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Glucose rise falling asleep
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<blockquote data-quote="Peyote" data-source="post: 2459969" data-attributes="member: 550531"><p>Thanks a lot for all your suggestions and ideas on this, it is really helpful <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite1" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":)" /> </p><p></p><p>[USER=538114]@StewM[/USER] When you say pushing the bolus to later, would you then suggest waiting for my blood sugar to respond after eating and/or splitting the dose to limit the steep rise/fall? It sounds possible that the wrong dose of bolus could have that effect and with a mix of a little higer basal combined with more patience with the bolus could solve the issue. I will definitely give that a go.</p><p></p><p>Richard F - I do the same thing if I can see a rise before falling a sleep, but my issue is that it is so hard to tell how much correction I will need that I often end up with the high anyway. </p><p></p><p>Sgm14 - I have done some of that, but like mentioned above, I often find that the correction dose that I feel confident to take at the given measurement will often not be enough to correct the rise very much.</p><p>I also tried cutting out things that I thought could have an impact like caffeine, certain types of carbs/foods etc. but never found it to make a difference and seeing that it happens in the same pattern when basal testing I do not think it is where the issue is at the moment.</p><p>I have addressed this issue many times with my diabetic team but they kinda brushes it off as nothing since the rest of my values are within the range. They look at the h1abc and the graphs that libreview creates, seeing the median is within the limits and does not care about the 25% peaking at 20 mmol/l... I gave up on them trying to solve the puzzle and turned to this forum which already provided me with more trials than they have done.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Peyote, post: 2459969, member: 550531"] Thanks a lot for all your suggestions and ideas on this, it is really helpful :) [USER=538114]@StewM[/USER] When you say pushing the bolus to later, would you then suggest waiting for my blood sugar to respond after eating and/or splitting the dose to limit the steep rise/fall? It sounds possible that the wrong dose of bolus could have that effect and with a mix of a little higer basal combined with more patience with the bolus could solve the issue. I will definitely give that a go. Richard F - I do the same thing if I can see a rise before falling a sleep, but my issue is that it is so hard to tell how much correction I will need that I often end up with the high anyway. Sgm14 - I have done some of that, but like mentioned above, I often find that the correction dose that I feel confident to take at the given measurement will often not be enough to correct the rise very much. I also tried cutting out things that I thought could have an impact like caffeine, certain types of carbs/foods etc. but never found it to make a difference and seeing that it happens in the same pattern when basal testing I do not think it is where the issue is at the moment. I have addressed this issue many times with my diabetic team but they kinda brushes it off as nothing since the rest of my values are within the range. They look at the h1abc and the graphs that libreview creates, seeing the median is within the limits and does not care about the 25% peaking at 20 mmol/l... I gave up on them trying to solve the puzzle and turned to this forum which already provided me with more trials than they have done. [/QUOTE]
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