Hi I'm type one on humalog mix 25 I take 30 u in the morning and 20 in the evening I never change it my doctor is really pleased with my blood sugar readings but my levels are always dropping at different times they could be 2.3 or 3.2 or even 1.5 sometimes I give my injection but don't eat for a longtime could this be the cause.
Hi
@dex44lego9 ,
I have been using 25Mix for almost 2 years now with a reasonable amount of success. My glucose levels were all over the place for the first 12 weeks though. After some experimentation I settled on 12u in the morning and on workdays I have a cereal breakfast of approx 25g carbs. So this 12u dose gives 3u of rapid acting insulin to cope with breakfast and 9u of long acting insulin. I am usually injecting around 10 minutes before breakfast at 6 30am.
We all have our own insulin/carbohydrate ratio. I work with a ratio of 1:10 for the rapid acting part of the injection so if I was to inject your dose of 30u of 25mix for breakfast, (25% is 7.5u rapid acting and) I'd need around 75g of carbohydrate for this. For my own personal needs I would also be taking far too much long acting insulin with this dose. I hope that makes sense.
Whilst the action of the rapid acting part of your insulin peaks at around 2hrs and is pretty much gone after 4 (possibly 5) hours the long acting part lasts for around 12 hours. I discovered that my blood glucose drops late morning so a coffee accompanied by a small biscuit (approx 6g of carbs) keeps my glucose levels above 4 until lunchtime.
Lunchtime is another problem. Because the rapid acting part of the insulin has been used by then, even a single round of sandwiches will send blood sugars skywards. I also have a rapid acting insulin that was originally provided for sick days but I use it to have a couple of extra units of insulin for lunch. If this option is not available to you then you probably need to be thinking about a very low carb lunch.
I don't like injecting a lot of mixed insulin for my evening meal because if I do, I'll wake up hypo at 3am. So I try not to go above 16u 25 Mix, ( giving 4u rapid acting and 12u long acting) and I adjust my carbohydrate intake to match. Every now and then I take a lower dose of the mixed insulin and an extra couple of units of rapid. Our insulin is also available as a 50Mix so it might also be worth asking the doc about trying it, up to you.
At the endocrinology centre, 1 nurse told me not to vary my doses, another told me I had to vary them for exercise and carbohydrate intake. I think you should be having a chat with you doctor or specialist about these aspects of your diabetes management. I do find it difficult to balance all this out at times and I've asked about going on a basal/bolus regimen and been talked out of it because my a1c level is good enough.