Hello @Fairygodmother.Hi @Jhon Doe, I’m not yet a pump user; I’ve been approved to have one - still waiting.
However, I’m a little confused by your posts.
Firstly, your use of Levemir for MDI seems odd. You say you took in two doses, one in the morning and one at noon despite Levemir having an active period of 12 plus hours.
I’m also wondering why you’ve explained the Medtronic 780 and ways to use a pump as if you’re instructing us rather than reflecting your own experiences.
I apologise if I seem critical, I don’t mean to, I’m just a little confused.
A final question, did you use AI to help you write your posts? I’m a grumpy old woman who’s keen to recognise all forms of communication styles.
Great synopsis regarding the issues around calibrating a new sensor. I too, have experienced the calibration issue if my blood glucose level is not relatively stable for a couple of hours.3.- The beginning, with the pump.
To start using the pump, you need to enter the following data:
-Set the basal rate, which is the number of units your body needs. You can enter this every 30 minutes, but of course, you don't have that data, so the pump training instructor and my endocrinologist calculated the Levemir units I was using and how much rapid-acting insulin they corresponded to. I used the pump for several days without insulin (and I continued to inject Levemir and Rapid), but the pump did collect the values to check if there were any peaks up or down so that I could correct them.
To use the Bolus Wizard feature, consult a healthcare professional to determine the personal settings that should be used. The carb ratio, insulin sensitivity factor, BG target, and the active insulin time are needed to complete the setup.
-Carb Ratio. The carb ratio setting is used for food bolus calculations.The number of carb grams that are covered by 1 unit of insulin.
-Insulin Sensitivity Factor. The insulin sensitivity factor setting is used to calculate correction bolus amounts. The insulin sensitivity factor is the amount that BG is reduced by 1 unit of insulin.
-BG Target. The Bolus Wizard feature calculates the estimated bolus based on the BG target range. The high and low values set are the values to which the BG is corrected. To use a single target value rather than a range, set the same value for the high and low value of the BG target.
If the BG reading is above the high target value, a correction dose is calculated. If the BG reading is below the low target value, a negative correction is calculated and subtracted from the food bolus
-Active Insulin Time, Active insulin is the bolus insulin that has been delivered by the pump and is still working to lower glucose levels.The pump uses the active insulin time setting to determine if any active insulin is still in the body from prior boluses. This may help prevent hypoglycemia caused by overcorrection of high BG. The current active insulin amount appears on the Home screen and includes only the bolus insulin received. Consult a healthcare professional to get the active insulin time that best represents the insulin type used and the physiological insulin absorption rate.
When the monitor (the person who taught me how to use the pump) saw my graphs showing the effect of Levemir, he told me that the pump would never give me that, and although I didn't believe him at the time, I later understood.
Most of my blood sugar pattern was flat except after meals. But with the pump, it's always sawtooth. So it's true: without eating, my blood sugar levels were flat. The only bad thing, which has always thrown my glucose out of balance, is after eating: while I'm not eating, everything is fine. After eating, that's another story.
And why are they sawtooth? Well, it's very simple: because the pump reacts to glucose levels and, in Guard mode, it's very conservative. It tries to compensate for the rises (but as the information is always delayed because interstitial glucose lags behind blood glucose), it's difficult to balance the rises and falls. And then (I got the table of insulin units to inject, based on the glucose measured), the pump pays more attention to you when administering insulin if you indicate the basal glucose. In fact, it sometimes asks you for it (or often, in my opinion), to check that the glucose obtained by the pump is sufficiently accurate and says it will use it ‘to calibrate’ the values provided by the sensor.
Another lie: I have never seen it adapt completely (or at all) to the values I indicate. What happens is that sometimes the glucose differs greatly (what it measures is much higher/lower than reality, usually higher). If it is less than 20%, it tolerates it. But if it is higher, it does not accept the ‘calibration’ and asks you to repeat the analysis within 15 minutes and tells you to wash your hands (as if you had not washed them before). If this process happens to you several times in a row, that is not good, as the pump will indicate that the sensor is not working properly and tell you to change the sensor. Also, if you do this when your glucose rises sharply due to something you have eaten, the above may happen and it may tell you that the sensor is broken. To supply blood glucose to the pump, it must be at a time when your level is as flat as possible so that it does not indicate that the sensor is broken and that you must change it.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?