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    • 3 hours, 14 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 9 hours, 49 minutes ago
      Bill Williams likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      Knowledge is power. Imagine depending on how much sugar your kidneys dump in your urine to know if you were high or low. Imagine having to sharpen a steel needle and boil a glass syringe each morning as part of your routine. That was my past.
    • 10 hours, 17 minutes ago
      Pam Hamilton likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      Having lived with T1D before most of the technology that is available today, I said that technology "EXTREMELY" improved the quality of my life. Before blood test strips, insulin pumps, continuous glucose monitors, A1c's, time-in-range, and GMI's, I was a walking zombie for 25 years. I was living in a fog, with everyday a bad day. I was constantly fighting days-long low blood sugars. It was not until the insulin pump came along that the quality of my life changed (extremely) for the better.
    • 11 hours, 27 minutes ago
      Ahh Life likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      I understand what you are saying - stick to the data collected by you and your technology. But it made me pause, because data that you are not verifying can be easily manipulated. I worked for a university registrar. We would have space studies done to see if we had enough classrooms. I always asked what the goal was: did we want it to say we had enough classrooms (in that case I would run the report from 8am through 10pm). Or did we want the outcome to be we needed classrooms (in which case I would run the data from 9am through 4pm).
    • 12 hours, 52 minutes ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      Having lived with T1D before most of the technology that is available today, I said that technology "EXTREMELY" improved the quality of my life. Before blood test strips, insulin pumps, continuous glucose monitors, A1c's, time-in-range, and GMI's, I was a walking zombie for 25 years. I was living in a fog, with everyday a bad day. I was constantly fighting days-long low blood sugars. It was not until the insulin pump came along that the quality of my life changed (extremely) for the better.
    • 13 hours, 28 minutes ago
      TEH likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      Having lived with T1D before most of the technology that is available today, I said that technology "EXTREMELY" improved the quality of my life. Before blood test strips, insulin pumps, continuous glucose monitors, A1c's, time-in-range, and GMI's, I was a walking zombie for 25 years. I was living in a fog, with everyday a bad day. I was constantly fighting days-long low blood sugars. It was not until the insulin pump came along that the quality of my life changed (extremely) for the better.
    • 13 hours, 35 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      Having lived with T1D before most of the technology that is available today, I said that technology "EXTREMELY" improved the quality of my life. Before blood test strips, insulin pumps, continuous glucose monitors, A1c's, time-in-range, and GMI's, I was a walking zombie for 25 years. I was living in a fog, with everyday a bad day. I was constantly fighting days-long low blood sugars. It was not until the insulin pump came along that the quality of my life changed (extremely) for the better.
    • 13 hours, 37 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      I appreciate and am loyal to data. It teaches humility. In a superficial era rife with subjective truths, people latching onto beet juice or memory enhancers isn’t surprising. Stick to the data. 𖨆♡𖨆
    • 14 hours, 6 minutes ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      How much does your diabetes technology improve your quality of life?
      I appreciate and am loyal to data. It teaches humility. In a superficial era rife with subjective truths, people latching onto beet juice or memory enhancers isn’t surprising. Stick to the data. 𖨆♡𖨆
    • 1 day, 8 hours ago
      Fabio Gobeth likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      Generally, it only takes about 10 minutes,, if I treat promptly. I set my CGM to alarm at 85, so I have time to treat quickly. Even if I go lower than 70, I'm able to function pretty well,
    • 1 day, 9 hours ago
      Steve Rumble likes your comment at
      How often do you over-correct low glucose levels?
      Depends on how low. The lower the more likely. The response also varies. A pair of 4 gram sugar tabs can raise my Bg 60 points or none.
    • 1 day, 23 hours ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      It would depend on if it was blood sugar responsive. I currently have an A1c near 6 and don’t want to give up control.
    • 2 days, 5 hours ago
      Bruce Schnitzler likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I like having control over the amount of insulin I administer according to my diet and physical activity.
    • 2 days, 9 hours ago
      Molly Jones likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I responded "Unsure" because I'd need more information about this before I would be willing to try anything...
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      If it handled basal and bolus correctly, where my time in range was 80-90% and I only had to do one shot a week that would be amazing
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      Would this be a basal insulin? How would meal-time insulin be administered? And how would fluctuating insulin needs (day vs night, sedentary vs active) be managed with a single dose? I have many questions that outweigh the possible convenience of a single injection (if that’s what this question is about).
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I responded "Unsure" because I'd need more information about this before I would be willing to try anything...
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I like having control over the amount of insulin I administer according to my diet and physical activity.
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I said moderately because being on Medicare, I’d need much more information such as how many weeks would I be able to have on hand without additional prescriptions? Would I still need some kind of preauthorization once per year that’s a hassle getting? How long would it stay good - the same amount of time? Would the pump take a week’s worth or how does that work with pump supplies?
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      eherban1 likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I'm MDI and if we're talking basal it isn't a big deal to me. Now if we're talking fast acting, that's a much different story!
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      Would this be a basal insulin? How would meal-time insulin be administered? And how would fluctuating insulin needs (day vs night, sedentary vs active) be managed with a single dose? I have many questions that outweigh the possible convenience of a single injection (if that’s what this question is about).
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I responded "Unsure" because I'd need more information about this before I would be willing to try anything...
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I like having control over the amount of insulin I administer according to my diet and physical activity.
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I responded "Unsure" because I'd need more information about this before I would be willing to try anything...
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      If insulin became available in a once-weekly formulation, how interested would you be?
      I'm MDI and if we're talking basal it isn't a big deal to me. Now if we're talking fast acting, that's a much different story!
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    Do you live with any sexual side effects of type 1 diabetes? If you’re comfortable, please share more in the comments.

