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I need to reduce my Tresiba (again!), and it's a pain in the proverbial. And nighttime hypos.
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<blockquote data-quote="Antje77" data-source="post: 2686777" data-attributes="member: 372207"><p>I think I should do this, or at least set it at mid 4's.</p><p>I have never had to deal with nighttime hypos before, so for years I've been sleeping blissfully in the 4's and 5's, and sometimes 6's (to the horror of my first diabetes practice nurse, who firmly believed in 8 for the night).</p><p>The good thing is that I don't see steep drops, just a very slow decline, so an alarm at 4.4 should warn me way below dropping below 4. No need to wake up still safely in the higher 4's.</p><p></p><p>Very curious what tonight will do. I went to my weekly gym and had a rather serious workout, followed by a pretty long cold dip (no real swimming, mostly chatting with the other swimmers), which means lower insulin needs for the rest of the evening and possibly night.</p><p>Last cold swim was on friday, so right before the nighttime lows started to happen.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Antje77, post: 2686777, member: 372207"] I think I should do this, or at least set it at mid 4's. I have never had to deal with nighttime hypos before, so for years I've been sleeping blissfully in the 4's and 5's, and sometimes 6's (to the horror of my first diabetes practice nurse, who firmly believed in 8 for the night). The good thing is that I don't see steep drops, just a very slow decline, so an alarm at 4.4 should warn me way below dropping below 4. No need to wake up still safely in the higher 4's. Very curious what tonight will do. I went to my weekly gym and had a rather serious workout, followed by a pretty long cold dip (no real swimming, mostly chatting with the other swimmers), which means lower insulin needs for the rest of the evening and possibly night. Last cold swim was on friday, so right before the nighttime lows started to happen. [/QUOTE]
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I need to reduce my Tresiba (again!), and it's a pain in the proverbial. And nighttime hypos.
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