I checked my BG levels at bedtime last night and they were 12.3, so I programmed my insulin pump to correct this high. 2 hours later I was in hypo mode at 2.5. Now, I'm not sure why this happened and would appreciate some advice.
Were your hands clean, no chance of anything on them to affect the reading? I know it's hard to be wise after the event but did you do a retest to make sure the reading was correct? Another option is the meal you ate, did you give the right type of bolus for the meal ie, was it a high sugar meal with little fat or protein to even out the blood sugar?
My daily insulin dosage is around 30units per day, including my basal. So, when I corrected my high BG last night my pump tells me to take just over 3 units of insulin, so I bolused this as a normal bolus, thinking it would bring my BG level to a normal range, certainly not into hypo mode!
Any correction should be by using the correction bolus not meal bolus as the pump sorts this out for the logbook.
Now, I have lost a lot of weight over the last 4 months and my insulin dosages have decreased dramatically over this time period (from over 100units per day to around 30units per day). Do I need to adjust my sensitivity? It's currently 1.6... I know I should know what to do being a pumper for nearly two years, however, I've never changed my settings since I was put on the pump so don't know what it's all about!
My next diabetic appointment isn't until October 16.
Yes you definitely need to decrease your insulin sensitivity / correction ratio by at least the same proportion as your body mass has come down, probably more (because you are probably more fit, as well as slimmer).
But change it slowly, and with testing.
Did you wash your fingers or hand after the sweets? As too the correction factor, you need to test that to see what you actually need. I would have thought if you have gone from 100 units down to 30 then carb ratio and correction factor would have changed. As from what you are saying I'm just assuming that the drop like you had was a one off, so if it were me I would not change anything unless it happened a couple of more times.
I've said this before, but these formulas are just initial guesstimates for the newly diagnosed. If you already have a number that works, or used to work, it's much safer to work up or down from an existing number than to jump to a new number from a formula.One way of calculating your correction dose is to divide 100 by your total daily dose of insulin. So in your case it would be 100/30=3.333333!. So 1 unit of insulin should drop your bs by roughly 3.5 mmol. Hope this helps
Anne x
One way of calculating your correction dose is to divide 100 by your total daily dose of insulin. So in your case it would be 100/30=3.333333!. So 1 unit of insulin should drop your bs by roughly 3.5 mmol. Hope this helps
Anne x
Thanks Spiker. My BMI has decreased from 39 to 26, so quite a big drop! I also do a lot of exercising to keep fit. I was thinking about trying the basal test but not got round to that yet!
Basal testing is a must before you change anything else.
Do you have the book pumping insulin by John Walsh? If not please try and get it (amazon) it's the best investment you will ever make.
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