stevejones1983
Newbie
- Messages
- 1
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
I’ll do that. I made some reductions in Basal on Temp Basal and that seemed to work ok. When Temp Basal expired, I would go back to Suspend Before Low. That happened most of the night and I checked my meter to ensure numbers were accurate.Hi Prancy. I can relate to your problem. I consistently had lows at about 11Am and 4PM. I adjusted both my carb ratio slightly Prancy and I also dropped the amount of insulin I was getting as a basal load from about 8 in the morning, through to 6 in the evening. I have had no lows at those times since.
That being said Prancy, I would suggest that you run it (any changes) by your pump people first. Once you get your 780 in auto and it starts working as it should Prancy, you will be a very happy camper me thinks.
Good luck.
Great response. Makes sense and I was not aware of this info. It helps. Which brings me to a question that I also may have already answered. When I finger stick, the number is automatically sent to my pump from my meter….I can accept or decline that number on the pump. I had been declining, if it was off too much, due to fear it would reject it due to large discrepancy and tell me to start warm up over, change sensor or something else that is terrible. However, earlier today I did accept a number that was over 30 points from the cgm number and it accepted it to my surprise. So, maybe “I” was the problem. Wish my pump trainer had told me that.Hi Prancy.
It certainly sounds like you are in the wars and I feel for you. I don't think anyone who isn't attached to one of these little suckers can ever understand the stress and anxiety that goes with them.
Firstly Prancy please allow me to preface what I am about to say, by stating that I am not in any way a trained doctor, nurse, or nurse practitioner. I am just another pump user, and these are simply my opinions, so I would urge you to contact your pump specialist people to see what they say. Doesn't hurt to work you way up the Medtronic's food chain either, until you find someone who will both listen and provide the assistance you require.
I.M.O. and from my perspective Prancy and as I understand things, the 780G is able to "think" and adjust how it delivers any insulin, based on how it views the disparity between skin glucose readings and blood glucose readings. For instance Prancy, if your skin glucose taken by your G4 sensor is reading 108mg/dl and a BG reading is taken and it reads 80mg/dl, then your 780 will say to itself that your sensor is reading high and it will adjust the amount of insulin it decides to give you , to accommodate that disparity. In full auto there is a pretty pink graph on the phone software, that shows this happening.
I.M.O. Prancy, the real problem starts at warm up. If your sugar levels are on the way up, or down and are changing quite steeply, then you get a much larger disparity, at that time, between SG and BG and the 780 then decides that that is the difference and adjusts itself to suit, so that Prancy, even after your sugar levels stabilise and are more in syc., the pump is still making adjustments based of those previously "learnt" figures, which in turn causes a see saw effect as the pump continues to chase itself up and down.
The only advice I can give you, is as I wrote earlier and to first contact your pump people, then get on to Medtronics and become a "squeaky wheel", until you are happy.
With respect to BG Prancy, what I usually do if this occurs, is to try to stabilise my sugar levels, then take and enter into the pump another BG reading 30mins after the last and another 30 mins after that. Then Prancy, I cross my fingers that the pump manages to "learn" what is happening.
When this system works as it is supposed to Prancy, it is a dream and IMO is the nearest thing to an artificial pancreas that is available today, which is really cool, though it is quite a slog to get there.
I will cross all my fingers and toes for you Prancy, please let me know how you are travelling.
Point taken. Things are continuing to go well. I have renewed enthusiasm. I have high hopes for my next A1c.Hi Prancy, it is my understanding, that provided you haven't done a fingerstick with dirty hands, or anything else that may skew the results, Prancy, that you should always accept the BG result. This gives your pump and up to date reading on the differential as to how the sensor is tracking against real time B.G.L's and it can adjust itself accordingly. The 780, particularly in auto is a very clever piece of kit and if the sensor is behaving itself, then it is very easy to forget that you are attached to a machine.
Enjoy.
P.S. There is enough stress that goes with T1 and more stress in dealing with insulin pumps and even more stress in working with the various peoples and organisations, that at times seem to treat you like some kind of alien life form, so please Prancy, never, ever even jokingly suggest that you may be the problem. Be a little kinder to yourself.
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