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    • 2 hours, 8 minutes ago
      Jneticdiabetic likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      When I am low I feel anxious, partly due to the adrenaline response and partly due to the jarring sound of the alert.
    • 7 hours, 57 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Very hard question to answer precisely. For the most part, i.e. most of the time, not at all. However, there is a very, very big “but.” And that is at a certain low level (60? 50?) where that irascible personality trait irritability kicks in. It’s not pleasant and neither am I. 🥶
    • 8 hours, 25 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      We need to have replicating living Beta cells reintroduced into our bodies ... science hasn't some up with the solution yet ... but they are working on it. In the meantime, I am grateful for the science that identified insulin as an important life sustaining hormone 100 years ago, and for the science of making various the synthetic and recombinant insulin formulas that have kept so many of us alive for the past 100 + years ... The drug companies don't make all that much money off of us ... it's the greed of PBMs in the health insurance industry that set high prices to suck up the profits.
    • 8 hours, 25 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I resent even having T1 diabetes and having to deal with it, and I think they could find a cure for it, but big pharma makes too much $$ off of us to be really try to find a cure.
    • 8 hours, 29 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Good point! Sometimes hard to tell if the blood sugar levels physiologically causing mood changes or just the stress and burden of trying to manage T1D non-stop. Both valid. I was having a persistent high the other day and thought with frustration how I'd been doing this for 27 years and still sometimes suck at it. With T1D, practice does not make perfect. It's endless guessing and troubleshooting.
    • 8 hours, 29 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Exceptionally well worded. In junior high algebra, teachers used to admonish us, “Don’t try to solve 3 unknown variables with 2 equations.” Welcome to T1D [expletive deleted] where the variables vary considerably and the constants are only constant when they wanna be. 🤺
    • 8 hours, 33 minutes ago
      sweetcharlie likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Yesterday was a day when it took FOREVER to get my supper high down. 274. Totally frustrating!!! I had changed to a new set that am too which should have had the "low" effect going on for me. I am terrified of lows and when I get below 80 I just want to withdraw from everything and everybody until my control returns. Didn't have that problem before getting the CGM. The alarms and arrows cause some anxiety at times.
    • 10 hours, 34 minutes ago
      Kris McDonald likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      It really depends on multiple other factors. How long has it been high or I can't figure out why. Also, it depends on if I've had multiple lows in a short period of time.
    • 10 hours, 34 minutes ago
      Kris McDonald likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      It used th be worse in the days of NPH and Regular insulin. I would get depressed around 2:30pm every day.
    • 11 hours, 58 minutes ago
      Richard Wiener likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Lows have a definite impact. After 68 years playing this game, I now need to rely on what the CGM tells me because I can't tell anymore. If something I've read/heard brings tears, I now know to check my bg. My CGM alerts are on vibrate because they annoy me, scare our cat and create a nuisance when I'm in public . Highs, on the other hand, are very frustrating. If possible, an injection of 1.5 - 2 u by syringe usually brings me into range faster than the pump.
    • 12 hours, 35 minutes ago
      Ahh Life likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Lows have a definite impact. After 68 years playing this game, I now need to rely on what the CGM tells me because I can't tell anymore. If something I've read/heard brings tears, I now know to check my bg. My CGM alerts are on vibrate because they annoy me, scare our cat and create a nuisance when I'm in public . Highs, on the other hand, are very frustrating. If possible, an injection of 1.5 - 2 u by syringe usually brings me into range faster than the pump.
    • 12 hours, 52 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Cheryl, please don't give up on a cure! I work with scientists, some who have spent decades and some their entire careers trying to cure this disease. There are good people working on it.
    • 13 hours, 11 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Good point! Sometimes hard to tell if the blood sugar levels physiologically causing mood changes or just the stress and burden of trying to manage T1D non-stop. Both valid. I was having a persistent high the other day and thought with frustration how I'd been doing this for 27 years and still sometimes suck at it. With T1D, practice does not make perfect. It's endless guessing and troubleshooting.
    • 13 hours, 12 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Exceptionally well worded. In junior high algebra, teachers used to admonish us, “Don’t try to solve 3 unknown variables with 2 equations.” Welcome to T1D [expletive deleted] where the variables vary considerably and the constants are only constant when they wanna be. 🤺
