Diabetes Forums » Living with Diabetes » Diabetes » Type 1 Diabetes » Post breakfast blood sugars! Best Postprandial?


Welcome to Diabetes Forums!

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features.

Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.


Reply
Post breakfast blood sugars! Best Postprandial? LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 01:49 AM
klpants's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Midlands,England
Posts: 197
Post breakfast blood sugars! Best Postprandial?

Does anyone else have trouble achieveing thier target post breakfast blood sugars? For me the post breakfast is the worst meal to achieve stable blood sugars after. I try and cover all factors:
1. carb to insulin (even tried having very little complex carbs for breakfast!)
2. exercise (both the night before and on the morning)
3. what I had to eat the night before,
4. blood sugar at time of eating:
But always very unpredictable. One morning I'll have ok BS after breakfast then the next day awful and the next day, with no explanation?

Anyone else have the same problems, have you discovered the reason why? Is it do do with the liver's function and glucogon? How can we limit the effect?

Which is the most unstable postprandial BS for everyone on the forum?
__________________
Type 1 diabetic since 1985 (and loving it!! not!)
Humalog and Lantus, MDI, split dose Lantus
12+ blood tests a day.
HBA1C June 2006:6.4%!!
HBA1C Dec 2006:6.4%!!!!!!
HBA1C April 2007: 7.0% arghh!
HBA1C Feb 2008: 5.9% woooh man!
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 03:33 AM
Banned
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 56
good morning klplants----its a fine morning in pizzaland usa----------breakfast can be tricky on certain days for me allso but generaly i seem to get my bs under controll ----what i do is i eat the same food for breakfast untill i get it right ----and then i eat the same food untill i make sure it stayes right and then no mater what i do i have to increase insulin or take less------i dont wory about it i ckeck bs 15 minuts after i eat 30 minuts after and 1hour after and 1hour and 130 minuts after and 2 hours after and if any of those times my bs goes over 100 i take more humilog i dont care when i took my last shot of insulin i have been treating myself with no doc for many years ----i dont know how to spell to good so that is all i can say about it ----i like to eat the same food day after day it is easer for me to controll that way i shoot for fastings of 40 to 60 ----and post meal of under 100 allways -----and never allowing bs to go over 100 it is possible----i check 16 to 20 times a day------all a1cs non diabetec last 30 years 2007 a1c 5.1----pizzaman current bs 58---------do you eat big breakfasts they can be hard to controll ----i eat very small meals more often than big meals---even when i eat pizza most of the time ----type 1 38 years
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 04:06 AM
klpants's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Midlands,England
Posts: 197
Thansk for your reply, pizzaman. I eat the same breakfast everyday, 6 egg whites, 1/4 cups oats, 1 tbs peanuts and 1 tbs flaxseed, not exactly high in any of the forms of carb.
I did used to have a banana but have cut that out to try and get better am bs, still not making a lot of difference.

I'm the same, test oftten to see the patterns. But, I'm startign to think my post breakfast bs is not so much to do with what I eat and something else? Omitting the banana should have made more of a difference?
__________________
Type 1 diabetic since 1985 (and loving it!! not!)
Humalog and Lantus, MDI, split dose Lantus
12+ blood tests a day.
HBA1C June 2006:6.4%!!
HBA1C Dec 2006:6.4%!!!!!!
HBA1C April 2007: 7.0% arghh!
HBA1C Feb 2008: 5.9% woooh man!
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 02:00 PM
Gary_W's Avatar
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: UK
Posts: 852
Hi Klplants,

Breakfast seems to be a tricky meal for lots of us. From what I've read here, many people tend to be insulin resistant to some extent in the morning due to certain hormones that your body deems fit to release. On top of that, the liver can do a nice slug of glucose to help kickstart your day when you don't actually need it! Also, excercise the day before can fiddle with morning numbers (not that I'd currently know )

A few thoughts spring to mind in your case here:

1. Have you done a fasting test to see what happens to your BG in the absence of either food or rapid insulin? If your basal is off, nothing else seems predictable (been there, bought that t-shirt).

