If I had just the sandwich I would be starving by 3pm ! - maybe need to find something else to eat that's not carbs to keep me goingThe sandwich, banana and crisps are not really slow release carbs so will be the cause of needing more insulin to deal with the spike . Better off just eating the sandwich
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Could be Lantus. The way to check whether it's right or not is by not eating or injecting fast acting a few hours before bed. If your before bed and before breakfast readings differ by more than 1.6 mmol/l, then your Lantus is out by at least 10%
Sorry if I'm hijacking the thread, but I'm seriously confused about checking the levels of LantusI suspect mine may be wrong, and all the info I've found so far seems to be based on once daily injections, and I split mine, so I'm not sure how to test. I'm waiting for a referral to the clinic, but that will probably be some time away yet.
I got my technique from Gary Scheiner's Think Like a Pancreas book. You can do what Noblehead said and skip meals, but I don't fancy that so just follow what I posted above. I also inject my Lantus in the morning, so that I know that if it changes (and it does frequently) I can act on that change immediately, instead of waiting all day to inject the new dose in the evening.Sorry if I'm hijacking the thread, but I'm seriously confused about checking the levels of LantusI suspect mine may be wrong, and all the info I've found so far seems to be based on once daily injections, and I split mine, so I'm not sure how to test. I'm waiting for a referral to the clinic, but that will probably be some time away yet.
Any advice, or a link to a previous thread on this would be so welcome
Thanks!
Signy
Hi all,
I was diagnosed with type 1 in march of this year, and have been put on Lantus and Novorapid.
I was told Novorapid is active for 4 hours, but not sure this is the case with myself.
I take 5 units Lantus at 8am, the Novorapid with each meal (1:35 ratio with breakfast / 1:20 at lunch / 1:12 at evening).
I have my lunch at 12.30pm (bg is in range), and usually have a bg test about 4.30pm for driving home at 5pm, and my bg is still highish (8 to 12mmol),
but by the time I have my evening meal (between 6pm and 7pm) it will be ok (5 to 7mmol) and sometimes drops low (3 to 4mmol).
So, is the Novorapid active longer for me, or do you think I could be taking too much Lantus, and not enough Novorapid?
I will speak to my diabetes nurse about this, but I don't see her for another 3 weeks.
Thanks,
if youve been a type 1 since march youll be still in the( honeymoon period ) your diabetic nurse will be controlling your doses of novorapid and Lantus IM ON NOVORAPID & LANTUS myself been a type 1 for 2 years now
[/ regarding you driving has your diabetic nurse mensioned informing DVLA swansea regarding you driving and a new insulin taker ? ok the dvla medical group get involved , there check with your GP at random, there take your licence off you for about 2/3 months then re issue with a new one short term licence that lasts 3 years'
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