I had a hypo on Wednesday afternoon. 1.8 and I passed out on my living room floor. I was petrified. I only take lantus at 7am every morning as my pancreas is still spurting it out now and again. I recently increased my lantus to 10 and and suffered 4 hypos in one day I decreased it back to 8 and still I'm having hypos but it's at 4am and I wake up paralysed and often can't breathe and covered in what seems a few bucket fulls of water but it's actually cold sweat. I've spoken to my DN and she wasn't much help. I'm a dispenser and know about stuff and my brother has type 1 and my father in law. I'm 8st 3 and 5ft 7. Xx
I had a hypo on Wednesday afternoon. 1.8 and I passed out on my living room floor. I was petrified. I only take lantus at 7am every morning as my pancreas is still spurting it out now and again. I recently increased my lantus to 10 and and suffered 4 hypos in one day I decreased it back to 8 and still I'm having hypos but it's at 4am and I wake up paralysed and often can't breathe and covered in what seems a few bucket fulls of water but it's actually cold sweat. I've spoken to my DN and she wasn't much help. I'm a dispenser and know about stuff and my brother has type 1 and my father in law. I'm 8st 3 and 5ft 7. Xx
How do you know how long its been working in your body whether its for 24h or 18h or ... how do you know?
Unlike fast acting insulin you can not tell when it is depleted or its active period is over?
I totally agree with you that it differes from one person to another.
This ties in with working out what your basal should be. Get that right and then you just need to fiddle the bolus. I too am on variable doses, 1:1.5 in morning 1:1 afternoon (unless exercise or busy then it drop to 1:0.9) then 1:2 in the evening. If I go for a late snack a couple hours after my evening Levemir then my ratio is 1:1.5.Hi. I don't know if this well help,but when I was first diagnosed, I was getting too low for comfort every morning - not actual hypos, and nthing like you're suffering, but just too low to operate normally. The advice from the diabetes specialist was to reduce the ratio of Novorapid for breakfast (only the morning was affected, so the Lantus was okay for the rest of the day). The ratio went from 1:10 to 0.5:10 and ended up 0.2:10. This means that I very rarely take any Novorapid in the morning and the Lantus takes care of things until lunchtime. If I limit lunch to 10gcarbs, I don't take any Novorapid then either - unless the bg is over 6.8. This seems to be working - no hypos.
It is just a thought, but could it be that's the Novorapid that's causing the problems? Not overnight, but during the day. Whatever, I do hope you can get some help and advice - I was lucky in that I had a phone number to the diabetes team, and they were very helpful. Best wishes.
Hi been t1 for over 22years and on lantus for 10 or more years, take one injection at 5pm of twenty units and nearly same time next day/ night at 6.30pm i go hypo,but other than that it works fine,tried changing times and splitting but does not work,so now waiting for my pump will be here in six and hope this will do the trick,could this be the way forward for you ?
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Hi been t1 for over 22years and on lantus for 10 or more years, take one injection at 5pm of twenty units and nearly same time next day/ night at 6.30pm i go hypo,but other than that it works fine,tried changing times and splitting but does not work,so now waiting for my pump will be here in six and hope this will do the trick,could this be the way forward for you ?
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hi.changing to pump as have tried every thing with lantus if i split it (was told that you should'nt as they can over lap and have hypos) but for me my BG was 20+ over night ,and running high throughout the day if i'd changed my time for the one shot,have been on insulatard and levermir and both were just as bad for hypos,been a long road (3 years) to get to this point and the only thing i have'nt tried is a pump.the pump will have novorapid in,which am on now with injections so things will stop the same with meals half to one ratio,but then the pump mimics the pancreas by releasing insulin every hour.just need to find what basal rate is best for yourself.from as little as 0.005 units per hour and can be adjusted by 0.001 per hour.cant wait for it to come been told will take up to 4 to 6 month to set it myself/life styleHi roosta why r u changing from lantus to pump?
And what insulin will be in the pump?
How does it work?
And why is it considered any better?
Well that's pretty easy. There is research on the action curves that is independent of the manufacturers claims, and more to the point there is personal basal rate testing which very clearly shows when the action of long acting insulin fades and ends. All it takes is a blood sugar meter and a day of fasting. There is no mystery, no rocket science.How do you know how long its been working in your body whether its for 24h or 18h or ... how do you know?
Unlike fast acting insulin you can not tell when it is depleted or its active period is over?
Pumps use normal QA insulin for basal needs and deliver it continuously 24 hours a day. As the delivery rate can be fine tuned si much, it is far more flexible in exactly matching basal requirements than is possible with any long acting insulin.Hi roosta why r u changing from lantus to pump?
And what insulin will be in the pump?
How does it work?
And why is it considered any better?
Yes that and the thought of having a device attached to you 24x7. But believe me you soon get used to it and there are many benefits over multiple daily injections (MDI) if you are willing to put the work in.Hi
My diabetes team have never mentioned a pump I wouldn't mind having one but the thought of a needle inside me all the time puts me off.
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Well that's pretty easy. There is research on the action curves that is independent of the manufacturers claims, and more to the point there is personal basal rate testing which very clearly shows when the action of long acting insulin fades and ends. All it takes is a blood sugar meter and a day of fasting. There is no mystery, no rocket science.
Hi Josef. You're just completely wrong on every point. Sorry mate!Basal testing does not "shows when the action of long acting insulin (e.g. Lantus) fades and ends" whether it lasts for 24 Hours or less/more
It (the Basal test that is) only tells you that you need to adjust the dosage i.e. increase/decrease it.
It also does not take into account many other variables such as your level of activity during that day or what type of food did you eat how many meals did you eat... i.e. how sensitive to insulin (insulin resistance) your body is in a particular day.
Unlike the fast acting NovoRapid where you can know exactly when it ends.
There is no Meter or device that you can use that says you have 0 or any number of insulin in your body at a given time
The thing is Josef you have come on here very recently and you are making a lot of very sweeping statements and generalisations. You are advising people and questioning people about how they treat their diabetes with very little idea of their specific situation. For example, you don't believe in the honeymoon period because it didn't happen to you, despite the fact it is well documented, and you advise others on the basis there is no honeymoon period. You seem to take a "one size fits all" approach that what worked for you is the only thing that works and what you were told / what you believe / what manufacturers claim is the only thing that could be true.
I know you are trying to be helpful and to share, but please slow down with all the advice and perhaps do more listening and reading and more asking questions first?
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