2. What do you think your insulin ratio is in the AM compared to other times of day?

3. Protein. My body is fairly unpredictable with protein and how it affects BG. My local clinc recon that protein does not raise blood glucose at all. A big fat steak for me will still need bolus insulin, though it will not be needed until a couple of hours after the rest of the meal. I've done the maths on your breakfast. Assuming that the egg whites weigh 45g each (large ones) and assuming that your 1/4 cup and tablespoon are the same as mine then you are eating only 17g of carbs and knocking back 36g of protein. There's a bit of fat in there but not a lot. You MAY need a bit of insulin to cover that protein, you may not.

In me, I would go higher than expected later on if I just bolused for the carbs, especially as the only real source of carbs you're having (the oats) are real slow burners too. Maybe that could be your problem? Personally, I need around 1 unit per 25-30g of protein, but I find it very tricky to habitually get right. I know that Cyborg on here says he has to whack in 1 unit per 15-20g of protein (if memory serves). If you are similar and are ignoring it in your calcs then it may do the equivalent damage to your BG of 20g of carbs but over a much longer period. In me, that would turn a BG of 5 into a BG of 9, which is all it takes to foul up your morning.


As an experiment, why not try having a fairly standard breakfast (e.g. a measured bowl of bran flakes with semi skimmed), bolus for it according to your ratios and see what happens? Not suggesting you change your eating habits overnight, but eliminating the high protein percentage as an experiment will at least let you know if that is causing you problems.

4. Insulin profile. Long shot, but maybe a different insulin would suit your morning bell curve better? For me, I eat lots of carbs and consequently Apidra is a thing of wonder in the morning. Novorapid couldn't quite keep up and while my waking BG and lunchtime BG would be great I'd have a huge spike in the middle. Apidra helps with that a great deal. I would suggest if you stick to your high protein low carb breakfast that Apridra would do you in completely as it's that quick it just isn't funny

Personally, I always have a grapefruit for breakfast plus EITHER cereal or wholemeal toast. Until I bought the nutritional scales, I thought I was having 60 g of carbs which I always needed 9-10 units of insulin for. This was because the carb counting book I used had the wrong figures for grapefruit. When you weigh it, it turns out that I'm typically having 85g+ of carbs each morning so my ratio is not much worse than the 1:10 that I am later on in the day.

If I go with the toast, I'll usually be around 9.0 at 1 hour and 7.2 at 2 hours. By 2.5 hours I'll be down to respectable levels. If I go with cornflakes (evil things for GI) I'll be 10-11 after an hour but down to 5.5 at 2 hours! You could argue which is worse. Personally, I'm not too bothered as I like 'em both, I feel well and my A1c is currently very good indeed.

Good luck with breakfast; hopefully you'll find a way of skinning the cat AND eating what you like!

Gary
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 02:16 PM
Junior Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Calgary Alberta
Posts: 32
I have the same problem, Breakfast is usually the meal of the day I need to keep most stable. If i can continuously eat the same thing at the same time every morning my sugars will gradually get back to normal, however Monday's are my biggest problem day since I usually go off my normal breakfast for the weekend.

I find if I do cardio the night before, my morning sugars are a lot more on target as well.

I eat a slice of cheese and instant oatmeal everyday but the amount of novorapid i take definetly changes!
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 02:19 PM
xMenace's Avatar
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Rothesay, New Brunswick Canada, eh
Posts: 6,829
I cut back on the carbs and pre-bolus. I also super-bolus but that's a pump thing. It means borrowing later basal and adding it to my bolus.

Together these have worked for me.
__________________
Michael Pollan on CBC

In Defense of Food with Michael Pollan


T1 1975, MM 722 pump
A1C 7/08 5.9%
HDL - 1.55 (59.9)
LDL - 1.76 (68.1)
Triglicerides - 0.44 (40.0)

John


Postcards received: 17 of 20
Postcards sent: 20 of 20
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 03:49 PM
rzrbks's Avatar
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1.5
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Hogwarts, Hobbiton, the Galactic Milieu &Ks when I have to be here
Posts: 4,299
Yep,

Breakfast is the only meal I have to bolus at 1:7 and often still have to do 2 hr. correction. The rest of the time I cover at 1:15.

Have the same thing every morning: PB & J sandwich with coffee.

