My very first plus I had it on for over 24 hrs as I put them on 24 hrs in advance I started it at 22.35 we was in gran canneria on holiday I had a shower the next morning and it fell off. I had taken another plus with me I fitted that we flew home the next day. I reported it to abbots 4 days later the replacement came then the next day the 1 I fitted said replace sensor. I think it had 9 days left to run, I reported it again and another 1 arrived since then they haven't been to bad apart from how quickly my sugars drop. I can check and let's say it's 11 and stable then 2 minutes later the alarm is going off at 5.5 then a cpl of minutes later it's under 5, in that time I've eaten lots of jelly babies or full fat coke but my blood tester says 8 ISH then the sensor comes up with an error for sometimes up to an hour so I test manually then when it comes back on its 16 ish it's bloody annoying.That’s interesting. I have had the 2 Plus sensors on prescription since February, and they are either constantly falling off, or just completely failing for no reason. As in, I replaced my sensor today, started it and managed to take 2 readings about 2 hours apart, then the error message ‘replace sensor’ appeared! In my experience, I haven’t had one yet which has lasted 15 days. I self-funded for about 4 years and the Libre 2 sensors were absolutely fine, but I now feel I can’t trust the readings on the 2 Plus anymore. I do wonder if the self-funders are given the more reliable sensors and the prescription crew get the ‘trial’ ones. I think Abbott use us as unpaid research subjects, if I’m honest. This is definitely an issue, as my Health Board ration sensors and numbers are limited over 12 months, to 24 per year. I’m sick of phoning Abbott up for replacements, because the NHS won’t replace them.
I’D say in that situation, work with the BG meter. I find there’s a time lag with the sensor if I’m hypo, it takes longer to sense a rise in blood sugar than the sensor. Apparently the difference between measuring with meter in that situation is because interstitial fluid, which is what the sensor measures, is slower to get glucose than the bloodstream, which a BM measures. I’ve had similar happen to me while away from home, and have so far had to buy 2 sensors, mainly because I have them on prescription and my GP won’t issue any more than 2 per month.My very first plus I had it on for over 24 hrs as I put them on 24 hrs in advance I started it at 22.35 we was in gran canneria on holiday I had a shower the next morning and it fell off. I had taken another plus with me I fitted that we flew home the next day. I reported it to abbots 4 days later the replacement came then the next day the 1 I fitted said replace sensor. I think it had 9 days left to run, I reported it again and another 1 arrived since then they haven't been to bad apart from how quickly my sugars drop. I can check and let's say it's 11 and stable then 2 minutes later the alarm is going off at 5.5 then a cpl of minutes later it's under 5, in that time I've eaten lots of jelly babies or full fat coke but my blood tester says 8 ISH then the sensor comes up with an error for sometimes up to an hour so I test manually then when it comes back on its 16 ish it's bloody annoying.
Well aware of that,and fully understand having been a nurse for over 40 years. but Abbott could make the process far easier than it actually is. There’s an issue with the email form, it doesn’t seem to be answered or dealt with for days, for a start. I had a sensor fail on me a couple of months ago on a bank holiday, and couldn’t raise anyone at Abbot for about 4 days. I’m still waiting for a reply from that one! I’ve been using these for years, first as a self-funding patient, then as a prescribed patient, and their service used to be more accessible than it is now. I don’t expect the NHS to provide replacements.I know it's frustrating @Zilsniggy , but the NHS is struggling for money, and Abbott make them, so it's up to Abbott to replace them, not the NHS.
any particular reason you've set the alarm so high? default is 3.9 i think. i'd consider reducing it which should help prevent treating as hypo when sometimes it wont be. alongside that i would most definately check against vs fingerprick. there is delay alongside possible compression lows. compression low doesnt have to be when pressure is directly on the sensor just pressure within somewhere of that area which can then have that knock on effect. staying hydrated should help somewhat too.the alarm is going off at 5.5 then a cpl of minutes later it's under 5, in that time I've eaten lots of jelly babies or full fat coke but my blood tester says 8 ISH then the sensor comes up with an error for sometimes up to an hour so I test manually then when it comes back on its 16 ish it's bloody annoying.
As far as I can see the main difference is that 2 plus should last for 15 days before replacing. The 2s are being phased out.The other day when it dropped I didn't have a finger prick tester so I couldn't check but I felt fine but because of the 5 to drive I didn't just in case. What is the difference from 2 to 2 plus ???
I normally fit the new 1 24 plus hrs on advance as I've found using them straight away they seem unreliable ??
After a day they seem to settle down. Thanks for your reply.
