With accuchek pumps there are a couple things not explained fully.
Within 24 hours you will get airbubbles in your cartridge...you need to prime these out, especially if your pump is loose in bed as it is flat. The insulin that you put in to cartridge is best to be at room temperature when you load the cartridge.. Even if you load it from the vial and leave it for a few hours before changing the cartridge over.
When you connect your tube and cannula together that again can somehow get airbubbles in the connector, so when priming gently tap the actual connectors when together and insulin is going through them, you will be amazed at just how many airbubbles can come through when these two conectors are joined together.
I am assuming that when you have a bath and shower and if you disconnect your pump that you are looking at your tube from the pump and repriming it before reconnecting it. The insulin in the tube will "suck" backwards and the tube needs to be primed to get rid of the suck back air...
Finally, check that the lueur lock is done up tight every day.... As if this has worked itself slightly lose then the insulin will be slightly seeping out.
When tou go above 12 you must consider that your correction bolus's by pump need to be more than what it recommends.. At least a third for me...
Glad your levels are coming down.
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