Interestingly enough, PB & J sandwich is 1:15 any other time.
__________________
"I am wounded," he said, "wounded, and it will never heal."

Frodo to Samwise
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 04:21 PM
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,583
In my case, taking Lantus in the morning, means I must wait four hours for the Lantus to be at 100%. So, sometimes I must bolus an extra unit or two during the Lantus "launch".

I just recently started doing morning fasts (still taking Lantus) to see how the basal rate was going. My first test showed I needed more basal units. Today I was even at 105...116...125...then back to 90 for about two hours before lunch. I also take a small split dose of Lantus at night that is factored into that morning fast.

I had just increased my a.m. Lantus by 3 units per endo's suggestion, (well she suggested more, but I do increases gradually to avoid the ER!) I may try a bit more in a few days and see if I'm still running good basals, or not...don't want to be too low.

But, if taking Lantus in mornings, many people forget about the 4-hour warm-up. See the package graph for a clear example, if needed.
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 05:28 PM
Cyborg's Avatar
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1.5
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Orlando, FL
Posts: 7,835
Find out how the protein is affecting your bg. You may need to take insulin for it. Also, try bolusing 1/2 hour before you eat to give the insulin a head start...
__________________
You may call me Locutus
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 08-30-2007, 09:27 PM
TenderVittleS's Avatar
Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Dallas for now, back to Orlando soon
Posts: 364
Breakfast is the hardest for me too!
Reply With Quote
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 09-03-2007, 03:33 AM
klpants's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Midlands,England
Posts: 197
Quoting Gary

1. Have you done a fasting test to see what happens to your BG in the absence of either food or rapid insulin? If your basal is off, nothing else seems predictable (been there, bought that t-shirt).
My basal is the best I can get at the moment, as I exercise a lot, tweaking my basal just one until sends me into hypos all the time. I will try your suggestion though.
2. What do you think your insulin ratio is in the AM compared to other times of day? It's about 1.5 -2 units to 10 grams carbs, compared to 1 unit per 10 grams carbs after AM.

3. Protein. My body is fairly unpredictable with protein and how it affects BG. My local clinc recon that protein does not raise blood glucose at all. A big fat steak for me will still need bolus insulin, though it will not be needed until a couple of hours after the rest of the meal. I've done the maths on your breakfast. Assuming that the egg whites weigh 45g each (large ones) and assuming that your 1/4 cup and tablespoon are the same as mine then you are eating only 17g of carbs and knocking back 36g of protein. There's a bit of fat in there but not a lot. You MAY need a bit of insulin to cover that protein, you may not.
I agree, most people don't seem to inject for protein, but for me protein does affec the BS, not instant, probrbaly 2-3 hours after. I know it makes a big difference if the proten is lean protein or fatty, maybe that's what's going on with your steak!??

Thansk for your helpful reposnse a Gary. My moring BS has been a bit better since I ommitted the banana. If I have the banana later in the day, not much of an effect on my BS compared to AM.
I also think the female hormone cycle has a lot to do with my unpredictable BSs (and many other women's BS). I've tried to set up a diary of when this woudl happen, but unfortuanly each month is never the same!
__________________
Type 1 diabetic since 1985 (and loving it!! not!)
Humalog and Lantus, MDI, split dose Lantus
12+ blood tests a day.
HBA1C June 2006:6.4%!!
HBA1C Dec 2006:6.4%!!!!!!
HBA1C April 2007: 7.0% arghh!
HBA1C Feb 2008: 5.9% woooh man!
Reply With Quote
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 09-03-2007, 04:18 AM
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 43
I had the same trouble with post-breakfast BG until I started taking my breakfast Humalog bolus 30 minutes before the meal. At 15 minutes before the meal, the glucose would shoot sky high. Now it stays perfectly flat and I am a heppy ket.
-Olaf
Reply With Quote
  #13 (permalink)  
Old 09-03-2007, 02:13 PM
Gary_W's Avatar
Senior Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: UK
Posts: 852
Quote:
Originally Posted by klpants View Post
Quoting Gary

1. Have you done a fasting test to see what happens to your BG in the absence of either food or rapid insulin? If your basal is off, nothing else seems predictable (been there, bought that t-shirt).
My basal is the best I can get at the moment, as I exercise a lot, tweaking my basal just one until sends me into hypos all the time. I will try your suggestion though.
2. What do you think your insulin ratio is in the AM compared to other times of day? It's about 1.5 -2 units to 10 grams carbs, compared to 1 unit per 10 grams carbs after AM.

