Wise words, knowledge is power- knowing all different opinions gives as much scope to try all options available.Hi @Maxy
It is definitely very frustrating, the advice we get at times. Unfortunately you are an individual and you don't quite fit the 'standard' pattern of treatment in a number of way - athletic, active, low carb. I can only commiserate.
At least on this forum you will get some diverse opinions. We don't all agree but we try to respect each other's diversity. You can pick and choose the ideas that forum members present here and decide if some of them might work for you. Which is frankly more freedom than you will get at a typical clinic appointment. Alas.
Hey Maxy, wow I had a CGM a month ago and in comparison mine was flat lining..
This was picked up before but my personal thought is one of 2 things, change your basal injection site, start injecting into your bum, it's fat or at least probably the fatest area of your body, should absorb at a slower rate, try this for a week, if this doesn't show any signs of working then ask to change your insulin to Tribeca, you take this once a day and has a flat profile, no spikes.
Out of interest what was your days like on Thursday and Friday as these appear to be your most stable days ?
Morning @Maxy , without seeing the food and insulin diaries that accompany these graphs it is quite hard to draw conclusions. What we do see is that you spike heavily with food and there looks to be a lot of yo-yoing going on, which has been discussed before. I'm guessing you take glucose to treat the lows and then find yourself very high afterwards.
The thing that I really notice are the following two points (and you can see it in the other overnight graphs):
These all show a significant falling in your bg level overnight, ie it looks like a drop of around 5mmol/l over the faasting period. This would typically suggest that your basal level is too high, and that there is constant downward pressure on your bg levels that you are trying to manage around.
The following graphs also show some interesting items which do seem to be repeated:
The red circle highlights a hypo and treatment. You see this in other points on your graph, and when you treat hypos, you seem to hugely overtreat them. Now this particular spike also looks like a bit of a CGM error as it jumps massively then drops off again within two hours, but the spikes you see post hypo suggest that when you treat them you are probably using too much glucose and you are getting a side effect glucagon release as well, pushing the BG levels up higher.
The blue circles highlight your reaction to food. Your spikes last around two hours, which is what you would expect. They are not of unexpected duration, but what is different is the timing. The insulin I assume you are taking with it is taking about an hour to kick in. I suspect that there are two issues here. One is your insulin carb ratio and the other is your timing. Both probably need some level of consideration.
The other Item that I noticed was a number of late night food items recorded with no insulin. Those seem to have resulted in a higher bg level post eating in the majority of cases.
I strongly recommend that you do a number of basal tests. Once that is correct it is much easier to reassess your insulin carb ratio and review your timing. This isn't going to be a quick fix, but only once you've done this can you start to look at using Metformin to reduce insulin resistance. I'm not a clinician, but your food and insulin data doesn't look (just from the graphs) like insulin resistance is taking place.
Hope that helps.
What if it were the case that I'd do better with more basal, but a respectively lower bolus, as the high bolus doses cause a much more frequent spike- which could result in fewer ups and downs?
If you look at the fasting periods, which I highlighted in my earlier post, you see that your bg level is dropping 5mmol/l over a 6 hour period. If your basal level was correct, it would be dropping no more than 1.7 mmol/l over this period. It's not that you need more basal, it's that you need less in total. What I'm suggesting is that maybe 32u of basal is actually too high a load.
In terms of timing, until you basal test your morning load, you won't know how much too much you are taking. I suggest you start there and then look at what needs to change. The issue with having an incorrect basal is that it throws everything else out, so you need to take the time to get it right. Once this is right, then you can look at the bolus amount and the insulin carb ratio. It will become very obvious whether this is right once your basal is correct.
You are also not applying consistent insulin:carb ratios - you have some which are 1u:6g, some that are 1u:2g, some where you aren't bothering to use insulin at all, in spite of having a high BG and eating 25g of carbs. It's all a little unclear as to why you are doing what you are doing.
I'm intrigued that the basal tests under medical supervision didn't notice that you weren't getting a flat basal profile. It's a little disturbing. Can you post the numbers you saw for either of those, and were they conducted fasted or with some form of food on board? If you had food on board what was it?
Hmmm. Any protein or beans would, in my view, screw up a basal test. Others on here would agree with that I think.I'll see if I can find em mate, they were conducted with small fat/protein meals with non fibrous veg- namely spinach/beans/brocolli. On one or two occasions I had to jump ship due to treating hypo. I'll try and find the results.
I'm intrigued that the basal tests under medical supervision didn't notice that you weren't getting a flat basal profile. It's a little disturbing.
Hmmm. Any protein or beans would, in my view, screw up a basal test. Others on here would agree with that I think.
That would make sense, and the cgm is showing that really you need to. I notice that when you've eaten carbs and protein, you've bolused (normally) only for the carbs. I think you probably need to include the protein as well.I think quite a few of those spikes on the CGM graph is where I have eaten no carbohydrate meals, felt it was unnecessary to bolus and not written anything down.
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