecting though thumb pricks are worse lol. I only injections my legs . My doctor said injections then press on the sight for 2 mins after and you shouldn't bruise. It is working so far.
 
The reason I asked is that mixed insulins are usually injected twice a day, before breakfast and then before evening meal.

Is toothpaste supposed to prevent bleeding/bruising? I have never heard of that! Do you use it before or after injecting?
I don't know about mixed insulins.I think they have just started me on it. Today my blood glucose has been 5 all day with 10 units after breakfast. They were in the 20 plus 4 x a day...waking/ lunch/ teatime and bedtime. So its clearly working.
Apparently you put it on after.
 
Yes just before breakfast. On 10 units. Yes I pinch my skin. Doc said press on it for 2 mins afterwards so I've tried that this morning. I did read toothpaste is good lol. Not tried that yet. x
toothpaste thats a new one to me
 
The reason I asked is that mixed insulins are usually injected twice a day, before breakfast and then before evening meal.

Is toothpaste supposed to prevent bleeding/bruising? I have never heard of that! Do you use it before or after injecting?
Had my CT scan this morning...get results Friday when I see the Consultant on Friday morning 9am xxx
 
Fingers crossed it shows nothing amiss and it has just been a "covering all bases" thorough approach. How are you managing with the insulin?
 
Fingers crossed it shows nothing amiss and it has just been a "covering all bases" thorough approach. How are you managing with the insulin?
It's going ok. I started on 6 now up to 10. Just every morning. It all may change after Friday. Seeing the head diabetic consultant at the hospital. Can't say I like injecting myself.Sometimes I feel over whelmed but it is what it is. Are you on insulin? How often do you take it? x
 
Yes, I am on what we call a basal/bolus insulin regime. My basal insulin is injected twice a day, morning and evening and this covers the glucose that my liver trickles out day and night. Then I take the bolus insulin before meals/snacks to deal with the glucose released from my food/drink. The bolus insulin is also used to do what we call a correction where, if my levels go high and don't come down for whatever reason, I can inject a bit of extra bolus insulin to bring them down. Because I follow a low carb way of eating, I have to do corrections after most meals because in the absence of enough carbs in a meal, the body also breaks down protein and fat to release glucose but this process takes longer and typically starts 2 hours after the meal, so I have to inject up front for whatever small amount of carbs are in the meal and then correct afterwards for the protein release which is much slower and more gentle but can still gradually take you up into double figures if you don't deal with it. So typically I inject basal twice a day and bolus maybe 5 or 6 times a day sometimes more sometimes less, so probably about 7-8 injections a day. To be honest the injections are the easiest part of it, it is the calculating carbs and factoring in exercise/activity you did over the past 2 days and illness and ambient temperature and when you are next going to be physically active and hormones and what colour socks you are wearing etc etc which can be more taxing. Gradually it just becomes a bit of a dark art where experience plays a part and educated guessing and a good bit of luck to get it somewhere near right. They reckon we make in excess of 100 decisions a day about our insulin needs and diabetes every day, but the amazing thing is that a bit like learning to drive a car, your brain takes over quite a lot of those decisions/actions on autopilot once you get into a routine with it. You develop strategies to tackle specific foods which are tricky or the effects of different exercise or alcohol. It's like a complicated game of chess where your opponent doesn't always play by the rules and you have to adapt to deal with that. I used to take it really seriously but now I see it much more as a game and when I am doing well I try to get a new personal best result on Libre and when I am not doing so well I ease off a bit and just coast along or sometimes it feels like fighting until things suddenly settle down and I am back up to winning the game and trying for a new personal best. Finding a mental approach that works for you as an individual is really key to good management.
 
Yes, I am on what we call a basal/bolus insulin regime. My basal insulin is injected twice a day, morning and evening and this covers the glucose that my liver trickles out day and night. Then I take the bolus insulin before meals/snacks to deal with the glucose released from my food/drink. The bolus insulin is also used to do what we call a correction where, if my levels go high and don't come down for whatever reason, I can inject a bit of extra bolus insulin to bring them down. Because I follow a low carb way of eating, I have to do corrections after most meals because in the absence of enough carbs in a meal, the body also breaks down protein and fat to release glucose but this process takes longer and typically starts 2 hours after the meal, so I have to inject up front for whatever small amount of carbs are in the meal and then correct afterwards for the protein release which is much slower and more gentle but can still gradually take you up into double figures if you don't deal with it. So typically I inject basal twice a day and bolus maybe 5 or 6 times a day sometimes more sometimes less, so probably about 7-8 injections a day. To be honest the injections are the easiest part of it, it is the calculating carbs and factoring in exercise/activity you did over the past 2 days and illness and ambient temperature and when you are next going to be physically active and hormones and what colour socks you are wearing etc etc which can be more taxing. Gradually it just becomes a bit of a dark art where experience plays a part and educated guessing and a good bit of luck to get it somewhere near right. They reckon we make in excess of 100 decisions a day about our insulin needs and diabetes every day, but the amazing thing is that a bit like learning to drive a car, your brain takes over quite a lot of those decisions/actions on autopilot once you get into a routine with it. You develop strategies to tackle specific foods which are tricky or the effects of different exercise or alcohol. It's like a complicated game of chess where your opponent doesn't always play by the rules and you have to adapt to deal with that. I used to take it really seriously but now I see it much more as a game and when I am doing well I try to get a new personal best result on Libre and when I am not doing so well I ease off a bit and just coast along or sometimes it feels like fighting until things suddenly settle down and I am back up to winning the game and trying for a new personal best. Finding a mental approach that works for you as an individual is really key to good management.
Wow...I love your strategy! Do you mind me asking what age you were diagnosed. I've just turned 60 so I was 59 x
 
I was 55 at diagnosis. Initially assumed Type 2 but didn't respond to max dose Metformin and Gliclazide and within a few weeks I was on insulin despite going very low carb and a few months later my test results for Type 1 came back positive. I am 6 years down the line with it now and it is just part of life. Libre was a big game changer as regards treating it like a game, rather than a medical condition and that takes a lot of pressure off me and enables me to manage it really well, although of course I get it wrong from time to time as everyone does and I've had a scary moment here and there but life is like that and you "live and learn" as they say and try not to make the same silly mistake twice. The way I see it I now have a much better diet because I am very conscious of everything I eat and how I "spend" my insulin. I exercise more because it means I need less insulin, and I get regular health checks. I would not have gone low carb if I hadn't got diabetes and going low carb has dramatically improved several other health issues, so there are positives there too, so I actually see my diabetes as having made me more healthy rather than less healthy and since I manage it well, I hope to increase my lifespan and quality of life because of the changes I have made, rather than decrease it. I will be having words with the powers that be if that doesn't prove to be the case! 😉
 
You have inspired me there! I had a heart attack at 42 and felt relieved I was fit to got through it with a stent and only a few pills .Having diabetes was another knock...but whilst I ate a healthy diet and im very active I have improved my diet and like you I've got this far I certainly want longer as im in a happy place in my life. I do believe positively plays a big part!
I will join your game if that's OK with you ❤️
 
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