All the treatments that you comment that you have had both in this thread and in others are typical treatments of type 2 diabets (a slow or prolonged insulin + some oral antidiabetic or combinations of oral antidiabetics).
They have been treating you like a type 2 diabetic and some of these things may be happening:
- That the diagnosis of the type of diabetes is correct and you are type 2, then:
Of those treatments that have been prescribed to you, they have not given you but have not found the right pattern (doses/schedules) that you are still doing you.
or
Of the treatments that have been prescribed, you also need another treatment (and that treatment can only be based on PQ insulins over timeA type 1 diabetic).
- That the diagnosis of the type of diabetes is incorrect and you are type 1, then:
The treatments that you say that you have had the only thing that has served you is the Lantus insulin but it is insufficient PQ would need an insulin of immediate action (also called ultra-rapid) for meals since oral antidiabetics (Sandoz metformin that isMetformin alone, Velmetia that is metformin with another oral antidiabetic ...) They are not useful for anything (no matter how much metformin can be prescribed to diabetics of all kinds).
Type 1 diabetics have total insulin dependence from the first moment that they are diagnosed and the treatments of type 1 diabetes usually have at least two types of insulins.
It is also very important to be diagnosed because that leads you directly to a treatment that is as effective as possible to treat your diabetes and you for things you have written in this thread and in other threads of this forum you look at all the pint of being badly diagnosed.
For what you have commented in other threads, I debuted being under 30 years (even if it was for little with 28 or 29 years) and I think you are not obese, looking at the typical diabetic profiles you would directly enter the diabetic profile of type 1. SureThat if you told us anything else about your debut, some data would come out that would point even more than you are type 1 diabetic.
But regardless of what someone tells you in a forum, you have also said that two endocrine doctors (supposed professionals of medicine and also expectitatives in diabetes) have told you contrary things: an endocrine has told you that you are of type 2 fixedAnd that another endocrine has told you exactly the opposite that you are of a fixed type 1.One of those two endocrine (if not both) deserves to die shot.Possibly one "only" is shitting in the diagnosis (he says that you are type 2 and with that he prescribes a treatment according to that diagnosis) but the other is screwing twice (PQ tells you that you are of type 1 and prescribes aTreatment for Type 2 with two COJ **** !!!).
You say that you have two endocrine, regardless of whether one is public and another private, I see a problem there, you cannot take the issue in two endocrine, especially if there is such a great discrepancy with the diagnosis.
I honestly don't know how I would consider it ...
- -The first and easier it would be to tell you that the current treatment and the previous ones are not going (this cannot be discussed by anyone even if it is only because of the glycosylated hemoglobins that you must be giving that they do not go down from 8).
- The second that those treatments you have received are for type 2 diabetes and that for your debut (under 30 years, thin ...) better fit the profile of type 1 and that that can be the cause of those treatmentsDo not go well.
- Someone should make sure you are (alreadybe the public, the private or both) but with blood tests (that you do some peptide test C, antibodies ... whatever) not only of word "you are of such a fixed type ..." because saying thatAnd nothing is the same.
- In the worst case, if you do not want to change the diagnosis of type 2 to type 1 that give them there but at least they change the treatment and between those possible treatments for type 2 diabetes is as I have explained before thesame treatment received by type 1 diabetics (only with insulins).
If things with the public endocrine (the social security) are not well (it does not make any blood tests beyond glycosylated hemoglobins, the treatment does not change, it does not listen to you at all what you are commenting on,There is a generalized communication problem) because as you leave the consultation you go to patient care or wherever and inform you what you have to do to request the change of endocrine doctor.
If things with the private endocrine go wrong for you more or less for the same thing that the other stops going to the private endocrine, on top of the fact that you are paying you are still bad, you continue to wear your diabetes badly ... Well, door ... for a seasonIt is better that you are only with the Social Security is the one you have now or the one that assigns you if you request the change.
That takes you more than one endocrine at the same time is a problem, it is crazy, do not do it if you can avoid it and you can.