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View Full Version : hello, is anyone on a pump?


kattt
04-26-2006, 02:55 PM
I am new here. I really don't know my way around. I have a 5yr old with diabetes. We found out when he was a little older then 2yrs old. He is on lantus and humalog. the doctor thinks he would benifit from being on the pump. Are there any pump users out there?

TvBabe
04-26-2006, 03:19 PM
Katt you might like to browse thru the Pumping Insulin message base here at Diabetes Forums. If you can't find it just click on the following URL:

http://www.diabetesforums.com/pumping-insulin/

Dewey
04-26-2006, 03:35 PM
Hi Katt & welcome to the forums. I moved your thread to the Pumping Insulin area so that other pumpers & parents of pumpers could provide some input for you.

I've been on the pump since 1996, and am very pleased with the sugar levels & A1Cs I've been able to achieve. I'd definitely recommend it to people of any age, as I feel there are many benefits to pumping. Hope this helps & welcome aboard. :shakehand

Cyborg
04-26-2006, 03:43 PM
:hello: Welcome aboard

Quite a few pumper on the forum. Even some parents of little pumpers. You came to the right place...

Funnygrl
04-26-2006, 03:45 PM
I'm in the process of getting on a pump now. Let me know if you have any questions.

Shotokan
04-26-2006, 05:40 PM
You might also find useful information at these web sites.

Children with diabetes:
http://www.childrenwithdiabetes.com/index_cwd.htm

American Diabetes Association:
http://www.diabetes.org/home.jsp

HollyB
04-26-2006, 05:47 PM
Hi,

I'm the mom of a 14-year-old, just diagnosed this September, who made the switch to a pump about a month ago. I know someone whose grandson went on a pump when he was about 2 and it has been a real godsend to them.

Aaron, my guy, is really glad he made the switch, but the issues are a little different with a young teen. He likes the flexibility to be able to eat when he wants to (ie with his friends) and of course not having to pull out his insulin pens all the time.

I would think a big advantage with young children is that you can make changes to their doses much faster -- if they are having an active day and going low, for example, you aren't stuck with a 24-hour long-term dose that's in there and you have to eat just to cover it. You can also be a lot more precise with the doses because a pump will give you as little as 1/10th of a unit or in some pumps even less. Aaron fairly often will bolus for his main course, then eyeball the dessert and bolus for that, and sometimes he gets up from the table and pops a few grapes and a couple of crackers and adds something like .3 of a unit.

From a mom's point of view, there is one drawback and that is the extra variable of the infusion set itself (Aaron has accused me of having "infusion set anxiety" and it's kind of true). We've had a couple of episodes now when he's run a little high after a set change -- but not so soaring high that it was obvious the set wasn't working -- and it took us all day and into the night to decide it was the set because, you know, kids eat unpredictably and are way active one day and sit around playing video games the next, plus he's in puberty and coming off his honeymoon and yaddah yaddah... so many things that MIGHT explain it. So long story short, what I hate is being awake at 3:30 in the morning wondering if the insulin in the pump is actually getting into his body properly or not.

That said, the pump is a great tool and I think it really can give kids a better quality of life. Aaron's numbers have been fantastic on it. It's possible he may want to go back to MDI when we are at our cottage this summer (in and out of the water 25 times a day) but overall he is really happy with it.

If you want to pm me don't hesitate,

Holly

am1977
04-26-2006, 06:43 PM
Yes, there are many pump users here :top:. I think you can find a wealth of information...so stick around and don't be afraid to post and ask questions :hmmmm:

kgm0612
04-27-2006, 06:34 AM
Welcome to the forum. It breaks my heart when I hear of little ones being dx'd with this disease.

I know someone who's daughter was dx'd at 8 months and she's been pumping since she was 2. She just turned 6 the beginning of the year. She is doing fantastic! Good luck to you and your son.

Karen

psilocybin
04-27-2006, 10:04 PM
welcome ! its tough probly being dx that early in life, but you will have a hang on things easier maybe? but yet it would be difficult to teach a young one all thisstuff...i dont know just babbling lol