That's a bad idea; Novorapid/Humalog tend to peak at about 1h and last for 3-5h, so injecting every hour if it hasn't come down far enough is a pretty good way of causing a hypo.Again try a small about of insulin then test your sugars an hour later to see if it has decreased, if not give more insulin.
Not sure what you mean by that; obviously, the net change in BG will depend on what you eat - you'll see a rise in BG if you have a bottle of lucozade with the 1u correction dose.So irrespective of what you eat 1 unit can drop your bs by a certain amount ?
Looks like you might benefit from a more flexible carb counting regime - e.g. DAFNE clone BDECThe Doc told me to use 5 units for every meal and I did that for months
Insulin pens tend to come in 3ml (300u at 100u/ml) size - so that's about 80 for a cup of tea. :lol:I had no idea 1 unit could make that much difference !!! thats like a tiny drop !
dingbat said:huge thanks for taking the time to respond. sounds like most people have similar experiences.
I thought I was going mad wondering why no one else felt this way.
I need to get back on track but hate fast acting insulin, spend all my time worrying about hypos. I'm not quite sure how to deal with this without using it though.
maybe I'm in denial.
:think: :?: :lol:bedclothes
Neicy0412 said:When my levels are high, I feel exhausted, as if I am wading through treacle! My vision blurs, I want the loo all the time, my mouth feels dry so I generally prefer not to feel that way, but I do struggle with control, when it's good I am thrilled and when it's bad. I feel rubbish.
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