OT Diabetes

Welcome to our community

Be a part of something great, join today!

calvin natt

Confeve
Joined
Jun 30, 2017
Messages
7,520
Likes
10,460
Points
113
Anyone have experience with child diagnosed with diabetes? I have an 11 year old who we just found out is diabetic. On vacation and had to go to the ER. It’s day three now and we have left the ICU for a regular room, and hoping to head home tomorrow. Been an overwhelming and emotional time but I know that a lot of people go through this. If anyone has had a child go through it would love any insight or suggestions
 
Sorry to hear this.
Keep insulin stored and extra insulin when traveling. Healthy diet, exercise but dont push it to hard.

Eventually it will be part of the routine, it can be tough at the start. Hope your child continues to recover and you can get out tomorrow.
 
Yikes man. I too have an 11 year old, our only child, I can only imagine the fear and stress of a close call like that. Glad to hear the worst is over with. I’ve heard of adults going into remission with a proper diet and being able to function without supplementary insulin. I would think a child, as spry as they are, would have as good of a chance as anyone to live a normal healthy life. Catching it early could (hopefully) be a silver lining? I’m no expert. A positive outlook can go a long way in any circumstance though.
 
Anyone have experience with child diagnosed with diabetes? I have an 11 year old who we just found out is diabetic. On vacation and had to go to the ER. It’s day three now and we have left the ICU for a regular room, and hoping to head home tomorrow. Been an overwhelming and emotional time but I know that a lot of people go through this. If anyone has had a child go through it would love any insight or suggestions
I am just glad you found out now...you can cut the sugar out and work on a healthy regimine for your child and insulin will balance things out...good luck..I hope your child recovers without issues and you guys sort it out!
 
damn Calvin sorry to hear about your kid. That is tough. I pray your kid gets through it and you guys get it figured out. Thoughts are with ya...sending good vibes your way
 
I have a good friend whose son was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when he was either 12 or 13. Is that what your child has? I recall my friend saying that onset was sudden rather than gradual....I think that's a indication of type 1

IIRC, it took a month or two to stabilize the condition. There was a drug he was given that I can't recall the name of. And they became very strict about regulating diet and glucose levels. Also, they didn't allow him to develop and real sedentary habits. I think he may have had some temporary vision issues but that went away. He was/is a regular user of insulin, but I think there are newer insulin therapies that are mild and really effective....I might be talking out of my ass on that one

the kid grew up and is in his late twenties (maybe 30) now and is a landscape contractor in the Sacramento area. No desk job and active life, but I do know there were some small alarms for him in his teens....mainly because like all teenagers, he did some dumb things
 
My stepfather was a diabetic but i dont honestly know alot about it. Other than once stabilize, if maintained, its a minor setback to daily life. sorry for the struggles you are going through right now.
 
Anyone have experience with child diagnosed with diabetes? I have an 11 year old who we just found out is diabetic. On vacation and had to go to the ER. It’s day three now and we have left the ICU for a regular room, and hoping to head home tomorrow. Been an overwhelming and emotional time but I know that a lot of people go through this. If anyone has had a child go through it would love any insight or suggestions
I was diagnosed with diabetes when I was about 41. It slowly got worse and worse for me until I couldn't get the right long term insulin from them and lost my kidneys so that now I'm a dialysis patient, at ALL COSTS. Let this sink in. Whatever you do, test their blood sugar a minimum of once a day and probably three times a day. Make sure they get the right amount of fast acting insulin, aspart, and slow acting insulin, glargine or Lantus based on their blood sugar readings and what type of food they eat and the quantity. This is going to take some getting use to but it must be done. Get a blood test meter such as the Accura and take it in to the doctor every few months or so he can download the data and give you advice on how your child is doing and whether he needs to change his insulin regimen or not. There are a ton of wonderful foods that your child may not eat if they lose their kidneys. No orange juice, for starters. Tomatoes, nuts, avocado artichokes, beans, grapefruit juice, coke and chocolate among others. Too many carbs should be avoided. It's a drag when you lose you kidneys. For God's sake, guard your child's kidneys by not letting the child have repeated episodes of high blood sugar. You want to keep the blood sugar below 150, 100 being normal and 150 getting into the lower level of the danger zone. Some people check again an hour after eating.
 
Anyone have experience with child diagnosed with diabetes? I have an 11 year old who we just found out is diabetic. On vacation and had to go to the ER. It’s day three now and we have left the ICU for a regular room, and hoping to head home tomorrow. Been an overwhelming and emotional time but I know that a lot of people go through this. If anyone has had a child go through it would love any insight or suggestions
Sorry CN, I just now seen this. Ill keep you guys in my thoughts. Hang in there!
 
