slip
Well-Known Member
Basal is suppose to keep you level, you had a slight decrease over the day, but the 3.2 this morning?, I'd do some more basal testing before jumping to any conclusions, Also try and test during the night (a pain I know).
Ok I fasted yesterday for 24 hours on Levemir only.
The results:
6am - 12 Levemir, BG 10.8
8am - BG 12.1
11am - BG 10.4
1pm - BG 9.1
4pm - BG 8.8
6pm - 12 Levemir, BG 8.8
9pm - BG 8.2
6am - BG 3.2
So, on the whole it seems to be pretty level. The morning high is not a surprise, the dawn effect always seems to be present, although not this morning when I was low, but again not a surprise after fasting for 24 hours.
Does this tell me that the Levemir as a twin daily dose is right? It seems to.
So back to the question, why, after eating a meal, is it taking four or so hours for my levels to start to drop?
Yes I know they were high yesterday through fasting and normally I would have had a correction dose but I didn't want any other factors working - just the Levemir. While they were high, they were consistent expect for the morning hypo). Is the morning low not just down to the fact I had nothing to eat for 24 hours?
Ok I fasted yesterday for 24 hours on Levemir only.
The results:
6am - 12 Levemir, BG 10.8
8am - BG 12.1
11am - BG 10.4
1pm - BG 9.1
4pm - BG 8.8
6pm - 12 Levemir, BG 8.8
9pm - BG 8.2
6am - BG 3.2
So, on the whole it seems to be pretty level. The morning high is not a surprise, the dawn effect always seems to be present, although not this morning when I was low, but again not a surprise after fasting for 24 hours.
Does this tell me that the Levemir as a twin daily dose is right? It seems to.
So back to the question, why, after eating a meal, is it taking four or so hours for my levels to start to drop?
Hello everyone!
I hope that you are all very well today!
What I am about to say may sound completely ridiculous and off topic but, there is a trick with the glycemic index.
I can see you all smiling somewhat ironically now but, just be patient with me.
Following my diabetes nutritionist’s advise, I was all for low glycemic index foods.
I was starting my breakfast, with ridiculously low glycemic load meals which included pumpernickel bread or rye bread or even the Hovis Seeds sensations and olive oil spread to delay the digestion process...
Now here is the tricky bit.
I have breakfast at 07:00 am at a beautiful 6.2mmol level and I injected Novorapid basis 1:1.
Due to the low GL of my breakfast, I had a very mild spike so about 2 hours later I might have seen a spike at 8 mmols, not so bad. My diabetes nurse was happy.
However, around 09:30 (which is after my Novorapid’s peak) my BG was shooting up to 13 mmols….
“Bloody hell” I was thinking… what on earth was that?
THAT, was the low glycemic load food, which was kicking in AFTER my Novorapid had done its serious job…
As a result, at around 10:00 am, I was hoping for whatever had remained of my Novorapid (along with my Levemir overalp) to do something…
By 13:00 pre-lunchtime, I would be lucky if my BG would be at 11 mmols.
The low glycemic breakfast was messing with the timings and gave me the impression that my ratios were all wrong… I was starting to think that maybe my ratios are 2:1 or even higher.
So, I decided to experiment with a medium to higher GL breakfast of the same carbs content.
I had the same 30 grams carbs but, this time it was coconut milk, Dorset cereals, hazelnuts and berries and injected 4 units of Novorapid (just in case 3 units weren't enough).
The 1:1 ratio did work and by 11:00 am I was at 4.3mmols…
I don’t know if this is any help to you… But, maybe it isn’t your Levemir… and maybe it isn’t a ratios issue either…
Maybe it’s the glycemic load of your food?
Just a thought…
Regards
Josephine
That's true from the reports i've read, insulin resistance/sensitivity is a major factor. Specific choices of a healthy diet and exercise improves this, our lifestyle choices post diagnosis play a significant part as well as our genetic disposition.Another question. You are asking a general question about insulin sensitivity, not a specific one about adjusting ratios/doses etc.
Could this delayed reaction to insulin be to do with your body composition or activity levels (or both)? The better your muscle to fat ratio, the greater your insulin sensitivity is. And the more sedentary you are, the longer your insulin takes to get into circulation. I'm not asking you to tell us what your body composition is but do you realize that is a factor? (There is research that says insulin sensitivity, not HbA1c, is the single biggest factor in preventing complications and enabling longevity in people with Type 1.)
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I know - do one thing and it throws up hundreds of variables and questions. I have a pretty healthy diet (low-fat vegetarian) and active - gym four weekdays for 35-min high-intensity training and Sunday road rides of between 50 and 100 miles. Saturday is always rest day.
My BMI is spot on (according to my doc), as is my blood pressure. Activity of course has an impact on insulin doses and how quickly it is absorbed.
Interestingly, last Sunday I did a 101-mile sportive. My BG at the start was 11.2 (at 7:15am). That's fine as I was about to burn off 5,000 calories over the next six hours. I had injected 2 Humalog 1 hour before the start (BG was 9.1) and eaten 55g of carbs. Normally my ratio is 10:1 carb to Humalog. I had decreased this by 50% (OK slightly over) to account for the imminent exercise (as per my consultant's advice).
Two hours later (after some pretty tough hill climbs), my BG was 14.9. So three hours after injecting and after constant exercise my BG was still rising. Was my ratio wrong, was my background dose too low the evening before (down from 12 to 10 or that morning - down from 10 to 8), was there a 'flight or fight' adrenaline reaction related to the increased activity or was there, as I still suspect, a delay in the Humalog taking affect?
An hour later (I stop every hour to blood test when cycling) it was 8.2, which is a massive drop and seems to be when the Humalog was starting to act (four hours after injecting).
I know there are loads of variables that could be causing this but today I got up at 5:45. My BG was 7.4. I injected 12 Levemir and only 2 Humalog as I was going to the gym for 7am. I had no breakfast. My BG was 9.9 at 7am (dawn affect?). It was 4.9 at 10am. Four hours after injecting it seems the Humalog was acting.
I'm finding the same thing after my evening meal. On Saturday (rest day) my BG was 6.4 at 6pm rising to 13.4 at 9pm! By 11pm it was down to 9.8.
On Sunday (last night) I could not excercise as my bike was in for repairs so another rest day. My BG was 7.2 before dinner at 6pm. It was 14.2 at 9pm. It fell to 9.9 at 10pm. I injected at a ratio of 10:1 and also increased Levemir to 12 (so 24 units over the 24 hours, which is my highest dose and only administered when I have nt exercised). This morning it had fell to 7.4.
This is why I am asking why it appears Humalog is not starting to act in my body until four hours after injecting. It's about the only constant thing in my diabetes at the moment. My levels are all over the place but it always seems to be around four hours before this fast acting seems to start to work.
I have ordered a Libre system and will use it for the month and use it to track my levels over a sustained period.