Showing posts with label diabetes type 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diabetes type 1. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Pitter Patter

Yup, you guessed it.

This post is about feet. My feet in particular.

I bought some health socks that I chanced upon at the polyclinic last Monday but I think I may have bought the wrong one. =(


Yes, I have been worrying about my feet for some time now because of the new but not exactly good experiences I have been having with them.

First, there is neuropathic pain. Secondly, I think I am losing a bit of sensation on them. Thirdly, I have been having cold feet which I've not had before. No, it's not nervousness but rather the nerves. Get the joke? No? Nevermind...

It has a lot to do with blood circulation, I would say.

The easiest way to see whether enough blood is circulating to your extremities is to see how fast things are growing. Fortunately, my hair still grows quite fast but that's because I think a lot, so that explains all that hair. And when I had debridement to my right hand the other day, and the surgeon removed some nerves there, a fingernail there did not grow at all for weeks. 

Unfortunately, the nails on my feet have been growing very slowly lately, and my left foot is still a little bit swollen.

Doesn't help too that the graft wound on my calf is taking forever to heal, and that is a worrying sign indeed.

So, that's why I bought those darn socks but today I realized that although it was marked as a medical sock and I presumed there was 35% of the silver X-static fiber - apparently I was wrong and I think I may been misled by the information put up at the polyclinic.

The one I bought (MS04-MGL) only has 14% of the silver fiber and I only realized it after reading it on the official website and after retrieving the box from my rubbish bin. I did not read the fine print at the back of the box where it is stated, apparently. =P

But anyway, good news is I got it at a discounted price of S$32 (website price is S$39.95) and the silver fiber apparently works and it has sort of cleared the eczema on my feet.

This is due to the fact that according to the website -
X-Static® offers both anti-microbial and anti-odor performance by inhibiting growth of bacteria and fungi, and it neutralizes ammonia and denatured proteins. Bacteria are only one cause of body odor. Ammonia and denatured proteins are also significant contributors to odor. Incredibly, both ammonia and denatured proteins bind most readily to silver.

Because silver is on the outside of the fiber, X-Static® allows for immediate binding with ammonia and denatured proteins – resulting in instant odor reduction.

Well, I guess I have to buy the one meant for diabetic foot care because it is supposed to promote blood circulation and that's my primary objective ya.

It is way more expensive at almost S$70 but I guess I don't exactly have a choice if I still want to walk around with my own feet for a long time. It'll certainly be worth if, if it helps to prevent any complications to my feet.

Obviously I can't just rely on the socks alone but it has got lots to do with having a tight control on my blood sugar, washing my feet carefully and inspecting them for anomalies every single day without fail and to go to the doctor at the first sign of infection, and to not walk barefoot anywhere, even in the house.

It is really depressing to see those amputees being wheeled around at the hospital, and it scared me silly last Saturday when my father said he just received news that my auntie's husband also had just got one of his feet amputated due to diabetes. =(

So, for now my strategy would be trying my best to improve my blood circulation and of course the first step is to make sure I have enough exercise, and this is important for circulation and general health. I will try to walk as much as possible whenever I feel fine, and in the long run maybe I should go for acupressure and acupuncture sessions at the TCM shop. So, Marko - we will discuss about this ya?

Pray for me.

=)

Thursday, January 22, 2009

I Can't Believe I Am Actually Entertaining Thoughts Of It

In a futile attempt last night to reset my body clock and sleep early, I ended up with only 3 hours of sleep. It was an epic fail, to say the least.

Man, that sounds especially fatalistic (not even sure if this is the correct word) to someone who's usually optimistic like me.

I couldn't sleep the whole night, no matter what I did, and finally settled down roughly at 7.30am after an hour of music and an hour of computer gaming (yes, I actually ran out of ideas). I thought music could calm me down and gaming would wear me out but I think I slept due to the fact I've been sleeping at roughly 6am for the past few days. It was just my circadian rhythm. It was late by one and a half hours today due to the brain stimulation due to the music and gaming.

So, I should be sleeping right now you say?

That's what I thought too but nooooo.... pain in my legs had to wake me up at 10.30am just now and it's the darn neuropathic pain again, the sort of pain which will go on like forever, attacking a particular, random area, coming every few seconds. No matter what I do, there's no way I can close my eyes and drift to sleep when this kind of pain comes.

So here I am, typing this stupid entry (I will go back to editing Jacqueline's wedding photographs after this) because it is of the rare times I feel defeated and wishing for all this to end.

Yes, I was actually entertaining thoughts of suicide the past hour.

=(

Monday, October 27, 2008

A Life Less Ordinary



That's my right hand when they first opened the bandage up for cleaning, after I had to go for a debridement due to an infection I got from having an IV drip plug.

Cool right? I could see right through my skin and down to the cartilage.

Hahahaha!!!

Now, I've a got a 3 inch centipede looking scar on that hand and some loss of sensation on my ring finger.

Damn!

Anyway, it's 8 days to D day.

No, I am not talking about the US presidential election (according to SNL, Obama will win definitely) but my triple CABG lah! Kekeke...

According to Wikipedia -

Coronary artery bypass surgery, also coronary artery bypass graft surgery, and colloquially heart bypass or bypass surgery is a surgical procedure performed to relieve angina and reduce the risk of death from coronary artery disease. Arteries or veins from elsewhere in the patient's body are grafted to the coronary arteries to bypass atherosclerotic narrowings and improve the blood supply to the coronary circulation supplying the myocardium (heart muscle). This surgery is usually performed with the heart stopped, necessitating the usage of cardiopulmonary bypass; techniques are available to perform CABG on a beating heart, so-called "off-pump" surgery.

