Thank you. Yes I’m in the UK and have the Libre2It is common to start bolus on a fixed dose.
Why only your evening meal? Whilst I could speculate, that is a qu based on your blood sugar levels throughout the day. Assuming you are based in the UK, you should have a Libre (if not, this is something to raise asap) so you can see this information clearly.
I wonder if you DSN chose the evening meal because your basal was not lasting the full 24 hours.
In the long run you'll probably carb count and have an insulin ratio and a correction factor to aid you in dosing for meals.Curious to know if one should adjust bolus according to the amount of carbs in the meal or what the blood sugar reading are before the meal or take both into consideration..
Ah, thank you @EllieM.In the long run you'll probably carb count and have an insulin ratio and a correction factor to aid you in dosing for meals.
1) Insulin ratio (often started at 1 unit for 10g but can vary massively eg 1 unit for 1g or 1 unit for 20g) So if your insulin ratio was 1 unit for 10g you'd take 4 units for a 40g meal.
2) correction factor. Also varies massively, but if your correction ratio was that 1 unit of insulin brought you down by 3 mmol/L then you'd add in a correction dose to your meal if your starting bg was too high eg if you were 6mmol/L too high you'd add in 2 units.
3) It's almost impossible to get the above right if your basal is wrong so the basal dose is the first thing to address.
Having said all that, the fact that you are new to insulin and probably still producing some of your own means that there's no hurry to do the above calculations, though in your position I'd probably ask the DN what she's assuming about how much carb you are having in your meals.
And just to make things more complicated, insulin ratios can vary by time of day and activity level....
Good luck
Bolus'ing for protein mostly only tends to be needed for those on a very low carb diet as far as I can tell (basing this on what I've read), and given your diet looks to be very low carb that may be why you have to.In my case, it’s not just the carbs I have to calculate but protein too. Is this the same for you?
markpj31,
Sorry to hear you got robbed, but I want to say I know the frustration you are feeling, there are days I think I have got it, only for the next day to be completely different. What I say to myself is that tomorrow is another day, and if like today my sugars are high (another story), even though I am trying to get my sugars down, I wont stress and know that tomorrow morning that providing my sugars a relatively OK, we start a fresh.
I do what you are doing and micro adjusting my long acting each day to find that sweet spot where I am not struggling to get my sugars above 5 mmol/L but not struggling to get them below 10 mmol/L either.
Perseverance and patients I tell myself and I will get there.
Good Luck
I would wait for your next appointment before making any changes. Blood sugar control is a marathon rather than a sprint. Ask to be enrolled in the DAFNE course. Complete the BERTIE Online type 1 diabetes course created by the Royal Bournemouth Hospital, in the meantime, to learn how to carb count and dose with MDI.Hi,
l have just been recently introduced to bolus and was looking forward to more stable blood glucose readings, which, for most of the time I am having.
But my DN just advised me to take just 1 unit of Novorapid before my evening meal and reduce my Lantus by 1 unit.
My question is, would be better to gauge the bolus on the meal to be eaten rather than just take 1 unit as she advised.
And why just evening meal and why reduce the Basal by the amount of units used for Bolus?
Also, does one base the amount of Bolus by the blood sugar reading just before eating the meal?
I should have been more proactive in questioning my DN but was hoping for a bit more input from her.
As it is, I have an appointment with her in a few weeks and will raise those question.
Meanwhile if anybody has any words of wisdom, they will be gratefully received.
Thank you.
Hi. Having the same Bolus amount at each meal isn't a good idea which is why being taught carb-counting is important. It's dead simple but not for me to explain but the job of your nurse. You need to insist it's explained and not wait for a training course. That's NHS nonsense.I was on 28 units of Lantus and 8 breakfast, 8 lunch and 10 nova rapid for dinner. This was what I was discharged with originally with the DSN's back in 2022.
My Hba1c for that period was 48. 49, and 45.
I had an extreme Hypo following a few hypos before (Blood went to 1, was in A&E Resuss unconscious in a pubic area (and subsequently robbed while unconscious - somebody stole my wallet and spent £180 in the local supermarket).
My doses were reduced to 18 Lantus and 3, 3, 3 Novarapid but now my bloods are all over the place with 13 before lunch yesterday and 12 before dinner today (10.2 waking). So, now I'm doing my own thing again and stepped up to 24 Lantus and 8, 8, 8 but still seeing highs.
This is really frustrating.
Couldn't your healthcare professional look at switching you to Toujeo/Tresiba?Hi Speedbird,
Thank you for this post, it is something that I am going to watch, as I am in a similar situation as in trying to adjust my Lantus and Aprida at the moment.
I started taking (5 Years ago) one dose of Lantus, but found that it would not last the full 24 hours.
So about a year ago I started having 2 separate Lantus injections per day so that it would cover the whole 24 hours, but again recently I have discovered that my dosing was not correct. I was taken 28 units of Lantus in the morning and 6 units in the evening, where I've now realized I should have been taken 2 equal doses at the same time, 8:30 AM and 8:30 PM each day for example.
These past days I have been adjusting my dosages by one unit per day. For example two days ago I had 14 units of Lantus in the morning and 14 units of Lantus in the evening, this straight away had a positive effect and stabilized my bloods throughout the day. Over the next few days I had to increase the dosage by one unit each day for both morning and evening, and at the same time I was able to reduce my Apidra so I'm not injecting so much as I was before, a goal I have been trying to achieve for some time. So Yes for me it seems the slightly more Lantus I take, the less Aprida I need to have, I was regularly injecting just one unit several times a day.
I look at each day as a blank canvas and I learn something new today and I will apply it tomorrow and I am confident in the next week or two I will have my dosage correct after many years and I have to say that thanks to this forum in part.
I will be keeping watch on this post and hopefully learn myself to improve my management of the diabetes even better.
Big thank you for asking and I wish you luck.
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