A Corpus Christi Parent Dealing With Diabetes

Welcome to the new site of "A Corpus Christi Parent Dealing With Diabetes". Being a Parent is hard, but when your child has Diabetes sometimes it pushes you to the brink! This website was created because somedays you really need someone to help and somedays you just need someone to listen.

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Location: Corpus Christi, Texas, United States

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Scar tissue

I just wanted to vent about scar tissue! I just changed my son's infusion site and it is getting very hard after 6 years to find usable skin that isn't scar tissue. Yes the obvious would be to move to another area of his body, but change is hard. Especially when you've found someplace that's comfortable (relatively speaking) and dependable (at least when it was fresh skin). Now the thought of having to get use to someplace new is inconceivable is his little world. Scar tissue be damned! There has got to be a fresh 6mm patch around here somewhere. Why can't we come up with something that won't hurt, or leave scars! Scientist hurry up! I just hope his little hinny holds out until then.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

A New Direction

Many years ago, I helped start a support group for parents who had kids with diabetes. My son was very young when he was diagnosed back then, just 3 years old. We had a one year old daughter and were still in that new parent mode. After the diagnosis we realized the lifestyle we had to lead was going to be very overwhelming. It was. Gathering as much information as possible, at that time, seemed to be the best coping mechanism I could find. The Internet was a source of both information and comfort. The more I learned about Diabetes the more in control I began to feel. Each piece of information became part of the arsenal I would use to in this "war" against this disease.
When I started the support group I thought the more information I can share with, and learn from others would help me win my battle. But it wasn't like that. People get tired of war. I got tired of fighting. After 8 years my spirit was not as strong and I began to compromise. If I can't win, maybe there's a way we can just peacefully live with this. I began to look at the newly diagnosed families with a smug air of maturity. They are so young and naive. After a few years they too will see that this is a battle you cannot win. This made running a support group very hard for me. There was this constant internal battle between that idealist "Conquer the Disease" rally call and that "day to day living" acceptance of fate. So the support group fell apart. And this website was ignored.
There is a big misconception out there that if you have a disease you need a support group. I don't agree. I think you just need support. Where ever you may find it. I had forgotten that I once found mine here. That's why I decided to come back. So the new direction of this website is support. Whenever I find anything that may be helpful to parents dealing with diabetes I will post that here, to help pass it along. But I will also post anything that I need to share to help me get through the day to day stuff. Things I need to talk about, but can't with someone who doesn't understand. Some days I need support. Some days I just need someone to listen.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Roche Diagnostics Recalls Some of its ACCU-CHEK® Aviva Meters in the U.S. Due to a Potential Electronic Malfunction

Indianapolis, November 11, 2005

Roche Diagnostics Recalls Some of its ACCU-CHEK® Aviva Meters in the U.S. Due to a Potential Electronic Malfunction

In cooperation with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, Roche Diagnostics has voluntarily sent people with diabetes, physicians, and pharmacists a letter informing them of a recall of some of its ACCU-CHEK® Aviva blood glucose meters, due to a potential electronic malfunction which will cause the meter to render itself inoperable or may cause the meter to show an erroneous result. This issue applies to ACCU-CHEK Aviva meters with serial numbers 52500000000 through 52510999999. Aviva test strips are not affected by this recall. To date, no adverse event has been confirmed in the United States, in relation to this issue.

People with diabetes, health care professionals, pharmacists, and distributors have been instructed that if they have a meter with these serial numbers, they should contact 1-888-591-5084 for a complimentary product replacement. This information is also available on the ACCU-CHEK website at www.accu-chek.com.
For more information please contact:

Doyia Turner
Corporate Communications
Roche Diagnostics
Phone 317-521-7252
Cell: 317-694-0335
Doyia.turner@roche.com


Another Route for a Cure?

Test will try to fend off type 1 diabetes
By Warren King
Thursday, November 24, 2005

Seattle Times medical reporter

Seattle researchers will soon begin testing a way to stave off diabetes by tripping up the immune system with the help of mouse cells.

