I hope you get on well with the Omnipod, it seems like such a cool piece of kit! I'm sure @noblehead will be able to keep you right with any issues you may encounter
Funnily enough, I booked-marked this from a post of @noblehead's I'd read a while back - it seems to describe the exact issues you've had with the "pizza effect". I've stolen a few handy links from him over the last year, he doesn't seem to mind... too much:
http://www.mendosa.com/The-Fat-of-the-Matter-How-Dietary-Fat-Effects-Blood-Glucose.htm
Ready for Xmas haha - still waiting on parcels to be delivered for presents for the Mrs, so starting to sweat a bit... Also still waiting for a consult with the lead pump Dr wrt my eligibility for one. Exciting times
Best news is all the courses done, i's dotted and t's crossed and Omnipod will be ordered soon and I am looking at mid to late Jan for starting it. Looking forward to joining to omnipodders here! I am sure I will pick some of your brains later on
@noblehead I have been reading pumping insulin way back and translated a few pump things such as microbolusing (.5 is my smallest amount currently) and thats helped. My only real concern with moving to a pump is that safety but restrictive basal is gone, so if you have a pod failure your on your own. So my question is worst case scenario, all the spare pods I carry are also duds how quickly does Tresiba start working once injected, or should I retain my lantus pen for a backup basal (the issues I had with lantus would be minimal to no basal of course).
with a pump your basal rates can be set to be adjusted on a 1/2 hourly basis ( hard to understand until you see how it works ) --- but trust me -- taking a few ( 4-8 weeks ) weeks to get settings correct for your individual basal needs and you will be smiling@noblehead sorry I mean that currently I have a fixed basal that takes two days to accept any changes, so if I am more active one day I end up munching glucotabs to keep me afloat. I am on a measly 4 units of tresiba a day, sometimes I take that to 3.5 which is mostly too little so I end up moving back to 4. So temperamental.
@noblehead sorry I mean that currently I have a fixed basal that takes two days to accept any changes, so if I am more active one day I end up munching glucotabs to keep me afloat. I am on a measly 4 units of tresiba a day, sometimes I take that to 3.5 which is mostly too little so I end up moving back to 4. So temperamental.
@noblehead thats one of the reasons I cant wait for a pump.
And on that note! My pump day is last week of Jan! So any tips for the switch are welcome!
Should I not take my Tresiba the night before as it takes 48hours to wear off or just stay the course?
The pre-pump nerves are kicking in now!
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