I didn’t know typ 2 took insulin, can someone tell me under what circumstances would your doctor put you on insulin?
My circumstances were pretty unusual I think. I'd been skirting the edge of pre-diabetic for a long while, but moved jobs to a new area just over a year and a half back. I must have changed diets quite a lot in that time, because I was eating a lot of fruit like grapes. I was also eating other high carb foods because I was busy with the new job. Anyway, about 12 weeks ago I was having dizzy spells and went to the doctor about it. They did a few blood tests and the day after they got the results, the GP phoned me and asked me to go in. A few hours later I was in hospital and on an insulin drip as apparently I had diabetic keto acidosis, which can kill you and/or put you in a coma. So from "ok" a year ago, I'd gone to this "you're really in trouble" stage.
At the time they started the insulin IV, my bloods were like 25+ I think. My graph here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...Qg/pubchart?oid=1123067073&format=interactive is starting about a week after going into hospital. You can imagine how high the left hand peak was at the height. Since then I've learnt about carbs and have been doing the usual 2 low carb meals + intermittent fasting thing and my bloods are relatively stable. So the doctor took me off the basal insulin they were using to bring my blood glucose down overall.
So the insulin in my case was sort of an emergency measure. Both in hospital and outside of it. Thankfully though, that insulin has taught me a lot in terms of how I feel. Taking the insulin has really revitalized my metabolism, so before I was feeling dizzy and weak if I walked just normally. Now it's actually fun again to do exercise. I didn't even understand that my body had been shutting down until the insulin. Bit like the boiling frog thing, it just slowly deteriorated and I thought it was normal for me.
I must admit, somehow the injections of insulin didn't bother me, even though I've got a phobia for needles. I just treated it as a mechanical process I "had to do" and that made it easier. It really isn't that drastic once you get a routine, although to be honest the initial motivation was having a hellish experience in the hospital, I was sooooo glad to be out of there I'd have sawn my own arm off and been glad. Having an injection just didn't seem that hard in comparison.
Hope that sheds a bit of light. Its really fine even if you eventually end up having to do the insulin injection. Bit like nobody wants to finger prick, but we do that because its what we have to right?