Scientists at the Pacific Northwest Research Institute (PNRI) will be part of a national effort to see if they can stop type 1 diabetes — or at least delay its progression — by derailing the immune cells that attack the body's insulin producers.

The experimental therapy "has a reasonable shot at being the first building block toward a cure," said Dr. Bill Hagopian, director of PNRI's work on the therapy. In early trials, the treatment has enabled patients to continue making a portion of the insulin they need for up to two years.

Type 1 diabetes, formerly known as juvenile diabetes, afflicts more than 1 million people in the United States. It develops when the immune system destroys the cells that produce insulin, which the body needs to process sugar.

Most cases of type 1 diabetes develop in childhood or young adulthood, and patients become dependent on injected insulin for the rest of their lives. Complications include heart disease, stroke, blindness, kidney damage and amputations. Many sufferers have shortened lives.

Scientists in Seattle and four other cities are testing the notion that if they treat patients within about six months of a diabetes diagnosis, they can prevent destruction of all the insulin-producing "beta" cells.

"We want to get in there early to extend the 'honeymoon' phase," when about 10 percent to 25 percent of the patient's beta cells are alive and still functioning, Hagopian said.

Diabetes study



To learn more, including how to enroll, call the Pacific Northwest Research Institute, 888-324-2140, or Benaroya Research Institute, 800-888-4187.
The treatment would not be effective for the more-common type 2 diabetes, which usually begins in adulthood and affects more than 19 million people in the United States. It is not caused by an immune-system problem but develops when the pancreas gradually loses its ability to produce insulin.

Researchers at PNRI will test the type 1 treatment on 13 newly diagnosed patients, ages 15 to 30. They will be among a total 70 patients nationwide, including at Columbia University; the University of California, San Francisco; the University of Colorado; and the University of Florida. The Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle also is planning to join the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health.

And that's where the mice come in.

The treatment relies on the rodents to help make a drug containing the protective antibodies:

These "monoclonal antibodies" are taken from laboratory-preserved mouse cells, then altered to prevent a human allergic reaction and tailored to seek out key human immune cells.

The antibodies then are mass-produced and injected into the patients, where they "neutralize" the immune cells that otherwise would orchestrate a wide attack on the insulin-producing beta cells.

Scientists believe that protecting those remaining beta cells will decrease the chances of long-term complications of diabetes, especially with repeated treatments. They also hope that the therapy eventually may "reset" the immune system, permanently ending the attacks on beta cells.

In a best-case scenario, the beta cells then would begin to multiply slowly, perhaps with the help of hormonal treatments, and eventually return to normal levels, essentially curing the diabetes, Hagopian said.

To read the rest of the Article go to Seattle Times Local News

Paradigm® users are now free to choose their own infusion set brand


Why should you be forced to use an infusion set you aren't comfortable with? The new THINSet® 1.8 and 3.0 ml Syringe Reservoirs are engineered to accept any infusion set that uses a standard Luer fitting. This means you now have a choice when it comes to infusion sets. Although the THINSet reservoirs may look different from the original, rest assured, these reservoirs are designed exclusively for use with your Paradigm® pump.



The freedom to choose is yours. Make the right choice with ADR products.

FEATURES:
Reservoir 326A is compatible with Medtronic Paradigm® 511 and 512 pumps
Reservoir 332A is compatible with Medtronic Paradigm® 712 pumps
½" 22-gauge needle with protective cover
Bold, easy-to-read barrel markings
Smooth-travel plunger with positive stop at barrel end
Standard Luer fittings compatible with all Luer infusion sets
Made in the USA
Taken from: Applied Diabetes Research Inc. Website visit for more info

Monday, November 21, 2005

Oral Insulin? Maybe one day!