3. Protein. My body is fairly unpredictable with protein and how it affects BG. My local clinc recon that protein does not raise blood glucose at all. A big fat steak for me will still need bolus insulin, though it will not be needed until a couple of hours after the rest of the meal. I've done the maths on your breakfast. Assuming that the egg whites weigh 45g each (large ones) and assuming that your 1/4 cup and tablespoon are the same as mine then you are eating only 17g of carbs and knocking back 36g of protein. There's a bit of fat in there but not a lot. You MAY need a bit of insulin to cover that protein, you may not.
I agree, most people don't seem to inject for protein, but for me protein does affec the BS, not instant, probrbaly 2-3 hours after. I know it makes a big difference if the proten is lean protein or fatty, maybe that's what's going on with your steak!??

Thansk for your helpful reposnse a Gary. My moring BS has been a bit better since I ommitted the banana. If I have the banana later in the day, not much of an effect on my BS compared to AM.
I also think the female hormone cycle has a lot to do with my unpredictable BSs (and many other women's BS). I've tried to set up a diary of when this woudl happen, but unfortuanly each month is never the same!
Hi Klpants,

Sounds like you really are walking a bit of a tightrope there. As far as the excercise goes, I can't really comment these days as (apart from taking the kids to the park) I don't get a great deal. I need to work on that.

Thanks for the thoughts on lean vs fatty protein. I hadn't considered that. I must admit that egg white omelettes are not something I go for (first time I heard of them was on at a conference in the US a couple of years back when an American colleague ordered one for breakfast. I asked if I could have an omelette + the yolks from his ).

Also, as far as female hormones go I can't help; just as well as I can be irrational and moody with no chemical help whatsoever

It's so hard spotting patterns when things go to pot. I know that my numbers have gone off a bit over the last couple of weeks, but there has been a fair bit of stress and a couple of nice bugs doing the rounds here so it's not surprising.

Good luck with spotting the pattern here and hope it improves for you soon.

Gary
Reply With Quote
  #14 (permalink)  
Old 09-07-2007, 06:14 PM
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 7
Have you heard of the Dawn Phenomenon? It causes a lot of problems for me. As soon as I wake up, even fasting, my blood sugar starts at 137 then goes to 150 an hour later, and then 179. Finally, about 11:00 am, it starts to go back down, and because the dose of Lantus I took the night before starts to work again, apparently, my blood could go really low in the afternoon. I do not know of a solution to this, because the more I increase the basal insulin, the worse and hungrier I get in the afternoon. I don't even try messing with carbs in the morning, or it's game over for me. I can only eat them in the afternoon. Try that.
Reply With Quote
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 09-09-2007, 09:47 AM
Richard157's Avatar
Member
I am a: Type 1
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Kingston, NY
Posts: 262
Hello kplants, I looked at your profile. We both test 12 times per day. We obviously want to get good control and frequent testing helps.

I do not know your age but I am 67 and as I have grown older my Humalog takes longer to do its thing. Not that many months ago I would wake up with a good level (80-110) and eat about 40 carbs at breakfast. Two hrs. later I was 160+ and sometimes 200+. I found that if I did not take any additional Humalog at that time I would drop to the low 100's by 11pm. Now I take my pre-breakfast Humalog an hour ahead of time. Two hours later I am in the low 100's because my insulin has been working 3 hours. That has solved my problem with post breakfast highs. If the insulin takes even longer to be absorbed in the future I may have to take Humalog 90 mins. or even 2 hours before breakfast.

If any of you have trouble with the Dawn Phenomenon then you might want to look at the following site:

Dawn Phenomenon

Good luck to you!

Richard
__________________
It is not the number of times you fall that determines your character, it is that you keep getting up and you try again.
Reply With Quote

Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes
Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


» Log in
User Name:

Password:

Not a member yet?
Register Now!

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 05:37 AM.

For Advertising:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32