They often rise in the evening (primarily because of dinner) but have been stable today. Only reason I'm commenting now is because I got woken up by my low alarm.What does your BG normally do in the evening/overnight? Are your levels stable today (i.e. you weren't coming down with a lurgy)?
LibreWas this on a libre or via fingerprick, as they can differ quite a lot when outside the normal range. I.e. you may not have been as high as you thought.
I usually don't have an issue eating them either. My dinner had low carbs compared to what I usually eat for no reason in particular (was perhaps not that hungry?) 45g carbs in total. Pasta, veggies, meatballs.I don't find the chocolate in chocolate biscuits delays anything very much, I'd be tempted to look at what you ate for supper instead, could that have been absorbed slowly?
That sounds ok, aside from the low, do you get dawn phenomenon? I split my evening meal bolus to avoid a post-supper/early-evening low (caused by a mis-match between insulin activity and carb digestion), this low can shift around a bit depending on insulin and carb absorption rates.Had dinner today. 204g, 14 units (2x 7) at 9 PM. 3.7 at 2 AM, 20.6 upwards trend at 5 AM. I had pasta with tomato sauce and mear today. Very odd.
This sounds like a classic case of needing to split insulin and take more across the 2 (or more) doses. This is exactly what I used to have happen.To put it into perspective; I had 133g the evening before, injected 9 units and ate at 8 PM. I dropped to 3.3 at 9:33 PM which I quickly corrected to 7.1 and I was fine until 1 AM when I rose to 18.1.
Any sauce with the food (which can often contain quite a lot of oil/fat to presumably slow digestion), how many units did you take to cover the 45g of carbs?I usually don't have an issue eating them either. My dinner had low carbs compared to what I usually eat for no reason in particular (was perhaps not that hungry?) 45g carbs in total. Pasta, veggies, meatballs.
Hi,Hi,
I had 3 small chocolate biscuits last night, injected 1 unit more than I usually would've and ended up hovering around 20 mmol/L throughout the entire night despite injecting another 12 units in total for that single high. I'm aware of how fats delay the breaking down of sugars but I never thought about why it did what it did last night.
1 of these biscuits is 8,5g in carbs. In the evenings, I inject 1 unit per 15 grams. I had 3 biscuits = 25,5 -> I injected 3 units.
I was good for 3 hours and then started rising from 10.7 at 10:31 PM to being 21.9 at 3:06 AM. Where's this sugar rush coming from? I injected a lot on top of the units I injected for the amount of sugar which works with every other meal (and/or snacks) in the evenings. Even when eating a 76g carb bag of chips in one go, I don't spike like this.
I had dinner 1,5 hours prior to eating the chocolate. I was stable. I was sitting down during all of it.
What's the explanation for this? Am I missing something? I'm T1.
Thank you in advance
I do.do you get dawn phenomenon?
3 units. I take 1 unit per 15g carbs for my evening meals.Any sauce with the food (which can often contain quite a lot of oil/fat to presumably slow digestion), how many units did you take to cover the 45g of carbs?
I didn't know there was a "limit" on how much sugar your body can break down like that but it does make sense.I don't have firm figures re carb absorption rates, but the top end for pure glucose is ~60g/hr, apparently it's possible to manage 90g/hr with a glucose/fructose blend (both re use for e.g. Triathlons, though the caveat here is that exercise delays digestion, I don't know how much of an effect that will be for very readily absorbed "sugars" though). Normal food is nowhere near these numbers, so I'd be thinking more on the order of 30g/hr or less (but don't quote me!), potentially with quite a long tail, even without the addition of fat/protein. I need to do some more research, which your post has reminded me about.
If I have a nice BG before going to bed ~2 hours after my meal, I don't go high or low overnight.The other thing I'd suggest you look at is your basal dose: does this control your BG stably overnight? If you're also getting a rise due to insufficient basal this isn't going to help.
I inject using Aspart Sanofi and Tresiba.You on MDI or pump?
If MDI, what basal??
I experience the same and have started splitting my dose for higher carb meals and it turned out great. Hit 92% time in range todayThat makes sense, I need to inject more in the evening typically, though I also tend to split my dose as otherwise I end up going low immediately after supper, then high later on (as I need treat the low, but don't take extra insulin to cover that).
I noted that you understand the fat slows sugar uptake, but Diabetes UK recently promoted a paper that highlighted a further issue regarding fats eaten.Hi,
I had 3 small chocolate biscuits last night, injected 1 unit more than I usually would've and ended up hovering around 20 mmol/L throughout the entire night despite injecting another 12 units in total for that single high. I'm aware of how fats delay the breaking down of sugars but I never thought about why it did what it did last night.
1 of these biscuits is 8,5g in carbs. In the evenings, I inject 1 unit per 15 grams. I had 3 biscuits = 25,5 -> I injected 3 units.
I was good for 3 hours and then started rising from 10.7 at 10:31 PM to being 21.9 at 3:06 AM. Where's this sugar rush coming from? I injected a lot on top of the units I injected for the amount of sugar which works with every other meal (and/or snacks) in the evenings. Even when eating a 76g carb bag of chips in one go, I don't spike like this.
I had dinner 1,5 hours prior to eating the chocolate. I was stable. I was sitting down during all of it.
What's the explanation for this? Am I missing something? I'm T1.
Thank you in advance
Can you please provide a link to this study?It has been found that fats are converted to sugar around 3 hours or so after consumption.
There is loads of research reports online - here is just oneCan you please provide a link to this study?
While I know many people take a split bolus or the equivalent on a pump for meals containing both significant carbs and fats because the fats delay the carb hit, I've never heard about fats being converted to sugar/glucose.
It has been found that fats are converted to sugar around 3 hours or so after consumption.
Thanks for looking it up, interesting study.There is loads of research reports online - here is just one
Dietary Fat Acutely Increases Glucose Concentrations and Insulin Requirements in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes: Implications for carbohydrate-based bolus dose calculation and intensive diabetes management
OBJECTIVE. Current guidelines for intensive treatment of type 1 diabetes base the mealtime insulin bolus calculation exclusively on carbohydrate counting.diabetesjournals.org
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