Diabetics could one day take their insulin in the form of a capsule rather than by injection after a trial in patients revealed promising results.
British-based company Diabetology said early trials in a small group of eight patients showed the insulin from the capsules could be successfully absorbed by the body. Charity Diabetes UK welcomed the results, but said further bigger trials were needed to make sure the capsules were as effective as possible.
The trial of eight male patients with Type 1 diabetes was carried out at Bradford Teaching Hospital and involved giving the patients the oral insulin called Capsulin. Their blood glucose and plasma insulin concentrations were then measured every 15 minutes for up to eight hours. Dr Donald Whitelaw, a consultant physician in diabetes and endocrinology at Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, said: "The opportunity to have insulin available in oral form has been a goal for researchers and people with diabetes for many years.
"This study has shown that Capsulin, studied here for the first time in people with Type 1 - insulin dependent - diabetes, produces an increase in plasma insulin while maintaining or even lowering blood glucose. "Capsulin therefore provides a means of delivering insulin via the gut in a form which is acceptable and easy to take. "Future studies will establish its suitability for use in everyday medical practice." Diabetology are now working on further trials of Capsulin in both patients with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
Taken from
Insulin capsule hopes for diabetics
18:44pm 15th November 2005
Daily Mail 24 hrs a day

Monday, October 17, 2005

SU chemistry professor develops breakthrough technology for non-invasive, pain-free


By Carol Kim october 11, 2005
A Syracuse University chemistry professor has patented a device that aims to make painful fingerstick testing of glucose levels a thing of the past for diabetics. To address the problems of invasive blood glucose testing, Professor Joseph Chaiken, of the Department of Chemistry in The College of Arts and Sciences, has developed the LighTouch, which accurately monitors glucose levels without a single drop of blood.
The novel procedure uses a laser to measure spectroscopic signals in blood while the blood is still in the capillaries. Abnormal levels of blood components, such as glucose, can be detected without pricking a person’s finger.

To read the complete Article please go to Syracuse University News or Light Touch Medical

What will they think of next?


With technology raceing ahead at record speeds it was just a matter of time before your cell phone could do just about anything. Now LG technology has created a cell phone that will test your Blood Sugar! Yes, that's right, TEST YOUR BLOOD SUGAR!

LG KP8400 cellphone with blood tester for diabetics
Posted Oct 8, 2004, 9:40 AM ET by Joshua Fruhlinger
Related entries: Cellphones, Misc. Gadgets

In an unusual, but sensible, marriage of technologies, LG has released the KP8400 cellphone that doubles as a blood test for diabetics. The phone includes a tester into which users can place a blood test drop on a strip, place the strip in a special reader on the phone (located near the phone’s battery pack), and get insulin and blood readings on the phone display. Readings can then be uploaded to an online database for retrieval later on. Because of the added technology the rest of the phone isn’t anything to write home about, but it’s more than sufficient: 262k color TFT display, CIF camera, and 64 voice polyphonic sound.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Guide to Healthy Restaurant Eating


The Guide to Healthy Restaurant Eating, Third Edition, by Hope S. Warshaw, MMsc, RD, CDE. (American Diabetes Association, 2005). 732 pages. Softcover, $17.95. ISBN 1580402461 is now available. The third edition of Hope Warshaw's Guide to Healthy Restaurant Eating has over 5,000 menu items (up from 3,500 in the second edition) from more than 60 restaurant chains (up from 55). With this book, eating out doesn't have to be a guessing game. Like donuts for breakfast? The full menu from Dunkin' Donuts is here (jelly filled donuts have 32 grams of carbs and 11 grams of fat). You'll find all the hamburger, chicken, seafood, submarine sandwich, pizza, and Mexican food chains, as well as family style sit-down restaurants like Bennigan's, Denny's, and Ruby Tuesday. If you eat out a lot, this book will help you make informed food choices. While the book is small in size, it weighs 1 1/4 pounds, so you may want to plan before you go out to eat. (FROM CWD Cookbooks and Nutrional Books selection)

ADA Walk Saturday

Don't Forget the ADA "Dancing Through Downtown" Fundraiser walk will be this Saturday 7:30am. Walk will start at 8:30 leaving From the Whataburger Field through Downtown and back. It will be a fun filled event that will raise lots of money for many local Diabetes events and education. Call your local ADA office for more info.

