View Full Version : Is There a Minimum Safe Basal Amount?
belyro
12-24-2006, 09:29 PM
I am on a ridiculously low amount of Levemir. When I started on DF (2 months ago) I was on two shots of 6 units each per day. Now through some wonderful advice from some wonderful people on here, I've cut my Levemir dose in half and am having MUCH better control! (YAY!) Now I take 6 units at night, and that's all. However, I still come down more between meals than I'd like to. Yesterday I was 7.0ish two hours after lunch, and I kept dropping all afternoon until I hit the 3's well below supper time (even with snacks in between). I'm not convinced that my nighttime bloodsugars will be able to handle another decrease in Levemir, but I'm tempted to try.
So.......what I'm wondering is......is there a minimum "safe" basal dose? It seems absurd to go down to 4 or 5 units a day. That's all the basal I'd be on! I'm also on Humalog and take 6 units, 10 units, and 10 units respectively at breakfast, lunch and supper. (I eat about 150-200 carbs a day, but am thinking of cutting back, or at least moving into lower GI foods.)
If you have suggestions for how to keep it from dropping between meals other than taking less Levemir, I'm open to those, but what I really REALLY want to know if it's safe to take such a minimal amount of basal, or if I'm running the risk of having problems with ketones, etc.
Thanks!
Funnygrl
12-24-2006, 09:41 PM
If your blood sugar is dropping like that, it means you are getting too much insulin. Cutting down too much will cause ketones, but what the safe amount of basal is, is the amount that you have good blood sugars at. If your blood sugars are in range, it means you are getting proper amounts of insulin, and shouldn't get ketones (at least not from that). I doubt ketones will be a problem, especially if you take decent meal boluses. You can try testing for ketones a few times, and if it is a problem, making try 2 doses a day again, but smaller amounts.
I didn't use any basal for about 2 months when I was first diagnosed, but I was honeymooning and my need for basal hit like a ton of bricks.
hadi_1975
12-25-2006, 02:22 AM
Theoretically basal dose is between 25-50% of total insulin dose in 24 hrs (for you it is 8-16 U) which is best taken at bedtime. I think you had better take less bolus at lunch and/or dinner depending on when you have most of the hypos. You can start with 2 U reduction and advance according to your BG results.
seacomp
12-25-2006, 02:31 AM
Your bolus ratio (carbs to insulin units) is about 6 to 1 from your description. That's about the ratio I use, and I'm an insulin resistant type 2. It would seem likely that you are just bolusing too much for what you eat.
xMenace
12-25-2006, 04:55 AM
The "THEORY" is your basals should keep you steady with no food intake. On an MDI it's often impossible to stay in range for a 24hr period, hence split dosing and possible extra bolusing to fill in the gaps.
The only way to tell is to pick a typical day with a decent BG and skip a meal. Test hourly. You should stay in range -- say 6-8. Skip only one meal a day. Repeat as necessary. Everything else is guesswork IMHO.
"We're all different"
Cyborg
12-25-2006, 06:19 AM
You can lower your basal and not worry about ketones. As suggested, do some basal testing. Nothing like having daily lows... :santaclau
belyro
12-25-2006, 08:17 AM
Your bolus ratio (carbs to insulin units) is about 6 to 1 from your description. That's about the ratio I use, and I'm an insulin resistant type 2. It would seem likely that you are just bolusing too much for what you eat.
But if I bolus less I'll go well above 10 after each meal. Trust me.
Cyborg
12-25-2006, 08:53 AM
You may find you need to change your insulin to carb ratio(s) after adjusting your basal.
Bethany, before you do that, try skipping lunch and the lunch bolus and check your sugars every half hour and see if they go up, down or stay the same. You *may* be bolusing too much "meal" insulin.
The "THEORY" is your basals should keep you steady with no food intake. On an MDI it's often impossible to stay in range for a 24hr period, hence split dosing and possible extra bolusing to fill in the gaps.
The only way to tell is to pick a typical day with a decent BG and skip a meal. Test hourly. You should stay in range -- say 6-8. Skip only one meal a day. Repeat as necessary. Everything else is guesswork IMHO.
