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<blockquote data-quote="leggott" data-source="post: 199276" data-attributes="member: 20065"><p>it sounds like the levemir is the culprit here but you will probably need to do some fasting tests at breakfast to find out what is going on.</p><p></p><p>We had a similar problem with my son, if I gAve more novorapid at breakfast he would be hypo by lunch. We overcame this by giving him a small snack at ten am which worked well. His fall however was down to the levemir which we couldn't alter as he would be too high at other timed of the day. ideally you want bloods below 10mml two hours after eating, so there is a bit of tweaking necessary.</p><p></p><p>Worth giving her a non carb breakfast one morning and then checking bloods every hour until lunch. if she is falling then the levemir is to blame. A small fruit snack or biscuit may be necessary if you are unable to amend the dose of levemir if all other readings are good.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="leggott, post: 199276, member: 20065"] it sounds like the levemir is the culprit here but you will probably need to do some fasting tests at breakfast to find out what is going on. We had a similar problem with my son, if I gAve more novorapid at breakfast he would be hypo by lunch. We overcame this by giving him a small snack at ten am which worked well. His fall however was down to the levemir which we couldn't alter as he would be too high at other timed of the day. ideally you want bloods below 10mml two hours after eating, so there is a bit of tweaking necessary. Worth giving her a non carb breakfast one morning and then checking bloods every hour until lunch. if she is falling then the levemir is to blame. A small fruit snack or biscuit may be necessary if you are unable to amend the dose of levemir if all other readings are good. [/QUOTE]
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