Sunday, September 11, 2005

Meeting This Wednesday Night!!

Don't Forget! This wednesday night (Sept. 14th) at 6:30pm-7:30pm we will have a suport group meeting in the Diabetes Clinic. I hope you all can make it. We will have child life services available to watch the kids if you need to bring them. See you There!

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Support Group Meeting For September

I want to apologize for the absence of Posts from the last couple of months. As you all know, sometimes life just get so busy any free time you have becomes precious. The end of summer and the beginning of school was a very busy time for me and I had to chose what to let slide. I choose the website. There has been lots going on in the Diabetes community these last couple of months. First of all we have a support group meeting coming up, and I hope you can attend. Second, both ADA and JDRF are starting up organize their fund raising events for October. I will post contact info and details for both, in another posting. I hope all your kids had as good of a time at Lion's Camp as my son Max did. It was his second year and he thought it was a blast! School has started and we are back to the routine. I hope everyone has had a smooth transition and are using the new Diabetes School Bill to help ensure your kids are safe and healthy at school. Know you and your child's rights. If you have questions you can contact you local ISD to find out how they are meeting the new standards of care for Diabetic students. Our next support group meeting will be September 14th at 6:30-7:30 at the Diabetes Clinic at Driscoll. Dr. Ponder is working on getting a great speaker for the group, Mr. Joe Solowiejczyk. He attended the last Diabetes Cruise and would love to come talk with our group. It should be a great presentation. Other topics we will discuss will be the new school bill, Local fund raising events and in light of the tragedy of Katrina, emergency preparations in case of a Hurricane. I hope you all can come. The next meeting will be around Nov/Dec. Just in time for he Holidays. If you would like an email alert when the site has updated info, please send me you email address with the heading "CCPDD updates please!" and I will email you when updates are posted. I appreciate your continued support of visiting my website and will continue to work to keep updating the site with information to help us and our kids.

Thanks
Kim Schmid

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Patientinform.org, Free Online Information Resource

Atlanta, GA, and Alexandria, VA - July 6, 2005 - Three of the nation's leading voluntary health organizations have joined a group of scholarly and medical publishers to launch a pilot program to provide patients, caregivers, and the general public direct access to medical research on some of the most serious diseases and medical conditions. The free online information resource called patientINFORM, will provide consumers with the ability to read the latest original research articles published in medical and scientific journals, find assistance in interpreting the information and access additional materials on the Web sites of participating voluntary health organizations.
ADA InDiabetes Toady July6,2005

Visit Patientinform for more information

Another Promising Break-thru for a Cure????

Anti-CD3 antibody, or ChAglyCD3
JDRF-funded researchers in Europe found that short-term treatment with a drug called an anti-CD3 antibody can preserve beta cell function in patients with recent onset diabetes for up to 18 months, decreasing the need for insulin and paving the way for better metabolic control of diabetes.

The finding, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine could lead to interventions that delay or reduce the risk of type 1 diabetes and related complications such as eye, nerve, and kidney disease.

"These exciting results provide enormous hope that we can preserve residual beta cell function by modulating the autoimmune attack and in fact change the clinical course of type 1 diabetes," said JDRF Executive Vice President for Research Richard Insel, M.D.

"There is no other current treatment that can actually change the clinical course once the disease has begun. This study shows we are on the right track, and opens the door for researchers to target this treatment specifically to individuals who would receive the most benefit."

Patients receiving the anti-CD3 antibody, or ChAglyCD3, for six days continued to produce their own insulin and needed less sup-plemental insulin to maintain normal blood glucose levels com-pared with patients who received a placebo. This benefit was apparent up through 18 months after the treatment, suggesting the protective effect is lasting--although for how long is not yet known. Moreover, side effects were minor and short-lived, including flu-like symptoms.