    • 13 hours, 12 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I'd be interested to find out the difference in answers here between highs and lows. I would have said very much or moderately for lows for sure. They affect me with actual physical changes. Feeling floaty/tipsy, tingles in my hands and a tendency to snap more easily if someone asks me a question that I take the wrong way. Highs (which itself should be quantified - for me from a physical standpoint, I'd consider anything over 200 a high). These don't affect me physically, so I might have said not at all. But those occasional steady highs of 160 that won't go down - especially if I'm not eating anything to cause them - will make me anxious and grumpy. But that's an emotional response vs. physical to this annoying disease that sometimes doesn't follow the same set of rules from day to day. No food, but I'm having a bad day at work? T1 decides to make it even more challenging by spiking my blood sugar and keeping it up no matter what I try to do. Often I end up doing too much insulin to compensate, (especially if it creeps up even higher an hour after I've done the correction). And then I've done too much and I'm rollercoastering for the rest of the day and feeling like a failure for not being able to manage the disease...which of course the docs all claim is easy peasey based on carbs and nothing else. So physical effect of a high, not really - emotional effect, yes. especially if it's a puzzler.
    • 13 hours, 16 minutes ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      My only reaction is feeling very irritable when I'm going low. Otherwise I have no other emotional changes when high or low.
    • 13 hours, 28 minutes ago
      Mick Martin likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Lows have a definite impact. After 68 years playing this game, I now need to rely on what the CGM tells me because I can't tell anymore. If something I've read/heard brings tears, I now know to check my bg. My CGM alerts are on vibrate because they annoy me, scare our cat and create a nuisance when I'm in public . Highs, on the other hand, are very frustrating. If possible, an injection of 1.5 - 2 u by syringe usually brings me into range faster than the pump.
    • 13 hours, 29 minutes ago
      Mick Martin likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I don't think there is a physical connection of low BG to mood, etc for me. It is psychological. I don't feel good about myself or my management.
    • 13 hours, 43 minutes ago
      Hark87 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I said a little bit, but that's my opinion. My husband might have had a different answer 🤣
    • 13 hours, 44 minutes ago
      Hark87 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Lows have a definite impact. After 68 years playing this game, I now need to rely on what the CGM tells me because I can't tell anymore. If something I've read/heard brings tears, I now know to check my bg. My CGM alerts are on vibrate because they annoy me, scare our cat and create a nuisance when I'm in public . Highs, on the other hand, are very frustrating. If possible, an injection of 1.5 - 2 u by syringe usually brings me into range faster than the pump.
    • 13 hours, 44 minutes ago
      Hark87 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I am highly sensitive to my blood sugar levels so like you I know my sugar is going low before my CGM alerts me because I get anxious about anything and everything or I can’t read.
    • 13 hours, 44 minutes ago
      Hark87 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      When my blood sugar is low my anxiety is through the roof.
    • 14 hours ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Amen to that! I find myself irritated when my BG won’t come down after an hour, so I do the same thing, with the same result, You’d think after 60 years of this, I;d be more ‘adult’ in my management, but not so. Still beating up on myself when bugs aren’t in range. Xx many variables. Sometimes I just want to cash in my chips…..
    • 14 hours ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      Good point! Sometimes hard to tell if the blood sugar levels physiologically causing mood changes or just the stress and burden of trying to manage T1D non-stop. Both valid. I was having a persistent high the other day and thought with frustration how I'd been doing this for 27 years and still sometimes suck at it. With T1D, practice does not make perfect. It's endless guessing and troubleshooting.
    • 14 hours ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How much do you think your blood glucose levels impact your overall mood? (For example, being more likely to cry or feel sad when low, feeling irritable when glucose levels are high, etc.)
      I'd be interested to find out the difference in answers here between highs and lows. I would have said very much or moderately for lows for sure. They affect me with actual physical changes. Feeling floaty/tipsy, tingles in my hands and a tendency to snap more easily if someone asks me a question that I take the wrong way. Highs (which itself should be quantified - for me from a physical standpoint, I'd consider anything over 200 a high). These don't affect me physically, so I might have said not at all. But those occasional steady highs of 160 that won't go down - especially if I'm not eating anything to cause them - will make me anxious and grumpy. But that's an emotional response vs. physical to this annoying disease that sometimes doesn't follow the same set of rules from day to day. No food, but I'm having a bad day at work? T1 decides to make it even more challenging by spiking my blood sugar and keeping it up no matter what I try to do. Often I end up doing too much insulin to compensate, (especially if it creeps up even higher an hour after I've done the correction). And then I've done too much and I'm rollercoastering for the rest of the day and feeling like a failure for not being able to manage the disease...which of course the docs all claim is easy peasey based on carbs and nothing else. So physical effect of a high, not really - emotional effect, yes. especially if it's a puzzler.
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    Do you currently use or have you ever used Lyumjev?