    Home > LC Polls > Do you live with any sexual side effects of type 1 diabetes? If you’re comfortable, please share more in the comments.
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    Samantha Walsh

    Samantha Walsh has lived with type 1 diabetes for over five years since 2017. After her T1D diagnosis, she was eager to give back to the diabetes community. She is the Community and Partner Manager for T1D Exchange and helps to manage the Online Community and recruit for the T1D Exchange Registry. Prior to T1D Exchange, Samantha fundraised at Joslin Diabetes Center. She graduated from the University of Massachusetts with a Bachelors degree in sociology and early childhood education.

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    16 Comments

    1. Bob Durstenfeld

      I developed ED decades ago, the available meds worked for a while, but alas, no longer.
      However, it was an early indicator of heart related issues.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. Don P

      the answer all depends on whom is answering, myself & or partner & atmosphere …. Hmmmmm. …..some things are inevitable after 70 yrs of T1

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Patricia Dalrymple

      A lot of sexual side effects have to do with menopause in women. I read an article recently in support of HRT but was never offered it or didn’t consider it because I thought it increased the chances of breast cancer, and those are already high enough. The comments related to the article were hilarious and said that if men had to suffer like women do, there would be drugs available over the counter or in the water for free.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. rick phillips

      I have had a penile prosthesis, but after 20 years, it failed.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. Sue Martin

      I have had low libido but having a brain tumor, dialysis, and kidney transplant all play into it. I’ve talked to my OBGYN and read some books.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. mbulzomi@optonline.net

      Not many ways to define NO!

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Andrew Carpenter

      ED since 2013. Viagra doesn’t work, not for lack of trying. Just had to get used to not being intimate.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Anita Stokar

        🙁

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Anita Stokar

      Some symptoms can also be age related, so who knows what any actual cause is?

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Ahh Life

      73 years of T1D. This is probably the ONLY area that has not been affected. . . . Yet. ✌️

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Mick Martin

        @Ahh Life. Keep going, brother. 😉

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. PamK

      I have vaginal dryness, but I am told that this is due to menopause.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Mick Martin

      ED (Erectile Dysfunction) which started when I was about 27 or 28. (I’m now 66.)

      I’ve tried a multitude of different pills/tablets, penile injections, intraurethral suppositories, vacuum therapy device, Kegel exercises as advised by a physiotherapist, B12 tablets, as advised by a psycho-sexual counsellor, but none of them have been as good as I was expecting.

      On a side note, when I first began having penile injections, I was informed by the doctor that I must carry a note explaining what medication I was taking as it was still experimental in the UK … apparently, it was an injection that was used on horses and MIGHT cause extended erections that would need blood removing at a hospital to cause demutescence.

      The vacuum therapy device was the most useful.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Amanda Barras

      I have had low libido for several years. As well as intermittent circulation issues in regard to that area. I asked for help and advice and my GYN, who is also female, basically she said it’s all in my head and normal for woman no longer trying to reproduce. And my Endo suggested DHEA but I haven’t noticed any improvement since taking it.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Amanda Barras

        I also feel like women get ignored in this department like it only matters if you are a male with ED. Because that is the only sexual health question asked on my Endo’s intake questionnaires.

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Jeff Balbirnie

      If YOU have questions feel free… T1 is not for the shy or inhibited. Bring it, ask away researchers, white coats. Unclear, never gotten a formal diagnosis regardless of how many times I do and have asked. The white coats seem candidly disinterested on any level and frankly quasi puritanical?! I ask but they have no answer(s), nor referred me to anybody so I cannot be certain. I strongly suspect/believe there are issues, but unless or until diagnosed… cannot be certain

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    Do you live with any sexual side effects of type 1 diabetes? If you’re comfortable, please share more in the comments. Cancel reply

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