The gene, called Roquin
JDRF-funded researchers in Australia have identified a novel gene that regulates the immune system by acting as a backup safety mechanism to keep harmful immune cells in check. If the gene, called Roquin, is mutated, the natural brake on the immune system is removed and autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes can develop.

Discovering this entirely new pathway through which autoimmune disease may occur could open the door to treatment strategies for type 1 diabetes. For example, boosting Roquin's protective effects could make islet transplantation safer or arrest type 1 diabetes in its earliest stage, before islets are destroyed.


To read the rest of each article Subscribe to recieve JDRF Research E-Newsletter send email to: info@jdrf.org Please include "Subscribe Research E-Newsletter" in the subject line

Thursday, June 30, 2005

New Drug Slows Type 1 Diabetes

An experimental drug slows the course of type 1, or juvenile, diabetes and one day might prevent it altogether, researchers say.

A study in today's New England Journal of Medicine involved 80 patients recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, a form of the disease in which patients can't make insulin. It usually is diagnosed in children or young adults, and it affects 1million to 2 million Americans.

Researchers in Belgium, Germany, England and France gave half the group infusions for six days of a drug that stops the immune system's destruction of beta cells in the pancreas, which make insulin.

They found that the drug preserved beta cells, so patients needed less supplemental insulin even 18 months after the treatment. Those who got a placebo continued to need increasing amounts of insulin and have fewer functioning beta cells.
Go to ADA E-News Now

Sunday, June 26, 2005

Encapsulated Islet Cell Transplants Avoid Host Immune Rejection

A technology that has been under development for several years -- encapsulating islets cells with polyethylene glycol -- may soon obviate the need for immunosuppression in islet cell transplantation, according to a presentation at the American Diabetes Association's 65th Annual Scientific Sessions in San Diego, California. The net result will be effective control of blood glucose levels in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes without the danger of hypoglycemia or graft rejection, lead presenter Dr. David Scharp told Reuters Health. Dr. Scharp is chief scientific officer and executive vice president of research and development at Novocell, Inc. in Irvine California.
Taken from ADA online Diabetes E-News now

Monday, June 20, 2005

Accu-Chek® Multiclix Lancet Device

San Diego, June 11, 2005 - Today at the American Diabetes Association Scientific Sessions in San Diego, California, Indianapolis-based Roche Diagnostics, a leader in diabetes care products and services, exhibited its new Accu-Chek® Multiclix lancet device. The Accu-Chek Multiclix lancet device is the first lancing device with a patented, preloaded, 6-lancet drum which provides more convenience and improves safety by reducing accidental finger-sticks of handling individual lancets. With no lancets to see or handle, a patented cam-driven design, 11 different depth settings and alternate site testing, the Accu-Chek Multiclix system is the least painful testing option1.

Visit Children with Diabetes website

Help for Families without health insurance

Families without health insurance can enroll in Together Rx Access
to save money on diabetes supplies, including OneTouch Ultra and
UltraSmart systems and test strips; FreeStyle and Flash systems and
test strips; Precision Xtra systems, blood glucose test strips, and
ketone test strips; and Lantus.
Visit Together RX Access

Recall of Accusure Insulin Syringes 1cc 28 Gauge 1/2 Inch 100's.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -- Huntsville, AL -- June 14, 2005 -- Qualitest Pharmaceuticals, Inc., today has issued a voluntary nationwide recall of Accusure Insulin Syringes 1cc, 28 Gauge l/2 Inch, distributed between October 2004 and June 2005. There may be 1cc syringes which are mislabeled as 1/2 cc syringes on the plastic inner wrap holding 10 individual syringes, which could potentially result in confusion by the patient or caregiver, resulting in an incorrect dose or amount being administered.

Visit FDA Recall Press Release

A new Spanish-language Diabetes web site

Diabetes Informate is a new Spanish-language web site with diabetes
information. See also Celebrities Featured On New Spanish-language
Website Share Experiences With Diabetes.
Visit: Diabetes Informate