"We're all different"
Hmmm - I like this dialog.
I was started on lantus/humalog routine a couple years ago, after lente was no longer available. The initial lantus dosing was night time only. After reading here, I decided to start the split lantus and am okay, I think. I do 8 at night, 12 morning. I have no idea how flat lantus is (in my system - I like your sig line, xMenace "We're all different"), but I was endinging waaay too low in the morning with a full 20 each night.
After reading here about split lantus, I am trying that routine out. So far, so good, and xMenace notes here seems good. Someday I will do some meal skip to see how the basal is being used - flat or slight hill/whatever.
Thanks Bethany for this timely thread.
belyro
12-26-2006, 10:21 AM
Bethany, before you do that, try skipping lunch and the lunch bolus and check your sugars every half hour and see if they go up, down or stay the same. You *may* be bolusing too much "meal" insulin.
How CAN I be, though, Duck? Most days I still get up to 8 or 10 2 hours after a meal. If I bolus less, it's definitely going to go up higher. That was my problem in the first place....2 hours after breakfast I had to be at LEAST 15 or I'd be low before lunch. Then I cut my basal in half and ended up being able to be 8 two hours after breakfast (with more bolus to compensate for the lower basal) and about 4 by lunch. I'm happy with that, but my afternoons don't work so well. I was hoping if I reduced the bolus by one or two more units it would help. Now I have to be 10 or 12 2 hours after lunch....sometimes higher, depending on whether I'm running errands or just sitting on my butt at my desk. Really and truly, if I increase my meal boluses, it's definitely going to be above 10 two hours after a meal....and there are some people on this forum who think even THAT is too high.
I'm going to an appointment with my CDE later in January (and a dietician) so I'm hoping that will give me some ideas. My best bet may be trying a low GI diet, I think.
Stuboy
12-26-2006, 10:45 AM
At the moment i'm takng a 7u shot every 12 hours, 9am and 9pm of lantus. It seems to keep me very steady without food, i go for 18 hours without eating sometimes (most weekends) and im absolutely FINE!
I imagine my basal u's will creep up as honeymoon ends
Also, i find that if i have too much lantus i get a stomping headache... like weeks ago when i was using the 2u dose pen, i upped it to 12u's (i hadn't split then) and i have a massive headache in the morning. then i split and had 6u's every 12 horus, all fine, a little high tho... to upped it to 7u's twice a day and it's perfect. YESTERDAY i took my morning 7 u's half asleep, and when i came to change my needle later, saw that the dial was on 5, so i thought i hadn't injected all of my morning dose, so i primed the rest of the 5... nothing came out, very confused, wound it back up to 5 and took what i thought i'd missed.. big mistake, massive head ache all day christmas day, today im fine cuz i dont have too much basal.
It's weird how we all react differently to basal's, too much too little, they all have tell tail signs i guess!
BlueSky
12-26-2006, 10:50 AM
Originally Posted by duck View Post
Bethany, before you do that, try skipping lunch and the lunch bolus and check your sugars every half hour and see if they go up, down or stay the same. You *may* be bolusing too much "meal" insulin
How CAN I be, though, Duck? .......
Bethany,
Have you actually done this test yet? I was very resistant to the idea before I first did it, mainly because my BG was unstable at the time. And I couldn't see how this would help. But there could be any number of confounding factors here. And speculating on what might happen only messes with your mind. Doing the basal test exercise will enable you to separately focus on basal and bolus insulin action. You could be surprised at what you find. And the exercise will definitely help you use the most approrpriate tactics. :smile:
grace girl
12-26-2006, 11:10 AM
I think you need to do some basal tests to really know what you need to do. Doing the tests sucks, really, but what you learn from it is great. I would also add, though, that I'm not convinced that the tests are always 100% accurate when you're on mdi, as opposed to the pump. According to the guidelines the results of my tests say I'm taking too much basal, but I've found a system that's working for me and giving me the results I want.
I don't know what you're carb ratio's are, but what you're saying makes me think that perhaps you need to increase you're basal and decrease your carb ratios.
