Levemir is my basal insulin and I take a split dose.Now that's what you call a DP. What basal are you on? How come it took so long to turn it around, is it not responding to corrections?
No you've answered it above, if you had caught it at 8 it would not have been so dramatic. I am guessing you missed the morning basal too which wouldnt help. Looking at the fact the slope is consistent all morning it makes me think your basal may have ran out about 4am?Levemir is my basal insulin and I take a split dose.
It wasn't too long to turn around was it? I think going from 17.3 to <7.8 in around an hour is alright? I'd be hard pushed to get any quicker of a turn around without injecting into muscle I think - my BG also continues to rise (from whatever value) as soon as I'm up and start moving around. Bit of a pain...
Looking at the fact the slope is consistent all morning it makes me think your basal may have ran out about 4am?
Just now I'm on 22u which I split into two doses of 11u at around 9 or 10 AM/PM.@GrantGam1337 - what are your timings and doses for Levemir? It would be interesting to see how that relates. Also, just looking at your graph, the timing of your drop seems fairly normal. It took about 3 hours from your insulin dose to hitting the bottom of your trough.
One of the things I found with Levemir was that it was helpful to do an AM and PM dose (indeed, the NICE guidelines and most of the literature and Clamp studies support this too), although with DP like that, you really need a pump as Levemir just isn't going to cut it.
But that's why we have Libres. To give us the evidence to deal with it and ask for better treatment.
When I was on Levemir sleeping in caused the exact same effect........
Yeah that's right @noblehead, still waiting patiently though as I imagine that these things take time@GrantGam1337 , didn't you mention a few weeks back that your consultant was considering you for a pump, as you know you can have multiple basal rates programmed throughout the day and night and this would be ideal for your DP issues, show them your graphs as evidence to support your funding for pump therapy.
Having been on similar Levemir rollercoasters, as it is in no way flat at low dosage levels I would suggest trying Tresiba, it just makes life so much easier.Yeah that's right @noblehead, still waiting patiently though as I imagine that these things take time
That's something which I'll be discussing at my next reviewHaving been on similar Levemir rollercoasters, as it is in no way flat at low dosage levels I would suggest trying Tresiba, it just makes life so much easier.
And if they argue cost it is now only +30 % more expensive than Levemir and every chance you will drop dose anyway in the switch. At 22u you are already low cost for basal insulin. Google the graphs on Levemir profile at low dosage to show it peaks and then turns to water!That's something which I'll be discussing at my next review
Thanks for the input @steve_p6, I appreciate itAnd if they argue cost it is now only +30 % more expensive than Levemir and every chance you will drop dose anyway in the switch. At 22u you are already low cost for basal insulin. Google the graphs on Levemir profile at low dosage to show it peaks and then turns to water!
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