As far as I can see the main difference is that 2 plus should last for 15 days before replacing. The 2s are being phased out.
As a self funder I can get the two cheaper than other versions. Should I stock up??
Off for blood draw today and being taught how to use insulin tomorrow
I’m partly relieved and partly worried what a future of daily injections will bring .
nice guidelines said:Multiple daily injections
Two or more daily insulin injections, which could either be a basal-bolus regimen or more than one daily insulin injection.
1.6.17
Offer intermittently scanned continuous glucose monitoring (isCGM, commonly referred to as 'flash') to adults with type 2 diabetes on multiple daily insulin injections if any of the following apply:
they have recurrent hypoglycaemia or severe hypoglycaemia
they have impaired hypoglycaemia awareness
they have a condition or disability (including a learning disability or cognitive impairment) that means they cannot self-monitor their blood glucose by capillary blood glucose monitoring but could use an isCGM device (or have it scanned for them)
they would otherwise be advised to self-measure at least 8 times a day.
I don’t know how long they are likely to be supported, if they are withdrawn. That’s the issue.As a self funder I can get the two cheaper than other versions. Should I stock up??
Hi everybody, just started on freestyle 2+, fist sensor worked fine, put an new sensor on Saturday and it’s frequently saying sensor error on not in range, spoke to abbot today and they are sending a new sensor and a reader. What did astound me was when asking what phone I was using (IPhone 12) and what version software (latest 18.5) he said that may be the problem as the sensor software has not been optimised for iOS 18.5.
Given that Apple recommends always using the latest software for security reasons I was shocked to find the sensor does not fully support it, hence why they are sending a reader.
I do find the sensor readings are not that reliable, sensor 3.9 vs 2.4 on finger prick, 17 vs 13, 5.6 vs 3.9 and so on.
Great in theory but can’t help feeling it’s still a work in process.
I was changed over 2 the libra 2+ a month before i was meant to get it but wasn't informed of this. I've now noticed that although i've customed the settings regarding high/low alerts my sensor now ignores my preferences !!!. Tyle 1 diabetics need this detrimental information as per indicated, i've bern diabetic now for 46 years & need to be kept in the loop concerning my bm's & this seems to not be the case with these sensors. If i have lucozade or milk & sugar when i'm alerted at 3.4 !!!( my setting is 4.9) even after i've had food, the nxt alert is high glucose of 15.9- 16.4( my alert setting's 13.5!!!) come on, this isn't helping me to "control"my diabetes & as told many yrs ago by a diabetes specialist don't let diabetes rule your life, you rule it. If this's technology, bring back finger pricks & glass syringes !!!.Hi all I've been having lots of issues with my recent libre2 sensors and yes I know they are being replaced my 2 plus are waiting to be picked up.
My question to you all is has anybody else have had huge drops say from 10 plus to say 6 when you notice it's falling fast, so you start saying a bottle of lucozade followed by say digestives biscuits failing that jelly babies, and there is nothing you can do from making them drop ? The other week we was out walking my sugars was fine there was a hill not massive but at the bottom I checked I was 6.6 it took say a minute to go up this hill my alarm went off at 5 even though it's set at 5.6 so I drank a 380 ml bottle of lucozade. we walked to the car another 2 minutes by then it's 4.2 I ate 3 digestive biscuits it's now 3.5 and I'm feeling fine. My wife drives me home and now it's 18 plus and showing I had a low that day and that I had 1 14 days ago yet I had photos showing the last lows was 90 days ago. 2 days later the 7 days 1 was on there the 14 days had gone and now I only have 1% on the 90 days ????
I'm hoping the new 2 plus are better for reliability I also had to replace 1 today I'd had it in 4 days and it suddenly started to hurt like hell it hadn't been knocked but the pain was immense. Thanks all sorry for the essay lol.
which version of libreview are you using? the app behaves itself for alarm purposes for me. check home (3 lines at left top of screen) then about:I've now noticed that although i've customed the settings regarding high/low alerts my sensor now ignores my preferences !!!.
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/th...tions-unlock-code-for-freestyle-libre.139956/ maybe still that?Anyone know the code for freestyle libre2 reader for proffesional settings .
lucozade is no longer recremmended to treat hypo's they have less sugar now than a can of regular coca-colaYeah, I’ve had similar weird drops with the Libre 2 as well. Sometimes it feels like the sensor just can’t keep up if your sugars are moving quickly, so it looks worse than it actually is. I usually double-check with a finger prick when the numbers don’t make sense, just to be sure. The big spikes after treating a “low” are often because the sensor lagged and your body was already catching up before all the lucozade and biscuits hit.
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