A few months ago they had me on a small amount of basal and a larger amount of bolus and I found it to be a major roller coaster....way too easy to go low after meals.
I've raised my basal to as high as I can stand it and lowered my carb ratio's as I've gone along. Over the last few weeks I'm at about 65% basal and 35%bolus....I've found that with the basal being the major player I've got more steady b/s....it's not as unpredictable as it was before. I've got one time a day when I'm prone to lows, as opposed to three or four, and I'm now beginning to figure out what's really causing these lows (it's all activity level for me. If I get really busy after lunch I have to watch out) so I have a better idea at least of when it will happen.
How CAN I be, though, Duck? Most days I still get up to 8 or 10 2 hours after a meal. If I bolus less, it's definitely going to go up higher. That was my problem in the first place....2 hours after breakfast I had to be at LEAST 15 or I'd be low before lunch. Then I cut my basal in half and ended up being able to be 8 two hours after breakfast (with more bolus to compensate for the lower basal) and about 4 by lunch. I'm happy with that, but my afternoons don't work so well. I was hoping if I reduced the bolus by one or two more units it would help. Now I have to be 10 or 12 2 hours after lunch....sometimes higher, depending on whether I'm running errands or just sitting on my butt at my desk. Really and truly, if I increase my meal boluses, it's definitely going to be above 10 two hours after a meal....and there are some people on this forum who think even THAT is too high.
I'm going to an appointment with my CDE later in January (and a dietician) so I'm hoping that will give me some ideas. My best bet may be trying a low GI diet, I think.
Let me make sure I understand what your query is:
You take 6 U of Levemir at night...You eat breakfast, you bolus. But it's not your AM sugars you are worried about.
You eat Lunch, bolus. And even though you are 7 two hours later, without eating anything you continue to drop the rest of the afternoon, right?
What I am saying is, skip LUNCH--don't EAT. I know, it sucks. But you are meal bolusing for lunch, right? In theory, if you are not going to eat lunch, you don't need to bolus for it. If you skip lunch, you can get a better idea of whether your basal insulin is indeed too much in the late afternoon, or if maybe your bolus insulin lingers longer for you than the "typical" four hours. As it is, we have no idea which of the two are affecting your sugars to knock them down later in the afternoon...
It's weird how we all react differently to basal's, too much too little, they all have tell tail signs i guess!
I am going to need to do the duck basal testing real soon. My experiment with split does basal is over for now.
I did not make it thru 2am last night.
The problem is, when low, I am violent - even my adult son didn't want to try to hold me down. I was thrashing and gone... gone. Finally I came to after an hour and emt visit. Is anyone else violent at night time basal low?
This is the second awful low from lantus I have had in 4 days. I am going back to full dose at night - which didn't leave me with any problems. Until after I do the basal test thing I am done with the split dose experiment I have been doing for the past week. Plus I'm gonna drop the lantus to 16 or so.
Question: Has anyone else noticed that a lantus low is really awful to recover? I mean, it takes maybe 10 minutes with humalog low, but the lantus low takes almost 30 minutes to get sane again. Stumbling, operating at 15 minutes, but back to sense takes 30 minutes. I do not like lantus low at all.
I let Stuboy say it all again: "It's weird how we all react differently to basal's, too much too little, they all have tell tail signs i guess!"
I went from NPH to Humalog (later Novolog) on a pump, so I never used Lantus. But in theory, since it is a basal insulin that provides about 1/24 of your shot amount every hour (for example, you take 24 units at 8AM, then for the next 24 hours you get 24/24=1 unit Lantus and hour), a low from Lantus should be easy enough to recover from since there shouldn't be *that* much Lantus working...
But that theory is fraught with issues. If you need as much as 1.5 units an hour at some points in a day and less than 1 unit at others, then you will either go high or low depending on how you took your Lantus. My suspicion for you Dan G is that your overnight needs are lower than your waking needs, and at that point your Lantus is working "harder" than you need...
You could try Peanut Butter at bedtime for a slow-release/slow breakdown food that should "prop up" your sugars. Or we can take a look at your shot times/amounts and see if further tweaking can be had.
