We found 10 result(s) that match your search "A1cs":Search Results
Categories: Type 1 Children Highs & Lows Complications Real Life
Tags: A1C diabetes communities social networking tudiabetes
Views: 1290
I joined Tu Diabetes recently.
If you feel like your page is being spied on by a guy sitting on a bench across the street in a grey overcoat and a newspaper with two holes cut out for eyes , well, it has. It's me.
I've been snooping around in the parents of kids with type 1 group, ogling your A1cs.
I've spotted some very nice ones.
Seeing such a selection gets me in that envious, wanting mode - the way I get when let loose in a good record store.
"Whoa! 6.8! That's rare. I don't have this one."
"Wow, 7.2! I don't have this either. I thought they broke up?"
"Ooh, a 7.0 live in UK bootleg. I have to get this!"
"This 7.4 is also pretty cool. I only have their 8.7 and their 8.9."
But these desirable A1cs must be returned to the shelves. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Emotions Women's Issues Real Life
Tags: (none)
Views: 525
I had my second appointment with my endo today. The first was back in late June when my A1c wasn't anywhere close to where I'd like it (clocking in at 9.1%). Today's appointment went well and I'll know my latest A1c in a few days. The doctor feels like it should be down and to keep trying to do what I'm doing with a little extra help.
She is the kind of doctor who offers advice if needed, but ultimately understands that diabetes is a very individual disease and my management may be different than others. She does not seem to be concerned with higher A1cs, which is a little troubling as I know the best A1c is certainly not in the 8 or 9% range for a 20-something year old.
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Real Life
Tags: frustrations with the pump going off the pump Lantus and Humalog
Views: 1407
I started using a pump back in October of 2007. It was a rough and terribly rocky start. The pump company wasn't helpful and left me stranded in the dark with this new technology. There were moments that it left me sobbing over the phone to my mother, claiming that I was seconds from throwing the expensive device against the wall. My A1c climbed from 6.9 to 7.6.
After about six months of that and some help from the online community, I finally got the pump closer to being stabilized to my life. It still wasn't pretty. My A1c plateaued around 7.3 and 7.4. I couldn't seem to make the pump fit with my life, despite what everyone was saying. Apparently, I wasn't as stable as I needed to be with my schedule.
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1
Tags: Anxiety control Dreams
Views: 1336
Been having weird dreams... Guess I'm a little anxious about the endo tomorrow... So in honor of odd dreams and anxiety:
Twas the night before my endo appointment, when all through the place Not a meter was stirring, had my pump at my waist My gym clothes were tucked in my backpack with care, And I hoped that my work would show on the scale.
And I was nestled all snug in my bed, While visions of low A1Cs danced in my head. And me in my 'kerchief, and Bob in his cap, Had just settled our brains for an early fall nap.
When in a weird dream there arose such a clatter, The doctor he told me everything was the matter. He said that my A1C had risen so fast, And my weight was through the roof, I was simply aghast.
The moon it showed down as I tossed to and fro The bad news continued from my dreamland endo. When, what to my sleeping brain did appear But a 400 plus cholesterol number, and my control-loss so clear. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Oral Meds Insulin & Pumps Complications Emotions In the News Real Life
Tags: control pandemic
Views: 1900
Imagine it's the end of the world.
There's a flu pandemic. Or The Plague. Or the sun is burning a hole in the atmosphere and we all have to be herded into caves. There's mass panic and people need medical treatment.
Imagine having to decide who is worth saving and who isn't. That was the task of an "influential group of physicians" who drew up a "grim" list of patients who simply wouldn't be treated, according to this story.
The idea is to try to make sure that scarce resources--including ventilators, medicine and doctors and nurses--are used in a uniform, objective way, task force members said.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Emotions Real Life
Tags: A1cs doctor's appointments symlin
Views: 2570
I went to my 3-month endo appointment today. (My dad also went for his check up.) Usually, I do fine with my endo, although I've never been thrilled with him. He's mainly there to tell me the blood results and fill prescriptions. Usually, I'm okay with that.
But today was a completely different story.
First, they didn't call me into the office until AFTER my dad was already done with his appointment (apparently, I was forgotten). Then they gave me hassle about doing the A1c. When it was finally done, they informed me that the machine broke in the middle of the test (now I have to wait 3 weeks to get the results from a blood draw.)
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Relationships Real Life
Tags: (none)
Views: 1086
My blood sugars have been pretty bad these last two days. I am just not feeling like doing anything with the diabetes at the moment. My mind is distracted with thoughts of careers, moving, and sleep. I'm also in "hunger" mode where I just want to eat and eat and never stop eating. I constantly have an appetite, as if I'd been starving for months on end.
It's pretty normal for me to feel that way every now and then. Sometimes it's hormone related, sometimes it's just my body telling me to eat a few more calories. But it always wreaks havoc on my blood sugars. I'm just not accustomed to eating so much in one sitting or to drinking large sugary drinks. So even with insulin, my body just wants to backfire and run high.
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Highs & Lows Emotions Real Life
Tags: Highs & Lows Numbers
Views: 2090
I had never considered myself a numbers girl. I had always thought that I was, in fact, the furthest thing from a numbers girl. In high school, I sat - bored and unengaged - through Algebra 2, Geometry, Trigonometry, and Calculus. In college, Statistics was the one course that found me with a grade below a B. Numbers had never been my friend. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 2 Oral Meds Emotions In the News
Tags: blood sugar testing medical news
Views: 1729
As a member of the media, you might think that I would get riled up about news stories all the time. Strangely, though, I don't find that to be true. So I guess it's no surprise that when I do get moved by a story, I get really moved.
There's not often much information in the e-newsletter from Diabetes Health magazine that pertains to me, but I look forward to reading it nonetheless. I usually scan the headlines and teasers, and maybe read a story or two. I sometimes forward it on to my mom and two aunts who help their 90-year-old type 2 mom with her diabetes management.
Today's newsletter, though, had a story that I read several times. The headline, Psychologically Dependent Type 2s Use Too Many Test Strips?, intrigued me; the story, on the other hand, made the fire rage. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Highs & Lows Real Life
Tags: data analysis diet exercise Logging workout
Views: 948
It's said that (for those of us with full visual faculties) we process something like 80% of what we learn visually. Color-coding, shading and graphs are some ways of marking differences between between values and degrees of value, helping us digest large amounts of complex information in a single glance. Consider the political map, with each country, state, county, or other subdivision in a different color. "Red" states and "blue" states. Degrees of obesity per state. And so on.
Consider the color-coded diagram of the human digestive system. Red stomach, yellow intestines, pink colon, green gallbladder, brown liver. What color is your pancreas? Do you want to color it in World Diabetes Day blue to indicate yours has died?
(READ MORE)
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