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Type 1 Diabetes
Dawn Phenomenon & Foot On The Floor
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<blockquote data-quote="Antje77" data-source="post: 2111436" data-attributes="member: 372207"><p>Nice article!</p><p>One of the reasons I got my consultant to prescribe Fiasp was the delayed action of NovoRapid. No problem (except it being very annoying) pre-bolusing for food, but injecting 45 minutes before you wake up is kinda hard (as described in this paragraph in the article): </p><p>"If you want to be very disciplined with your blood sugar levels then you’ll need to test with very small doses (.05 - 1.0u), and roughly 30 - 60mins before getting up. Otherwise, you can inject as you’re getting up, but you then run the risk of rising bloods - potentially out of your target range."</p><p></p><p>Fiasp solved this problem for me. On NovoRapid I was usually out of range for some 3 hours after getting up, despite bolusing as soon as I woke up, on Fiasp I stay almost level.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Antje77, post: 2111436, member: 372207"] Nice article! One of the reasons I got my consultant to prescribe Fiasp was the delayed action of NovoRapid. No problem (except it being very annoying) pre-bolusing for food, but injecting 45 minutes before you wake up is kinda hard (as described in this paragraph in the article): "If you want to be very disciplined with your blood sugar levels then you’ll need to test with very small doses (.05 - 1.0u), and roughly 30 - 60mins before getting up. Otherwise, you can inject as you’re getting up, but you then run the risk of rising bloods - potentially out of your target range." Fiasp solved this problem for me. On NovoRapid I was usually out of range for some 3 hours after getting up, despite bolusing as soon as I woke up, on Fiasp I stay almost level. [/QUOTE]
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