Went through the tread real quick. You're already high when you go to sleep, so you want to tackle that too. Thing is, when you sleep and have nightmares, or any other form of interrupted sleep, your liver'll start dumping glucose because it thinks you need energy for fight-or-flight. It believes it is helping because you're stressed and must need energy to combat whatever's going on. (It's a helpful, and very stupid little organ). That's glucose that's stored in the liver, and if you go to bed at 20, I can guarantee you, those stores are FULL. So you want to treat the way too high blood sugars, then your liver'll have less to dump (Mind you, dumping in the morning is normal, so there'll always likely be a little increase, but it shouldn't be six whole mmol/l).Can someone help to reduce this? Doctors and nurses aren’t doing jack shizz.
no one helped me answer it in my previous thread
Went through the tread real quick. You're already high when you go to sleep, so you want to tackle that too. Thing is, when you sleep and have nightmares, or any other form of interrupted sleep, your liver'll start dumping glucose because it thinks you need energy for fight-or-flight. It believes it is helping because you're stressed and must need energy to combat whatever's going on. (It's a helpful, and very stupid little organ). That's glucose that's stored in the liver, and if you go to bed at 20, I can guarantee you, those stores are FULL. So you want to treat the way too high blood sugars, then your liver'll have less to dump (Mind you, dumping in the morning is normal, so there'll always likely be a little increase, but it shouldn't be six whole mmol/l).
So... Cut carbs, get a handle on your blood glucose, and those rises you see in the night should be getting better too. https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/blog-entry/the-nutritional-thingy.2330/ <-- might help some, if you're a T2. If you're a T1, get your meds reviewed.
I use toujeo and take 32 units. I even doubled it last night(ik that’s dangerous but I tried to see if it would work) didn’t make the slightest difference. I inject in the morning and just recently, night to see if it would make a difference but noSounds like you need more basal insulin action during the night. What basal insulin do you use and when do you inject it? If it is not the very long acting type, changing dosage and/or timing should help.
Please contact your team and keep a close eye on your bg tonight. Are you alone?I use toujeo and take 32 units. I even doubled it last night(ik that’s dangerous but I tried to see if it would work) didn’t make the slightest difference. I inject in the morning and just recently, night to see if it would make a difference but no
I have but my appointment is next week. And I’m concerned about it. I just need someone to help mePlease contact your team and keep a close eye on your bg tonight. Are you alone?
Please don't double the amount of long acting again, it really is dangerous especially if your blood sugars are perfect before you go to bed!
Call 111 if in doubt!
I’m not high before I go sleep, it seems like I’ve confused everyone. My blood sugar is perfect before bed but when I’m sleeping it rises and when I wake up it’s really high
my blood sugar is around 5-9 before bed and then I wake up from sleeping to see it has risen to 27
There isn't a set time but it is after 7 pm.Hi,
What time do you retire to bed.?
What time was your evening meal?
It would be really useful to find out when your levels rise in the night. Maybe your team could lend you a cgm to find out what the issue is.... (Or set an alarm and test multiple times in the night, I know that's horrible) Some possible causes
1) Not enough bolus to cover your evening meal and your bg is still going up when you go to bed
2) Just not enough basal generally, but you have to change it gradually and don't expect an immediate result
3) Your toujeo has gone off and/or your insulin pen is malfunctioning eg a crack in a cartridge can have a drastic effect.
4)Poor injection site management.
5)Dawn phenomena: your liver pumps out sugar early in day to help you get active.
6) Hypo in night and your liver pumps out sugar to help you recover.
Honestly, with such a drastic rise I'd want to rule out pen and insulin issues but you should realise that toujeo is such a slow acting insulin that any changes may take days to have an effect.
Good luck.
they won’t give me one
I think it’s due to my nightmares
Well, if you're waking from the nightmares, could you force yourself to do a blood test when you wake?
I'm in NZ and while I'm on my own for funding cgms, my team have no problems lending me a cgm for a week so they can calculate insulin rations etc.
Having said that, I've just reread some of your previous threads, and found that your anti-nightmare medication can cause high bgs? Could you move to a different medication and/or skip it for a while to see if it is the cause of your bg rise?
Your team have a duty of care and should help you work out why your levels are doing this. The more data you give them (food diary, bg levels in night) the more likely they are to be able to help you work out the correct dosage.
Good luck.
And I did stop the anti anziru meds to see if that was the cause and it isn'tWell, if you're waking from the nightmares, could you force yourself to do a blood test when you wake?
I'm in NZ and while I'm on my own for funding cgms, my team have no problems lending me a cgm for a week so they can calculate insulin rations etc.
Having said that, I've just reread some of your previous threads, and found that your anti-nightmare medication can cause high bgs? Could you move to a different medication and/or skip it for a while to see if it is the cause of your bg rise?
Your team have a duty of care and should help you work out why your levels are doing this. The more data you give them (food diary, bg levels in night) the more likely they are to be able to help you work out the correct dosage.
Good luck.
And I did stop the anti anziru meds to see if that was the cause and it isn't