Hi Martin ,Hi Tori, the Dawn Phenomenon is why i was,recommended going on pump therapy and I'm really glad that I'm on it.
The dawn phenomenon for me has been gone since i started on the pump on 29th June this year so I'm well pleased. If you read through a few of the posts on this forum you will see how I and others cope with our pumps and i would say most of us have positive views. It has to be said and I'm sure that you are aware is that you have to be prepared for more BG testing and have an active input in the running of your pump.
So keep reading and posting as we all learn from each other irrespective of ones experience.
Regards
Martin
Hi everyone!Hi @Toriroge !
I'm a relatively new pumper, having started pumping 29 years after I was diagnosed - I wouldn't go back to MDI, and have got a whole new lease of life. It's fabulous. Have a read around this pump sub forum and you'll find out so much!
@Dave24/7 that's not a silly question. Pumps use solely short acting insulin - in my case a Novorapid cartridge in my Insight pump.
Some of this I use to bolus for food, or correction doses, and there are specific settings for this.
In addition to this, there is a continuous basal dose going on - again, of Novorapid - and because it's going in trickle trickle trickle it is providing a baseline level.
The way this basal level differs to that of long-acting insulin once (or in some cases twice) a day is that different levels can be set for different times of day. This is particularly beneficial for dealing with dawn phenomenon. For illness or exercise, basal settings can be adjusted up or down. I have 8 different basal doses over the course of a day (this is all programmed in so happens automatically) but I also have the opportunity to make changes on the fly if, say, I'm going for a run and want to take less basal insulin over that period so as to avoid a hypo. It's magic.
With MDI, and long acting insulin injected all in one go, there isn't any kind of adjustability. There is on a pump, using rapid acting insulin for its basal rate.
Hope that makes sense!
Are you saying I will only be using Short Acting insulin to do all the work now.[/QUOTE]
But on the machine its Called Basal for long acting, Levemir, and NovoRapid now set in 0.1 - 0.2 tricycles
and for Bolus is for when you have meals, so the machine is programmed for both? or do you have to do the meal time slots yourself to the blood readings? .[/QUOTE]
I see Multiwave when reading about it.
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