I am new in the forum, my name is Agnès, I am diabetics of the ageIt was, I just know that it was fast and slow), I started with very strong dances and I withdrew the insulin telling me that I had entered "the honeymoon" and that it would last little, for my luck I spent 6 years only with diet and nothing more.In 2007 it began to raise glycemia again and sent me Dinaben 850 (1-0-1), until 2009 (Glu 5.6) who also sent me the novonorm 0.5mg (0-1-0), also expanding the Dianben 850(1-1-1).Earlier this year I did an analytical and I don't know why the blood glucose to 10.9Novonorm 0.5mg, following the treatment after one month I did another analytical and had dropped (Glu 7.9), I don't know why after two weeks the glycemia took me again, so the doctor repeated the analysis andHigh (glu 8.3).After pleading almost on his knees and thanks to the nurse I went to the endocrine that has changed the medication, Novomix 30 (tomorrow and night) and metformin (0-1-0) Only with these changes I have improved a lot, of being at 300 andBut to go to 150 at most 200 .... for me a very large change, since I feel less fatigued.
Does anyone have these ups and downs?And another thing I can just puncture the insulin in my arm since in the belly and in my leg I can not because I have it very sensitive and it hurts a lot, you know where I can click the most mortifying my arms so much?
Hi Agnès! Welcome to the forum! It makes me very strange that you would debut with DMII with 14 years ... even if I don't know much about the subject.But those hemoglobins may indicate that you are not DMII but DMI with a very long honeymoon.Did they made antibody and peptide analysis c?Are you overweight?If this is your case, maybe that's why your doctors have chosen more for a DMII ... if not, the truth is that I don't understand it ...
Have you never gone to an endocrine?Let's see if a good specialist takes you and they succeed with treatment.You do not have been high to see if they find a solution and you start finding you less fatigued, that diabetes does not always imply being fatigued (only in the debut)
Miembro del equipo de moderación del foro DM1 desde 1988 Mamá de 2 niños y a la espera del tercero Bomba + Dexcom
Welcome to the Agnés Forum
As Neihs and Tica say, your case attracts attention.
As a general rule, type 2 diabetes is associated with obesity, sedentary lifestyle, insulin resistance ... the pancreas or does not produce enough insulin or the one that produces does not take advantage of. It is also true that type 2 diabetes may appear in people without obesity ... but I think never in cases of adolescents.
Perhaps, you can be considered as lada diabetes or type 1.5 diabetes A link:
As for the punctures, have you tried to click on your ass?And in the lower back zone? ... what we call Lorzas :))
I am of a large constitution, but I have obesity, in my family there are precedents of DMII, of echo my parents are, grandparents, uncles, cousins ........ that I debuted I have always gone to the endocrine, but ago 2 makes 2Years I changed the population and it has cost me mine that the doctor sent me to the specialist, now I have had the visit and only in two weeks I have noticed a very big change.
When I debuted they sent me to the Sant Joan de Dèu hospital to Barcelona and they did all of evidence, I know that it is not hereditary since the whole family has come out from 40 except my mother who, by the nerves, debuted at 35,I am the smallest debutant of the family.I know they told me that it was neither the DMI nor the DMII was a rare, that there are few cases but they encompassed it in the DMII.
And with that diabetes pattern throughout the family ... have you not thought about a mody type diabete?Haven't you done a genetic study to rule it out?MODY-like diabetes for symptoms is very similar to type II diabetes, it is hereditary so that there are entire affected families and although it usually begins around 10-11 years, it can go unnoticed for quite some time.
I have suggested lada diabetes because it is something more complicated to diagnose and much more several years ago.
Elna, who would see you at the San Joan Hospital in Deu, for me it is a guarantee that their job did well ... although no one is free to fail. Probably what has changed are your insulin needs ...