It really is highly personal how much we need, whatever works is the right amount.A personal question perhaps, but I’m curious as to what insulin units you do!
I restarted insulin, am using Tresiba (long-acting) and NovoRapid, after a five year gap. The diabetes clinic just gave me free reign on how many units I could use. They started me on 32 Tresiba but I’m up to 60 and have remained on that for the last week.
I use NovoRapid at 30 Breakfast, 40 lunch and 40 to 50 evening. I only have two coffee’s with milk for breakfast. My BGs are still rising during the early morning and I’m reluctant to increase it by more!
Diet is hit and miss, with room for improvement.
Have you done any basal testing to see if your basal keeps you more or less level without food (except perhaps for that morning rise)?
Hi @alimar77 it would be interesting to know what type of diabetes you have, as insulin resistance and production of endogenous insulin can make a huge difference.
As a childhood T1 who presumably makes very little of her own insulin after 53 years of injections I am currently on abiut 40 units a day, evenly split between basal and bolus, but I am on lowish carb and my insulin needs to vary quite a bit depending on weight, diet and exercise.
They make x3 and x5 strength insulins for very insulin resistance diabetics (usually T2s?) so some people need literally 100s of units a day. Other folk can be on less than 10 units, so there is no right answer here.
It can be helpful to fill out your profile to say T2 and insulin, that way it will be visible at a glance with any post you make.I should of said, type 2 for 18 years, I was 27 when I got diagnosed and overweight
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