When I was on NPH, I noticed that if I went low very, very slow, I was **** for a long time afterward. I was "stupid", couldn't reason to save my life. I was weird, I would throw things and act out. Drink a little coke and I was almost instantaneously better.
I have a story for Dan G too: My freshman year in college, some of the football players lived in my dorm. One of the upper-classmen football players was over visiting, and someone said I had diabetes. He asked me if I got violent when low, and I said no, just weird sometimes. He said his freshman year, the starting Senior Tight End was diabetic, and became violent AND paranoid when low. His girlfriend was constantly calling on the offensive and defensive linemen to come over and hold him down to get him to eat/drink something, and dude said it was ALWAYS a mammoth battle. Part of me wishes I could have witnessed that, 300-pound boys trying to forcefeed a 260-pound paranoid diabetic.
belyro
12-27-2006, 09:44 AM
Bethany,
Have you actually done this test yet? I was very resistant to the idea before I first did it, mainly because my BG was unstable at the time. And I couldn't see how this would help. But there could be any number of confounding factors here. And speculating on what might happen only messes with your mind. Doing the basal test exercise will enable you to separately focus on basal and bolus insulin action. You could be surprised at what you find. And the exercise will definitely help you use the most approrpriate tactics. :smile:
Oh, I'm not questioning the value of basal testing. I do intend to do that. I just mean I don't see how I could be bolusing too much. I very often get the balance wrong and bolus too little, and then I'm too high within 2 hours of eating. If I bolus such that I can be closer to 10 2 hours after a meal, I WILL come down before the next meal.
I just want to wait until the Christmas season is over and my life's on a more even keel before I try the basal testing, though. But I will.
belyro
12-27-2006, 09:49 AM
I think you need to do some basal tests to really know what you need to do. Doing the tests sucks, really, but what you learn from it is great. I would also add, though, that I'm not convinced that the tests are always 100% accurate when you're on mdi, as opposed to the pump. According to the guidelines the results of my tests say I'm taking too much basal, but I've found a system that's working for me and giving me the results I want.
I don't know what you're carb ratio's are, but what you're saying makes me think that perhaps you need to increase you're basal and decrease your carb ratios.
A few months ago they had me on a small amount of basal and a larger amount of bolus and I found it to be a major roller coaster....way too easy to go low after meals.
I've raised my basal to as high as I can stand it and lowered my carb ratio's as I've gone along. Over the last few weeks I'm at about 65% basal and 35%bolus....I've found that with the basal being the major player I've got more steady b/s....it's not as unpredictable as it was before. I've got one time a day when I'm prone to lows, as opposed to three or four, and I'm now beginning to figure out what's really causing these lows (it's all activity level for me. If I get really busy after lunch I have to watch out) so I have a better idea at least of when it will happen.
The thing is, I just decreased my basal not long ago, and I have had SO MUCH better control since then. I was really taking too much. I'm confident of that. I was coming down WAY too much between meals before. I used to come down from 15 to a low between meals while sitting on my butt. Now I can go from 10 to 4 comfortably, so I'm SURE my current basal amount is better, and if anything, it would seem to me that I should decrease it even more and it would give me MORE stability.....but I just don't know. I just don't see how raising my basal would do anything OTHER than bring me right back to where I started, and that's not a place I want to be anymore.
belyro
12-27-2006, 09:51 AM
Let me make sure I understand what your query is:
You take 6 U of Levemir at night...You eat breakfast, you bolus. But it's not your AM sugars you are worried about.
You eat Lunch, bolus. And even though you are 7 two hours later, without eating anything you continue to drop the rest of the afternoon, right?
What I am saying is, skip LUNCH--don't EAT. I know, it sucks. But you are meal bolusing for lunch, right? In theory, if you are not going to eat lunch, you don't need to bolus for it. If you skip lunch, you can get a better idea of whether your basal insulin is indeed too much in the late afternoon, or if maybe your bolus insulin lingers longer for you than the "typical" four hours. As it is, we have no idea which of the two are affecting your sugars to knock them down later in the afternoon...
