SherwoodT1
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 45
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
That one is actually called Foot on the floor effect!But it seems to really hit hard as soon as my feet touch the floor from waking.
I'd start somewhere at a gentle for you dose and log what happens in regards to dose, BG, and possibly breakfast.but can anyone provide tips as to how they systematically dial in dosing for things like this. If this falls within the forum rules?
Thank you both for the tips, I'll give them a go and see how I get on. As if T1 is mocking me, today I've had very little rise and likely have too much insulin got to love it!I'd start somewhere at a gentle for you dose and log what happens in regards to dose, BG, and possibly breakfast.
Your CGM graph should inform you if the chosen dose is too low, too high or exactly right.
For me, the dose I need for FOTF varies a bit, along with my I:C ratio.
I have days where I need more or less insulin than usual for the same meals, and my needed dose for FOTF seems to follow the trends.
I also adjust my dose for FOTF depending on morning exercise.
This is good to know, I should really start braving exercise again! It certainly feels very unreliable right now as to when it kicks in. Today? A minimal rise.Great advice above. A couple of extra things to add...
- my fotf rise is greatly reduced by exercise. To be honest, I exercise most days so it is more a case that I see more of a fotf rise when I do none.
- basal testing is a challenge in the morning because dp/fotf is the body giving us energy to start the day ... at least it would be if our pancreas worked properly. If we do not eat, our liver continues to dump glucose. A small amount of food will stop this. It won't mean that fotf will not happen just that our liver will stop dumping once it spits the food.
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