Triple Cabbage
Huh? Bypass?! What happened? I thought only old people have to go for bypass?

SHHH!!! You ignorant people! Go and take a number and join the line! I'll answer you when it's your turn. Hehehe..

There are still many, MANY people who have very simplistic views about A LOT of things, so it's forgivable. =P

Well, I too once blamed my poor father for my poor health, asking why I inherited a defective gene and all that.

BUT I have learnt, that a lot of times, people with Type I Diabetes may get it due to a multitude of reasons.

My best guess is -

1) I was predisposed to it genetically

2) I was an overweight child and

3) I must have been exposed to some bacteria or virus that made my immune system attack various cells in my body, including insulin-producing cells.

A Turning Point
I can still remember vividly, when I was barely in my pre-teens, a blockheaded 13 year old still reveling in street soccer and hanging out with the boys. I didn't care about studying, managed to scrape through PSLE with a pathetic 226 average, and struggling through Secondary 2 (or was it Sec 1?)

Suddenly, I was losing weight rapidly (more than 20 kg I remember), not eating lunch at the school canteen, was constantly craving for fruits and ice-cream (basically sweet stuff), urinating frequently, and falling asleep as soon as I reached home from school.

Then my father got worried and brought me to SGH (I think) and the doctors said if I was brought in two days later, it'd have 2 days been too late.

??!!!!

ps Do you know that there so thousands of children, some as young as TWO, in the world who have Type I diabetes and have to be injected with insulin everyday like I do?

Moving On
Sometimes it is sad to know that people are not really educated about their own-selves, their own bodies, their own existences.

It's sadder to know that people continue to live in ignorance though.

I must admit, that the human body is an extremely complex mechanism, a design of mind-boggling physical and mental structure. A human organism is very advanced indeed.

The human adult alone has about 10 trillion cells in its body.

It's really tough to also know that diabetes, particularly Type I diabetes, has a lot of complications accompanying it, more so if it's poorly controlled.

All these complications arise from events that happen at the cellular level, a lot of it hard to control because you don't even know what's going on. Some complications only show symptoms when a particular organ is down to its last 40% in function, like kidney disease.

I mean, if you don't study medicine, how would you know these kind of things?! =(

So, a lot of people rely on hearsay, from the mouths of equally-blissfully ignorant people, and form dangerously simplistic ideas about life, and its dramatic tragedies.

THANK GOD FOR THE INTERNET..

... and Wikipedia, of course! =)

Well, even the doctors can be wrong sometimes. I was initially diagnosed as having Type II diabetes and was given metformin, but I guess they performed some albumin or C-peptide test and subsequently I was put on an insulin regime.

I Will Prevail
Well, I am coping better with the thought of having to undergo 6 hours of an open heart operation, thanks to all my wonderful friends and family who have assured me that everything's going to be all right.

I know I am still extremely worried about my current stage of CKD (Chronic Kidney Disease). It is currently Stage III, as in borderline kidney function. Read more about the renal function here...

I am definitely NOT looking forward to having to go for a dialysis of some sort maybe 3 years down the road.

Contrary to popular belief, a kidney transplant is not really the way to go either.

You'll have a really hard time with your immune system trying to fight and reject the new organs, anti-rejection drugs will cause you to fall sick more often and more easily and you have to take these blardy expensive drugs for the rest of your life, and a typical lifespan of a transplanted kidney is said to be 5 years.

Right now, the kidneys don't feel too good. In fact, I have been worried since the renal doctors ordered a coronary angiogram to find out why my heart ECHO shows only 25% LEVF function. In fact, the latest creatinine level in my body was an alarming 267 μmol/L (110 is the normal level for a healthy adult male), after the angiogram. I hope my kidneys don't give out soon. The contrast agent (iodine in this case) used in angiograms have a high risk of rendering the kidneys totally non-functional, and permanently. =(

Well, yes I know the only way to go is to have a positive and healthy mind, to go on a strict diet of healthy food and to exercise but I am currently finding it extremely hard to balance a positive mindset while knowing all these facts about my conditions.

And I still have to contend with people blaming government bodies and pharmaceutical companies teaming up to bleed money, huge amounts of money from the sick public, and rejecting new applications for new studies into new therapies that may hinder these corporations from making more and more money! Gosh! Read more about this here..

Ok, ok, everybody dies. That I know.

The thing is, I am not afraid of dying.

If I die, I will no longer have to bear all this pain and worry and mental stress, and I will know for sure if Elvis is dead or still alive somewhere out there in Vegas and performing to unsuspecting audiences. Hahahahaha!!!

But it will be really nice to still continue to live, be with friends, share my experience, be a living example to many people, while hopefully be in better health that now.

With new and promising experimental treatments on the horizon, like the Islet Cell Transplantation, I really hope to contribute to society by taking part in these clinical trials, all in the hope of cure and prevention of diseases in the human race.

So, there.. I am not in a quest for immortality but it'd be really nice to live long enough to travel and see more of our beautiful earth, meet more nice people (not only pretty girls ok) and make new friends.

Sure I wont be able to eat as much wonderful food but life will be too irresistible for me to compromise for just food!

=)