I've been on insulin for 18 months. Everything was pretty steady until I switched back to a primal/low carb diet and I got to my ideal basal within a week of switching and have been very steady since then (1 dip into the 3s and once into the 8s). No changes recently at all apart from the...
Hi all, I've been taking the same amount of basal insulin for a few months. I'm on a low carb diet and as such don't need to take much if any bolus. For my basal I've been having 10 units at 7:30pm (I am normally around 5.5 at all times) and 9 units at 7:30am unless I am due to play golf when I...
That is interesting. When I say semi regular lows it would be once a week I'd dip below 4. I'm perfectly happy being in the 4s and feel 100 times better there than the 6s. She did not think it was an issue other than trying to reduce the amount I needed to eat during exercise.
Hi all I have a feeling this might be a long post so please bear with me.
I was diagnosed type 1 last year and put on Levemir/Novorapid. Ended up eventually at 22 units at 10:00pm in a single dose and a carb to insulin ratio of 1 unit per 12-15 grams. My A1C went from 13.5% to 6.0% in 6 months...
I test before meals as a minimum and after meals when I'm trying to guage if I got my timing and ratios correct and to learn what foods do what.
NHS gives me whatever I need in order to live my life in the way I need to. If they restricted to 5 strips a day I'd never be able to drive anywhere.
The lowest number I would ever do is 4
Breakfast, Lunch, dinner, Bed
Highest could be 10 or more I guess if I have to drive a lot and am doing post meal testing.
If my morning BG is 8 2 days in a row I would increase my own insulin but that is because I do whatever I want :lol:
It just doesn't seem that difficult to me. At least with Levemir and novorapid I can eat when I want within reason, what I want within reason and adjust my ratios depending on my activity (a morning round of golf = 25% more porridge for breakfast with no increase in insulin). App on my phone...
There are lots of things that can cause this. A mild virus, additional stress, infection etc. I believe it is quite normal and will happen from time to time.
Your atitude to the condition can change and it will make your life easier. You've taken the big first step to open up to the group. Look at us all in the same boat as you.
The positives I drew out of being a diabetic were the fact that I have to look afte rmyself. I have to do the things that...