Bingo, Duck. (Sorry Mods, feel free to combine my posts.)
Yeah, it's definitely lunch I need to try skipping. I'm going to do that when my schedule's back to normal. I assume I can still eat non-carb foods? Chicken or something? Otherwise I'm afraid I'll pass right out in the afternoon.
BlueSky
12-27-2006, 10:03 AM
...... If I bolus such that I can be closer to 10 2 hours after a meal, I WILL come down before the next meal.....
That used to happen to me all the time, until I reduced the amount of carbohydrate in my meals. It cuts the peaks and valleys off the BG cycle. :smile:
grace girl
12-27-2006, 10:11 AM
Question: Has anyone else noticed that a lantus low is really awful to recover? I mean, it takes maybe 10 minutes with humalog low, but the lantus low takes almost 30 minutes to get sane again.
Well, this is just my opinion, as one who is on Lantus, but I find that the lows are VERY different with Lantus vs. Humalog. And, yes, the humalog lows are easier to recover from. For me, most Lantus lows happen either overnight or upon waking in the am, and I think that because it's such a slow acting insulin that by the time you become aware that you are low, you've been there for a while. It's just my own personal theory, I could be wrong.
All I know is that a low from humalog is easy to recover and I bounce back pretty well. With lantus it takes me longer to recover, and I generally feel terrible all day long, like I'm hungover, and there's nothing I've found to fix it.
You said you've stopped your split dose experiment, but I'm curious, were you splitting it 50/50? That doesn't work for everyone. My total dose is 24 units. I take 16 in the am and 8 at night...I had to do it this way to avoid night-time hypos. Just something for you to consider if you decide to try it again.
belyro
12-27-2006, 10:15 AM
That used to happen to me all the time, until I reduced the amount of carbohydrate in my meals. It cuts the peaks and valleys off the BG cycle. :smile:
I was wondering how long it would take for someone to suggest lowering my carbs. :) I think you're probably right.
Bingo, Duck. (Sorry Mods, feel free to combine my posts.)
Yeah, it's definitely lunch I need to try skipping. I'm going to do that when my schedule's back to normal. I assume I can still eat non-carb foods? Chicken or something? Otherwise I'm afraid I'll pass right out in the afternoon.
I'd go cold-turkey (the technique, not the meat), but that's just me. If you know for a fact that there is a food/foods that don't affect your blood sugars, sure. But use sparingly.
grace girl
12-27-2006, 01:17 PM
The thing is, I just decreased my basal not long ago, and I have had SO MUCH better control since then. I was really taking too much. I'm confident of that. I was coming down WAY too much between meals before. I used to come down from 15 to a low between meals while sitting on my butt. Now I can go from 10 to 4 comfortably, so I'm SURE my current basal amount is better, and if anything, it would seem to me that I should decrease it even more and it would give me MORE stability.....but I just don't know. I just don't see how raising my basal would do anything OTHER than bring me right back to where I started, and that's not a place I want to be anymore.
You know, the whole thing is so individual it amazes me that doctors actually try to lay all that blanket treatment stuff on us at all! I don't know what the answer is for you, but I do know that if you keep at it you will find it! The last two weeks is the first time I've been able to take the same dosages of both insulins for more than 7 days in 6 months! It takes some time sometimes!
carolyn
12-27-2006, 03:05 PM
Thanx For Your Help Of Converting Carbs/insulin Scheme. It Seems To Be Working. Many Many Thanx. Carolyn.
BlueSky
12-27-2006, 05:22 PM
.... Yeah, it's definitely lunch I need to try skipping. I'm going to do that when my schedule's back to normal. I assume I can still eat non-carb foods? Chicken or something? Otherwise I'm afraid I'll pass right out in the afternoon.
Well, no, if you want to get a true result, you can't eat anything. Protein and fat, when they are metabolised, also use insulin. So they indirectly increase blood glucose. :wink:
You said you've stopped your split dose experiment, but I'm curious, were you splitting it 50/50? That doesn't work for everyone. My total dose is 24 units. I take 16 in the am and 8 at night...I had to do it this way to avoid night-time hypos. Just something for you to consider if you decide to try it again.
