[Diabetes-talk] Insulin Pumps, and Scar Tissue from Years of Syringes

Bridgit Kuenning-Pollpeter bkpollpeter at gmail.com
Wed Nov 16 14:09:16 UTC 2016


Your endo should have coordinated a training for immediately after you
received the pump. With both my Cosmo and Animas, the companies did not set
up trainings, it was my endo and diabetes educator at the clinic who trained
me. This should have all been set up a while ago. I would contact your endo
right away and set a training up. They will not contact you, you need to
contact them.

Bridgit

-----Original Message-----
From: Diabetes-Talk [mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of
blindhands--- via Diabetes-Talk
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2016 10:20 PM
To: 'Diabetes Talk for the Blind' <diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: blindhands at aol.com
Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] Insulin Pumps, and Scar Tissue from Years of
Syringes

As of Thanksgiving Day I will have been taking insulin for 58 years and
since I am right handed I would say I have been taking it more on the left
side then my right above my waist band.  My right does feel not as plyable
then my left.  

I will be getting the insulin pump tdelivered to my home on Thursday.  How
long does it take for Medtronics to hook you up with a trainer and they come
out and start training?  I don't have an appointment until 2 months from now
with the endocrinologist.

Joyce

-----Original Message-----
From: Diabetes-Talk [mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of
Joy Stigile via Diabetes-Talk
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2016 6:54 PM
To: 'Diabetes Talk for the Blind' <diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Joy Stigile <joystigile at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Diabetes-talk] Insulin Pumps, and Scar Tissue from Years of
Syringes

Hi All,
Since last Saturday, November 12, I have been taking Insulin for 50 years!
My right side of my lower abdomen has less scar tissue then the left.  What
is weird though, I inject my insulin more often in the right side then the
left side.  

Warmly, Joy

-----Original Message-----
From: Diabetes-Talk [mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of
Everett Gavel via Diabetes-Talk
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2016 10:44 AM
To: diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org
Cc: Everett Gavel <everett at everettgavel.com>
Subject: [Diabetes-talk] Insulin Pumps, and Scar Tissue from Years of
Syringes

Hello All,

I've recently realized an amazing difference in my insulin absorption with
my insulin pump that I've been using for I believe it's going on 3 years
now. Might be 2 years, though. I'm getting rather forgetful anymore. That's
what years of pretending you don't have Diabetes gets you. It's amazing how
much you learn after those teenage years when you know it all. Anyway, about
the insulin absorption... 

I thought I'd been safely sticking my tubing in spots where there wasn't
any, or at least very little, scar tissue from the decades of multiple
syringe pokes per day since I was 10 years old, y'know? Up along the edge of
my rib cage, above my belly button, on my kidney areas, etc. Places I
wouldn't have and don't think I did, stick nearly inch-long needles into
when I was using syringes, y'know? 

But I just the other day, almost a week ago now, tried sticking the site up
on the side of my chest area, between my nipple and my arm pit, basically.
And what a surprise, my blood sugars have not registered this well for this
many days in a row for years. Possibly decades. Seriously. I've had near
perfect sugar levels for almost a week straight now, and I'm not doing
anything different than I have been for the last couple/few years.
The only difference that I can recognize is that the injection/tubing site
is in a place where I have never, ever stuck a needle in my life. And so I'm
recognizing that not only over the last few months where I've been having
trouble finding sites where it will absorb decently through my scar tissue,
but it looks now like even when I thought it was absorbing okay most times,
it hadn't really been. Because I'm telling you, this past week has felt
great! 

Now, my question to you all is, has there been any research done on getting
injection sites for insulin pumps that will penetrate past and/or through
scar tissue, to absorb better? Because it seems that others like me, who've
been taking syringe shots multiple times per day for decades, might have
problems like this too. And as we continue on, the scar tissue isn't going
to dissipate or lessen, but rather, get worse. So, has any big pharma
company been researching how to help life-long type 1 diabetics absorb
insulin better as they age and deal with growing scar tissue?


Thanks,
Everett




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