Hi all, to echo what others have said, its difficult to make changes without discussing them with your diabetic team. Is there an email for the DSN? Perhaps phone or skype? My clinic is trying to set up skype for prearranged clinics so might be worth asking?
From what I've been told, big drop overnight could be due to your evening meal bolus insulin having an effect which is overlapping with your basal dose. It is easier said than done as life gets in the way, but I try to inject and eat at least 4hrs before bed as that seems to be the max action time for novorapid.
It could also be that your levemir dose is too high. From what I've read (will try and post links tomorrow!) Levemir can start acting within an hour of injection and doesn't smoothly release over the action period unfortunately. It seems to peak and have a skewed effect within the first 6-12 hrs but this also depends on the quantities injected. Eg The higher the dose in relation to body mass the more skewed the action. This skew can be advantageous acting against the 'dawn phenomenon' but could cause hypos if dose is too high.
I started noticing my blood glucose values creeping up mid afternoon- evening following almost 13yrs of only injecting levemir around 10pm. My consultant suggested slowly trying to split the dose, as many studies say levemir can last 18-26hrs (not sure what this depends on) so the fact my glucose levels were creeping up early eve suggested my once daily levemir was running out earlier than it had previously done. I started on the Libre and this completely reinforced this too! With their help I started shifting one unit at a time to the morning, giving myself 3-4 days between ever change to see the effects on early eve glucose values.
I'm now almost evenly split with my doses morning and evening but that's only been since lockdown! I've also noticed a few false hypos register on my libre where eg it says 3.9 and finger prick capillary test says 4.3. I've rescanned 5-15mins later to account for diffusion time lag of libre and it's still off. I've read lots about the libre losing accuracy at low or very high readings, which is why Abbott advises finger prick capillary test at these times. Still annoying when the libre log says hypo and you can't change it!
Sorry for the late long post, hypos are horrible esp at night so hope you get them becoming less frequent!