Thanks for the tip. I will get onto them tomorrow.If they aren't sticking , contact Abbott. They are supposed to last 14 days, and if they won't stick for fourteen days they are not meeting the advertising and Abbott will replace.
I agree I think they are using less too. Mines finishing Monday but I really need it to last over the weekend as I'll be having a few drinks.Aaargh, talking of sensors not sticking... I played a particularly sweaty game of cricket last night. When I got up this morning, instead of having the sensor on my arm it had decided to lie next to me on the bed. The glue on the sticky pad was barely even sticky. I don't think they've changed the glue, but I'm pretty certain they aren't always using as much. And it was such an accurate sensor. Oh well, new one has gone on on my back...
The conversation I had about mine this morning suggested that they are having a few issues in the heat, and quite a few of the sensors have just "fallen off"! Seems that with the glue reaction and the stickiness or otherwise, this one is proving a challenge for Abbott!Thanks to Tim2000s for the tip I called Abbott this morning to get a replacement for the sensor that lasted only 4 hours after a particularly sweaty bike ride today. I queried the stickiness and was told they are looking at the stickiness issue including changing it. Apparently there are people finding that it removes their skin when the sensor gets removed, OUCH!
Having read the comments above and from my own experience it seems the issue may be more to do with sweat.
@sp41700 - my sensor pulls large chunks of skin off when I remove them - it's terrible. Even the ones that don't stick properly and need Opsite over them pull skin off when I remove them on day 14 - the Opsite sticks firmly, causes me no skin irritation and removes easily and cleanly after 14 days without removing lumps of skin. Why don't Abbott just use the same adhesive on the sensors - you wouldn't think it would be this hard - they can invent a great piece of technology like the Libre but cannot come up with a suitable adhesive - really?
Incidentally, I use alcohol free adhesive remover wipes to soak the edge of the sensor skirt and lift it gradually, soaking each new area as I go. Never make any sudden pull and work around the sensor slowly. This seems to minimise the pulling away of skin.
Smidge
Thanks to Tim2000s for the tip I called Abbott this morning to get a replacement for the sensor that lasted only 4 hours after a particularly sweaty bike ride today. I queried the stickiness and was told they are looking at the stickiness issue including changing it. Apparently there are people finding that it removes their skin when the sensor gets removed, OUCH!
Having read the comments above and from my own experience it seems the issue may be more to do with sweat.
***Stupid question alert***
Are you all type 1 on this thread?
I'm type 2 and on basal/bolus insulin and am finding the Libre very useful, particularly the graphing and the way it shows the effect of various meals on my bg
After reading many posts about the Libre, I couldn't decide whether it would be suitable for me or not.
I have a very dry sensitive skin so was put off by the posts showing bad reactions to the sensors. I eventually decided to go on the "waiting list" and decide what to do when I got the long awaited e-mail. Then I decided I'd go for it and maybe I'd be lucky and not react to the sensor.
I was then put off by the posts about skin being torn off when removing the sensor. That just seemed too much . . . but it doesn't happen to everyone.
I've been waiting over 3 months now and expect to wait at least another month before I get the e-mail. I'll probably go ahead with it but it's a lot of money to waste if it's no use to me. Is there any problem passing on the Libre to someone else? Would they be able to order sensors even though they didn't buy the Libre themselves?
Yes, my thoughts exactly. It takes me over a week to recover from overnight basal testing so some form of cgm would be a great help in many respects. I just don't want my skin to break out any more than usual.My main reason for trying is I wanted to know what my blood glucose was doing in between my meter testing. Certainly for adjusting the basal on a pump using the libre or a cgm is soooo much easier than having to wake up very two hours to test!
Of course you don't have to wear it use it all the time. You can say use it every few months for the 14 days to check how things are going or if you are having challenging bg readings.
Never discard it until it stops giving you readings. If it pulls off or lifts like that, contact Abbott for a replacement.So what happens if after one week the sensor lifts off all one side do I have to discard it and start another one ?
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