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Diabetes Discussion
Type 1 Diabetes
Advice on rapid-acting insulin.
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<blockquote data-quote="Jaylee" data-source="post: 2291510" data-attributes="member: 101136"><p>Hi,</p><p></p><p>It is a concern.</p><p>You are either dropping BG wise, or.. what can happen is a "compression low" a false low reading from literally sleeping on the sensor? </p><p>I have a bluetooth CGM style set up with my Libre. Which means i can calibrate the data to my BG meter & alarms can be set if out of ideal range? </p><p>There is a way to find out. </p><p>A set up that alarms when you go low, so you can wake & check with a meter. (But it is advised to check anything errant with a Libre against the meter anyway.) </p><p>I also site my sensor inside the arm, so i tend not to lie on it.. </p><p></p><p>If this is a regular occurance you recently spotted with the libre? & have no BT set up. you could set a normal alarm at the times these anomalies are happening. Scan, then check against the meter..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jaylee, post: 2291510, member: 101136"] Hi, It is a concern. You are either dropping BG wise, or.. what can happen is a "compression low" a false low reading from literally sleeping on the sensor? I have a bluetooth CGM style set up with my Libre. Which means i can calibrate the data to my BG meter & alarms can be set if out of ideal range? There is a way to find out. A set up that alarms when you go low, so you can wake & check with a meter. (But it is advised to check anything errant with a Libre against the meter anyway.) I also site my sensor inside the arm, so i tend not to lie on it.. If this is a regular occurance you recently spotted with the libre? & have no BT set up. you could set a normal alarm at the times these anomalies are happening. Scan, then check against the meter.. [/QUOTE]
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Advice on rapid-acting insulin.
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