Yeah, I stopped. I am at total 18/20 for 24 hours and was doing 12/8 for breakfast/bedtime. But it was there that I had the awful low in the am that took forever to defeat, and then the incident at 2AM which was scary. Without the split, I have had zero problems for a couple years - lows when I wake as you say. My usual waking is at 60 - which really is low, but I have no problems functioning there, then I eat and things go up. Oatmeal with a dab of molasses and 4 units for bkfst, pbj for lunch+kefer and 10 units which gets me to 350 or so. Dinner is complex carbs and little protein and 8 units, but the lantus kinda brings that all down to 50 by morning.
Perhaps I will do the split again soon, but I'm freaked for now. I know what has worked, and will calm down for the time being. Perhaps I had some residuals that hung around and blossomed under the split. Does that ever happen with insulin? I mean, there are times when I take gobs of units, and eat very little, and nuthin' happens - where does the stuff go? It must go someplace. Does it hibernate for future blossom?
Duck - thanks for the story on holding the lightweight guy down. Interesting. Perhaps each of us is strong when low and paranoid. How do I defeat the paranoid? Just too weird. And the basal baseline testing will happen soon for me. I wanna know what lunch is doing to get me so high. I'm not like Bethany and dive low, I just don't have any effectiveness at my lunch experience and get to 350 for dinner. Then I gotta defeat that with something, plus eat dinner. Oh, well, I play with this/that and figure things out eventually.
The give/take and experience exposed here should be recommended reading as part of any doctor treating diabetes worth his MD. Books mean squat in the applied world of anything.
The give/take and experience exposed here should be recommended reading as part of any doctor treating diabetes worth his MD. Books mean squat in the applied world of anything.
Dan, JediSkipDogg (a member here) says this isn't a science, it's an art, when dealing with this disease. I tend to agree.
I also see it as a war, since I think there is no denying this disease would like to ultimately kill us, but in the meantime break us, beat us down, etc. When we figure things out, its tactics can change. But what it does not know is that our intelligence operations are better than its, and we can get to a point where we can counter-act and intervene before it can make its move.
Let us know how the basal testing goes...
belyro
12-28-2006, 09:04 AM
I'd go cold-turkey (the technique, not the meat), but that's just me. If you know for a fact that there is a food/foods that don't affect your blood sugars, sure. But use sparingly.
Even salad is a no-no for this?
No chicken breast? Oh man.....I'm going to be starving.....
belyro
12-28-2006, 09:05 AM
Well, no, if you want to get a true result, you can't eat anything. Protein and fat, when they are metabolised, also use insulin. So they indirectly increase blood glucose. :wink:
*sigh* I suppose you're right.
grace girl
12-28-2006, 10:48 AM
*sigh* I suppose you're right.
I hate doing it, but I wouldn't trust the results if I ate anything even if it had no carbs.
It Ain't Over
12-28-2006, 02:11 PM
A normal healthy adult will use 18 units insulin/day without eating anything, the so called basal rate.
A type one should come close to that number as a basal rate. Of course there are so many things that will change the "normal" rate that we could list them forever.
I would think that weight would be at the top of the list here.
Funnygrl
12-29-2006, 12:33 PM
A normal healthy adult will use 18 units insulin/day without eating anything, the so called basal rate.
A type one should come close to that number as a basal rate. Of course there are so many things that will change the "normal" rate that we could list them forever.
I would think that weight would be at the top of the list here.
So my 15 units is pretty average. Wow.
It Ain't Over
12-29-2006, 01:05 PM
So my 15 units is pretty average. Wow.
It would tend to show either there is a residual amount to insulin still being produced, or you are healthy and not overweight. If you are like most of us when you are off the wagon, so as to speak, you basal needs will go up. As in sick days.
belyro
01-02-2007, 11:13 AM
Alright....I'm taking a stab at basal testing this afternoon (under the guidance of one Mr. Duck).
The results are VERY interesting so far. I ate breakfast, but I'm skipping lunch. It's the afternoon I really wanted to look at.
