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<blockquote data-quote="urbanracer" data-source="post: 2170402" data-attributes="member: 140811"><p>I think it would kind of depend what your needs are. Novorapid (officially) takes 10 to 20 minutes to get going. Some people would say it takes longer. Taking more of it won't necessarily speed it up but you will have a bigger insulin spike at the 2 hour mark.</p><p></p><p>That kinda works if you've eaten a lot of carbs so a higher dose has it's uses.</p><p></p><p>If you need a faster acting insulin, then Fiasp might suit you better. In tests, (and it depends where you get your information from ) Fiasp reaches its maximum infusion rate between 7 to 10 minutes faster than Novorapid. But you have the same overall level of exposure.</p><p></p><p>Google Fiasp Insulin Profile and Novorapid Insulin Profile for a graphical representation of what I've tried to explain.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="urbanracer, post: 2170402, member: 140811"] I think it would kind of depend what your needs are. Novorapid (officially) takes 10 to 20 minutes to get going. Some people would say it takes longer. Taking more of it won't necessarily speed it up but you will have a bigger insulin spike at the 2 hour mark. That kinda works if you've eaten a lot of carbs so a higher dose has it's uses. If you need a faster acting insulin, then Fiasp might suit you better. In tests, (and it depends where you get your information from ) Fiasp reaches its maximum infusion rate between 7 to 10 minutes faster than Novorapid. But you have the same overall level of exposure. Google Fiasp Insulin Profile and Novorapid Insulin Profile for a graphical representation of what I've tried to explain. [/QUOTE]
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