Stanford's new cell therapy cures type 1 diabetes in mice

cell-energy-biochemistry-boost.webp


A donor–recipient hybrid immune system may hold the key to curing Type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. Credit: Shutterstock

Stanford Medicine scientists report that giving mice both blood-forming stem cells and pancreatic islet cells from an immunologically mismatched donor either completely prevented or fully reversed Type 1 diabetes. In this disease, the body's own immune defenses mistakenly attack and destroy the insulin-producing islet cells in the pancreas.

None of the animals developed graft-versus-host disease, a condition in which the immune system arising from the donated blood stem cells attacks healthy tissue in the recipient, and the destruction of islet cells by the animals' original immune system came to a stop. After receiving the transplants, the mice no longer needed immune suppressive drugs or insulin at any point during the six-month study.

"The possibility of translating these findings into humans is very exciting," said Seung K. Kim, MD, PhD, the KM Mulberry Professor and a professor of developmental biology, gerontology, endocrinology and metabolism. "The key steps in our study -- which result in animals with a hybrid immune system containing cells from both the donor and the recipient -- are already being used in the clinic for other conditions. We believe this approach will be transformative for people with Type 1 diabetes or other autoimmune diseases, as well as for those who need solid organ transplants."

Kim, who directs the Stanford Diabetes Research Center and the Northern California Breakthrough T1D Center of Excellence, is the senior author of the study, which published online Nov. 18 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Graduate and medical student Preksha Bhagchandani is the lead author of the research.

Read More
 
Stanford's new cell therapy cures type 1 diabetes in mice

cell-energy-biochemistry-boost.webp


A donor–recipient hybrid immune system may hold the key to curing Type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. Credit: Shutterstock

Stanford Medicine scientists report that giving mice both blood-forming stem cells and pancreatic islet cells from an immunologically mismatched donor either completely prevented or fully reversed Type 1 diabetes. In this disease, the body's own immune defenses mistakenly attack and destroy the insulin-producing islet cells in the pancreas.

None of the animals developed graft-versus-host disease, a condition in which the immune system arising from the donated blood stem cells attacks healthy tissue in the recipient, and the destruction of islet cells by the animals' original immune system came to a stop. After receiving the transplants, the mice no longer needed immune suppressive drugs or insulin at any point during the six-month study.

"The possibility of translating these findings into humans is very exciting," said Seung K. Kim, MD, PhD, the KM Mulberry Professor and a professor of developmental biology, gerontology, endocrinology and metabolism. "The key steps in our study -- which result in animals with a hybrid immune system containing cells from both the donor and the recipient -- are already being used in the clinic for other conditions. We believe this approach will be transformative for people with Type 1 diabetes or other autoimmune diseases, as well as for those who need solid organ transplants."

Kim, who directs the Stanford Diabetes Research Center and the Northern California Breakthrough T1D Center of Excellence, is the senior author of the study, which published online Nov. 18 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Graduate and medical student Preksha Bhagchandani is the lead author of the research.

Read More

It will be shelved with all the rest of the cures scientists have come up with and used only for the richest populations. There is no money in cures.
 
It will be shelved with all the rest of the cures scientists have come up with and used only for the richest populations. There is no money in cures.
Governments have incentive to offer cures. Cures make for a more productive and less needy population.

That's one reason for-profit healthcare should be illegal.
 
Governments have incentive to offer cures. Cures make for a more productive and less needy population.

That's one reason for-profit healthcare should be illegal.

The government, especially the current one, doesn't care about that.
 
The government, especially the current one, doesn't care about that.
Because they don't have to pay for it. If we eliminated for-profit healthcare the government would have to care about that because an unhealthy population would take money they could use on other things.
 
Because they don't have to pay for it. If we eliminated for-profit healthcare the government would have to care about that because an unhealthy population would take money they could use on other things.

We aren't eliminating for profit anything. We live in a capitalist country. In fact we are headed the other way. Anything and everything that profit can be made on is privatized and profited on. Even talking about eliminating for profit is considered treason these days.... unpatriotic... unamerican.
 
We aren't eliminating for profit anything. We live in a capitalist country. In fact we are headed the other way. Anything and everything that profit can be made on is privatized and profited on. Even talking about eliminating for profit is considered treason these days.... unpatriotic... unamerican.
Many capitalist based countries have single payer healthcare and healthcare as a right. Thus virtually eliminating the for-profit healthcare industry.

I'll never stop advocating for Medicare For All here in the US.
 
Many capitalist based countries have single payer healthcare and healthcare as a right. Thus virtually eliminating the for-profit healthcare industry.

I'll never stop advocating for Medicare For All here in the US.

By all means keep advocating for it. Just saying the corporate billionaire overlords won't ever allow it.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top