First of all...keep in mind I took 6 units of Levemir at 10:30 last night.
7:00am - wake up, 7.9 (142)
8:00am - 42g of carbs, 6 units of humalog, 20 min walk to work (in snow).
10:10am - 9.5
11:15am - 6.7
12:00pm - 5.0 (at this point I'm worriedly asking Duck if this is too low to start the test)
12:30pm - 4.9
1:00pm - 4.9
Whoa. It TOTALLY levelled off EXACTLY 4 hours after taking my humalog.
I'm stinkin' hungry, but this is SO interesting!
belyro
01-02-2007, 11:17 AM
Sorry, forgot to convert all those numbers.....for those of you who are too lazy (or don't have a calculator close by).....
9.5 = 171
6.7 = 121
5.0 = 90
4.9 = 88
belyro
01-02-2007, 11:38 AM
It's going down a bit now at 1:30 - 4.4 (79)....I think if it goes below 4 (70), I might have to eat.
belyro
01-02-2007, 12:42 PM
6.9 (124) at 2:30.
The plot thickens.
Injecto
01-02-2007, 01:10 PM
6.9 (124) at 2:30.
The plot thickens.
Wow, you went up, and didn't eat? Did you double check that test? This is like a mystery in the making reading the updates.
belyro
01-02-2007, 01:18 PM
Wow, you went up, and didn't eat? Did you double check that test? This is like a mystery in the making reading the updates.
Sure did. I haven't eaten a thing since 8am today.
At 3pm I was 6.4 (115).
belyro
01-02-2007, 02:17 PM
7.0 at 4:00.
very very interesting.
Injecto
01-02-2007, 05:14 PM
I just don't get how that works. You haven't eaten, and yet you are going up. Me, I wake up at 5.5mmol, eat a 45 carb breakfast and take no morning bolus and I'm hypo by 11:00am. Maybe my Levemir basal is too high. Your test is intriguing me more and more.
By the way, you must be starving now.
I just don't get how that works. You haven't eaten, and yet you are going up. Me, I wake up at 5.5mmol, eat a 45 carb breakfast and take no morning bolus and I'm hypo by 11:00am. Maybe my Levemir basal is too high. Your test is intriguing me more and more.
By the way, you must be starving now.
No one's basal metabolism is consistent all day long (dawn phenomenon, hormone release, etc), which is one reason I bristle at "experts" who say fine-tuning with a pump is unnecessary for most diabetics. I have five distinct basal rates a day, from .8 an hour to 1.1...And TRUST me if those were mixed up, I'd be hurting, LOL.
So, it could be a liver dump brought on by starvation (a pitfall of basal testing), or it could be a natural surge...further testing will mete this out.
BlueSky
01-02-2007, 05:48 PM
Bethany,
It has been interesting ....
...... I ate breakfast, but I'm skipping lunch. It's the afternoon I really wanted to look at.
First of all...keep in mind I took 6 units of Levemir at 10:30 last night.
7:00am - wake up, 7.9 (142)
8:00am - 42g of carbs, 6 units of humalog, 20 min walk to work (in snow).
10:10am - 9.5
11:15am - 6.7
12:00pm - 5.0 (at this point I'm worriedly asking Duck if this is too low to start the test)
12:30pm - 4.9
1:00pm - 4.9
And here are the other numbers you posted:
1:30 - 4.4 (79)
6.9 (124) at 2:30.
At 3pm I was 6.4 (115)
7.0 at 4:00
So it looks like you bolused a bit more than you need to before breakfast. And your BG started rising after the Novorapid finished. But it remained reasonably low, in spite of the fact that the Levimer from last night must heve been wearing off. It would be really interesting to see what would happen if you skipped the evening meal..... :wink:
Gangrel
01-02-2007, 06:45 PM
I think poor beth would die if she skipped lunch AND supper. ;)
belyro
01-02-2007, 08:17 PM
I think poor beth would die if she skipped lunch AND supper. ;)
She most certainly would.
She's going to try skipping breakfast tomorrow, but she WILL eat lunch.
This is so intriguing.
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