Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I certainly do hope this indocrinologist Dr. Welch knows what she is talking about. I find some of her recommendations rather strange. Of course she said she is coming at me with an entirely different direction than most of the diabetics she encounters in her office. Whereas most of her patients have a high A1C level I have the exact opposite in her opinion, since my latest A1C is5.7, according to her quite low. It seems that her goal is to increase my A1C to a 6.5 or a 7.0, which would be quite acceptible to her. She looked at my medications and she did a calculation that she said shows that an insulin requirement for me would be 24 units of Lantus per day. This is quite different from the total of 64 units of Lantus I presently take. She ordered a c-peptide test today and she is prescribing that I only use 1 unit of Humalog for every 5 grams of carbs I consume. This recommendation amounts to an extremely large reduction in the Humalog I presently dose at a insulin to carb ratio of 0.56. Her recommendation amounts to an insulin to carb ratio of 0.20. If you multiply every thing by a hundred, this amounts to a 36 point reduction in the I:c ratio. Quite a large reduction in my opinion, and it is guaranteed to raise my glucose levels higher and higher, which apparently she wants at this point, and Later she will address how to lower it. She equates having a hypoglycemic reaction as being equivalent to having a stroke, and she wants to ward off dementia in my case due to having hypoglycemia, from time to time, which does not bother me but scares the hell out of my wife, who claims I have had seizures in stead of a seizure, a single one instead of numerous ones as she claims. I admit the single seizure I had, which I do not rememger was entirely my fault, since I forgot that I had dosed Humalog for supper to cover the carbs I consumed and dosed the same amount of Humalog a little while later , which meant I gave me a double dose of the same amount of Humalog to cover a single episode of carb consumption, which most diabetics know is not a good idea. Maybe this forgetting on my part is a sign of early dementia, which the doctor and my wife fears. According to the indocrinologist an A1C of 6.5 to 7.0 in a diabetic is just as good as a 5.3 in a non-diabetic.I do not have a cost-benefit analysis regarding A1C levels in a diabetic as compared to a non-diabetic, so I don't know if this is a true statement or not. The doctor's concern and my wife's concern seems to be the same, the prevention of hypoglycemic responses, strokes or dementia. As I follow her recommendations I can assure you I will have no further hypoglycemic reactions. She also recommended I increase my statin drug Pravastatin from 20mg to 40mg, but no prescription was given to me. Maybe she means what she says or maybe not. I do know I had the c-peptide blood test drawn today and after a while in a couple of weeks, I am to have a CGM inserted into my abdomen for two or three days. The CGM is a continuous glucose monitor. So the experiment begins today. At lunch I consumed 50 grams of carbs and dosed 10 units of Humalog. My pre-lunch glr was 176. My pre-supper glr was 186 and I consumed 20 grams of carbs and dosed 4 units of Humalog. Bedtime glr is coming up. She wants me to reduce my Lantus consumption from 64 units per day taken in two doses of32 units at bedtime and in the morning to 30units of Lantus at bedtime and 15 units of Lantus in the morning a total reduction of 19 units of Lantus per day with 45 units per day taken compared to 64 units per day taken.So let us watch the rise in my glr as we merrily go along with this experiment and measure the pre prandial carbs three times per day and the bedtime glr for the fourth time per day. So instead of having a hypoglycemic reaction two or three times per week the goal now is to have none. So I will keep us informed as to the recvommendations and prescription and tests performed by an indocrinologist, so that we may all benefit. Happy experimenting, Harry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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