Having read a bit on basal testing I thought I might do a fast to see if I'm taking the right amount of insulin
Well, my wife, after getting Libre last year, and bit of experimenting with her doctor, has worked out morning ratio 1:3 (till 9:00), then all day 1:7.Your paragraph just before the photo talks about a basal test so I'm assuming it's a bssal test photo and you didn't have any carbs/bolus during that time.
The rise from 7am to 10am looks kinda like "foot on floor" to me. I can wake up quite happily at 5 or 6 and then it can double just by getting up and moving around so I usually take 2 to 3u to pin it. It's a noticeably rapid spike on the libre and will carry on so that I would easily be around 10 at lunch if I hadn't pinned it.
Your graph does indeed show you hovering around 10 from 10am till 6pm. It's remarkably stable throughout that period. Although much higher than you'd like it to be, oddly, it does suggest that your basal is correct: if you've had no food/bolus that's the point of basal: holds you where you are. It's the bolus which teases you into the right place before the holding pattern occurs. Personally, I'd have abandoned a basal test if it had been preceded by a hypo and foot on floor.
That leaves the 1am to 7am hypo. No information about what you'd done in the previous 5 hours: could it have been a bolus miscalculation after effect, was it a Friday night with a pub involved? Know nada about levemir as I'm on lantus (has it's problems but I'm generally ok with it) but lantus does have a small peak effect after 2 hours even though it's meant to be flat: maybe levemir does too?
Your comment about docs advising 1:10 and your experience if that is fascinating. After almost three decades of making educated guesses about dosing, mostly correct after lots of trial and error in the early years, and having literally no idea of what ratios were, I went on a DAFNE course. Sure, learned a lot of fine tuning tips, am grateful to them for that, and would recommend it to people without hesitation, but we went out to buy lunch from prepacked stuff in the hospital cafe which had carb count on the packet, I looked at mine, said I'll need X units for this, nurse says, no, remember it's 1:10, I say , are you ****** crazy, that'd put me through the roof, nurse says, no, no trust me. Guess what happens. Rest of the day I'm through the roof, up at 19 for an extended period, first time that's happened since dx. She then offered some views on correction doses: I declined, not politely. Stick to your guns on ratios. Even endos seem to think 1:10 is writ in stone. I've been messing around a lot with daily charts in libre, looking for good post-prandial results. Overwhelmingly, it works out at about 1.5:10. I can show this to docs on a graph, and they still say, you were on the course, why aren't you doing 1:10. Aaargh! Sorry, rant over....
Your paragraph just before the photo talks about a basal test so I'm assuming it's a bssal test photo and you didn't have any carbs/bolus during that time.
The rise from 7am to 10am looks kinda like "foot on floor" to me. I can wake up quite happily at 5 or 6 and then it can double just by getting up and moving around so I usually take 2 to 3u to pin it. It's a noticeably rapid spike on the libre and will carry on so that I would easily be around 10 at lunch if I hadn't pinned it.
Your graph does indeed show you hovering around 10 from 10am till 6pm. It's remarkably stable throughout that period. Although much higher than you'd like it to be, oddly, it does suggest that your basal is correct: if you've had no food/bolus that's the point of basal: holds you where you are. It's the bolus which teases you into the right place before the holding pattern occurs. Personally, I'd have abandoned a basal test if it had been preceded by a hypo and foot on floor.
That leaves the 1am to 7am hypo. No information about what you'd done in the previous 5 hours: could it have been a bolus miscalculation after effect, was it a Friday night with a pub involved? Know nada about levemir as I'm on lantus (has it's problems but I'm generally ok with it) but lantus does have a small peak effect after 2 hours even though it's meant to be flat: maybe levemir does too?
Your comment about docs advising 1:10 and your experience if that is fascinating. After almost three decades of making educated guesses about dosing, mostly correct after lots of trial and error in the early years, and having literally no idea of what ratios were, I went on a DAFNE course. Sure, learned a lot of fine tuning tips, am grateful to them for that, and would recommend it to people without hesitation, but we went out to buy lunch from prepacked stuff in the hospital cafe which had carb count on the packet, I looked at mine, said I'll need X units for this, nurse says, no, remember it's 1:10, I say , are you ****** crazy, that'd put me through the roof, nurse says, no, no trust me. Guess what happens. Rest of the day I'm through the roof, up at 19 for an extended period, first time that's happened since dx. She then offered some views on correction doses: I declined, not politely. Stick to your guns on ratios. Even endos seem to think 1:10 is writ in stone. I've been messing around a lot with daily charts in libre, looking for good post-prandial results. Overwhelmingly, it works out at about 1.5:10. I can show this to docs on a graph, and they still say, you were on the course, why aren't you doing 1:10. Aaargh! Sorry, rant over....
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