Leadinglights
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
- Pronouns
- She/Her
If you read the stories of people's diagnosis of Type 1 then you will soon realise that people are being diagnosed at much older ages than you so that is still a possibility for you, I would press your nurse to reconsider and ask for the tests C-peptide and GAD antibodies.Thank you for replying, and thank you for referring back to the possibility of me being a late-onset Type 1. I asked my doctor about this when reviewing my last eye exam (got retinopathy) and she said getting T1 at this stage (I'm 65) was unlikely but that she'd think about it! I've only been diabetic for a couple of years. It's all still rather a mystery to me but honestly the help and support on this forum is better than anything I've found elsewhere.
Apart from being now very underweight and horribly boney which I suppose doesn't really trouble me as much as my family (just don't look in the mirror!), my day to day issues are chronic early morning migraines 15 days a month and massive tiredness. And I don't want to make my own bread. Tbh food is now just a boring hurdle to be got over. It's no longer a question of what would I like to eat but what CAN I eat that ticks the right boxes. I'm a practical person and I just want to be told the right formula to keep everything on track. (I know there isn't a simple answer though!)
A friend in her 70ies has just had her diagnosis confirmed as Type 1 after 2 years of weight loss so now has the appropriate insulin regime.