    Home > LC Polls > Do you currently use or have you ever used Lyumjev?
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    Sarah Howard

    Sarah Howard (nee Tackett) has dedicated her career to supporting the T1D community ever since she was diagnosed with T1D while in college in May 2013. Since then, she has worked for various diabetes organizations, focusing on research, advocacy, and community-building efforts for people with T1D and their loved ones. Sarah is currently the Senior Marketing Manager at T1D Exchange. Sarah and her husband live in NYC with their cat Gracie. In her spare time, she enjoys doing comedy, taking dance classes, visiting art museums, and exploring different neighborhoods in NYC.

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    20 Comments

    1. connie ker

      What is this????? You should at least include the answer to this question!!!!!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. Daniel Alvarez

      A new fast(er)-acting insulin, presumably quicker than lispro or aspart (novolog/humalog). Appreciate it if ppl can share their experiences with Lyumjev…

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Rick Martin

      Yes, my endocrinologist is diabetic and on an insulin pump and found much better control with it as it acted sooner. Me, on the other hand, I always have a very slow and long lasting affect with short acting insulin. Even Afrezza (inhaled insulin) would take over an hour to go into effect and then last up to 5 hours. Lyumjev acts the same way. Not sure what it is about my system, but I just have to work with it.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Kristen Clifford

      I’d never even heard of it until I saw this question.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. Thomas Hatton

      No, but I want to try it.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Ernie Richmann

      Have no knowledge of Lyumjev.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Jana Foley

      I had never heard of it until seeing this question.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Kristine Warmecke

      No and I won’t since I’m allergic to Humalog. Not worth the hives.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Kristine Warmecke

      For those asking what it is? It’s Humalog for injection only per the website, in two strength’s U-100 & U-200, for adults only. https://www.lyumjev.com/?utm_source=google&utm_id=go_cmp-10033518424_adg-101101913476_ad-443254394558_kwd-958013199047_dev-c_ext-_sig-Cj0KCQiAtqL-BRC0ARIsAF4K3WEUJauradCYSq-L4QJJ8WMlL2eiR0Fd1gTSrcTiqHk0u62K62NWJPYaAgdZEALw_wcB&gclid=Cj0KCQiAtqL-BRC0ARIsAF4K3WEUJauradCYSq-L4QJJ8WMlL2eiR0Fd1gTSrcTiqHk0u62K62NWJPYaAgdZEALw_wcB

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. john36m

      Just started it yesterday in a pump. I had no luck with Fiasp in a pump, but it did work for bringing down highs when injected. Too soon for definite conclusions, but so far Lyumjev has been fantastic. 95% in range. I’ll need to check the infusion site in 2 days to see if there is any irritation, but everything is great so far. My total daily dose is pretty low, so that may help.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Linda Murphy

      Looks interesting. Called company, rep didn’t know much. Is it okay to put in a pump or not (2 different impressions from comments here). Is it okay to use as a basal insulin (since its fast acting)? If not, can one inject at mealtime and use pump for basal rate (I use Humalog and they are supposedly the same, with Lyumjev having an additional component for fast action).

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Clare Fishman

      I got a sample pen from my endocrinologist. I am using an Omnipod pump, but like to have a pen for stubborn highs or a carby meal. Lyumjev works well for these occasions.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Sandra Norman

      I have been using it for about 2 months with Tandem Control IQ pump and for me it is working much better than Novolog or Fiasp. It lowers my BG very quickly and does not seem to stay in my system as long so no lagging lows, time in range has gone up. The only down side is I can feel it going in, and I have had some slight pain/redness at the infusion site, but it goes away and it is worth it for the better control.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Molly Jones

      ‘Never heard of Lyumjev. The only bolus insulin I have ever used is Novolog. I have been on Novolog solely for around 15 years now on my different insulin pumps.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Stephen Woodward

      CVS Phamacy won’t order it. Like many things at CVS, you’re a diabetic you don’t need that. Won’t order correct number of test strips, alternative insulin or they create their own Phamacy policy that can harm you.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. eve seliger

      What is it?

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Carol Cunningham

      Haven’t even heard of it, will be asking my endocrinologist for a sample tomorrow.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Linda Fast

      I love this insulin! It works so much faster than any other I’ve used in 40 years of T1D. I use it in my pump with zero occlusions. It does burn a bit when it’s going in, but it is so worth it. I’ll use it for the rest of my life.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. Sharon Gerdik

      My Endo gave me a vial to sample. I’m using it via syringe now and then. Tried it for the first time on TG and felt that would be a true test. Never went over 120 so I was impressed. I’m on the Tandem x2 pump so decided not to give it a try in my pump. I turn off my Control IQ when I take a syringe dose and leave CIQ off for a few hours then resume it again. I use Novolog in my pump. I stopped using Humalog over 15 years ago since it irritated my infusion site. I learned that was due to Zinc in the insulin. I noticed redness at my syringe site with Lyumjev and assumed Zinc was the culprit with this insulin as well. It worked great on Thanksgiving but it didn’t do as well for my cereal breakfast. Maybe nothing works for cereal, who knows. I do feel it is super acting, more so than Fiasp, which I was given a pen to try. It is not pump approved as yet to my knowledge. Not sure if it would be compatible with my Tandem since they have a different dosing method. Technology keeps changing and progressing well. It’s a Blessing for Diabetics at this time IMO.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Cheryl Seibert

      I tried Lyumjev in my pump only for 3 days. The quick effect was wonderful, but I had severe burning and lasting redness and soreness at the infusion site. I have the same/worse reaction to Fiasp which did NOT show any timing improvement, so I’m back to Novolog in the pump and over 85% TIR so I’m content.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

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