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Changing Basal Insulin - Observing what happens and hopefully providing some "lessons learned"
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<blockquote data-quote="tim2000s" data-source="post: 909076" data-attributes="member: 30007"><p>I tend not to suffer so much with good control then letting it go, then good, then letting it go, although as a kid I used to hate finger pricking and made up most of my log book results for the diabetic clinic, using different pens and including enough randomly high results to justify a higher Hba1C that I was fairly sure was coming.</p><p></p><p>The advent of memory meters resolved that little game. </p><p></p><p>What I tend to find is that I'll run well for a period then change something that results in a set of higher results, e.g. really tough training session causing the next 48 hours to have high insulin resistance, drink too much wine causing a day of lows afterwards, etc. When I do a look back it's usually obvious as to what the trigger is, but it is usually thoroughly annoying,.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tim2000s, post: 909076, member: 30007"] I tend not to suffer so much with good control then letting it go, then good, then letting it go, although as a kid I used to hate finger pricking and made up most of my log book results for the diabetic clinic, using different pens and including enough randomly high results to justify a higher Hba1C that I was fairly sure was coming. The advent of memory meters resolved that little game. What I tend to find is that I'll run well for a period then change something that results in a set of higher results, e.g. really tough training session causing the next 48 hours to have high insulin resistance, drink too much wine causing a day of lows afterwards, etc. When I do a look back it's usually obvious as to what the trigger is, but it is usually thoroughly annoying,. [/QUOTE]
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Changing Basal Insulin - Observing what happens and hopefully providing some "lessons learned"
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