ChrisWoodward
Active Member
- Messages
- 37
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Hi
If this was me, I would increase the carb ratio at breakfast so that my mid morning levels were ok......so instead of 1 to 20, try 1 to 10 and then hopefully yr bg will be a bit lower. Trial and error is key to everything and loads of bg testing.....but we all get there in the end and you will to. Sometimes, during the night my bg decides that its going to change so I wait for 2 days to make sure that its not flash in the pan stuff but if the same thing keeps happening, then on 3rd day, I do some changes to the basal and use trial and error again to get the settings correct.
Pumps are very demanding and if the settings are not correct for whatever reason, then bg till be tish until we pay some attention....
Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
Hi Chris,
Sounds like a lot of similar frustrations to a lot of people on a pump. Give it 5-6 weeks to really settle down. And don't look to blame the pump, i.e. I can eat the same meal two days running but external factors can affect how my body deals with the insulin/carbs.... exercise and alcohol over the last couple of days, stress, dehydration... and probably lots of other things.
It's a long process to tune it to your basal requirements and then get the bolus dosing correct. Your ratio may be different after going onto the pump - mine was 10g per 1 unit of insulin but went to 12g on the pump - 20% difference!
Varying basal rates is one of the biggest advantages of the pump over mdi - and temporary basals for exercise or sick days are also really handy.
There's so much to know; I consider I'm still learning, 3 years in! Don't stress, keep in contact with your nurse and trust that things will work out in a few weeks. Then you won't look back.
Hi all,
Got given an insulin pump last week but ever since I have had it my BG has been even more unpredictable.
I know that it takes a little while to setup and I know all the best practise house keeping for it like how not to get air bubbles and best place for the infusion sites etc but I'm not finding it to be a benefit at all, it seems that my BG readings are all over the place keep waking up with extreme highs 25+ the carb ratio I was using before now seems completely wrong sometimes and fine other times like lunch today for example:
Pre Meal: 6.3 68g of carbs 3.4u of insulin 1:20 ratio
Post Meal: 16.4 :-S
Yesterdays lunch went fine and I ate exactly the same thing.
How long does it take to set one of these up? In your opinion is it even worth having if my pens gave me more stable BG readings?
I was given a pump because my last Hba1c was 66 or 8.2%, this was put down to dawn phenomenon because a normal night for me is like this:
Bedtime 5-6
3am 7-8
7am 25+
but the pump isnt helping this at all and I dont see how it could because sometimes my sugar levels in the morning are fine so we cant increase my basal rates to try to cope with it because otherwise I could run in to serious problems on the 2 or 3 days a month that it doesnt happen to me.
Ok Tuff talk time.
Do your basal testing end of story.
If your basals are wrong which they will be as you have just started on a pump then nothing is right. If you start messing around with other settings then you are asking for trouble. Look in the pump forum as plenty of info there.
Rome wasn't built in a day and basals weren't fixed in a day.
Bottom line is the pump only does as you tell it. So if you have set **** basals you will get **** results. Pumps are not plug and play and involve a lot of hard work and even more frustration. before things come right. Good luck
NHS guidelines are not exactly written on stone tablets, you can use your own discretion of course. Are we talking about just the DP here? Fair enough you want to be cautious about correcting such a massive DP while you are asleep. But if there is any other part of the day when you are routinely going into 14+ BG that needs to be fixed. A fasting day to sort out your basal rates (other than the dawn to waking period perhaps) would be a good idea. At the very least that's a firm foundation for then tackling the tricky DP, if you get everything else right first.I cannot test basal rates currently as my sugar levels are frequently exceeding 14 and the NHS guidelines stipulate that once your BG exceeds 14 you are to cancel the test and correct.
I'm not sure whether you meant to or not but talking down to me as if I am a child is hardly going to help.
I cannot test basal rates currently as my sugar levels are frequently exceeding 14 and the NHS guidelines stipulate that once your BG exceeds 14 you are to cancel the test and correct.
I am not stupid I do realise this will take some time but you seem to miss the point of what I have said, how can you set a night time basal rate to try to correct dawn phenomenon when it does not occur all the time and there is no pattern to it. No one seems to have been able to awnser this not even my DSN which is why I say if a pump cannot solve that problem then the treatment is no better than pens in my case because on pens my BG's were at least stable during the day.
To be fair, this did come across as talking down to someone (and like you've ignored the point completely).Ok Tuff talk time.
Do your basal testing end of story.
If your basals are wrong which they will be as you have just started on a pump then nothing is right. If you start messing around with other settings then you are asking for trouble. Look in the pump forum as plenty of info there.
Rome wasn't built in a day and basals weren't fixed in a day.
Bottom line is the pump only does as you tell it. So if you have set **** basals you will get **** results. Pumps are not plug and play and involve a lot of hard work and even more frustration. before things come right. Good luck
Had thought this but the CGM showed (as well as 2 hourly night-time tests) it wasnt low, it just starts climbing rapidly at 4am though of course only some times though which makes this tricky.Are you sure this big DP isn't an overnight hypo and rebound liver dump? That would make more sense than such a huge DP. In which case the solution would be to decrease overnight basal.
Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
Yeah I agree with you there will have a shot over the weekend.NHS guidelines are not exactly written on stone tablets, you can use your own discretion of course. Are we talking about just the DP here? Fair enough you want to be cautious about correcting such a massive DP while you are asleep. But if there is any other part of the day when you are routinely going into 14+ BG that needs to be fixed. A fasting day to sort out your basal rates (other than the dawn to waking period perhaps) would be a good idea. At the very least that's a firm foundation for then tackling the tricky DP, if you get everything else right first.
Cheers for your help as said above ill give it a shot over the weekend and see how I go.Hi again
Try to get yr going to bed bg levels to be more or less the same by eating a lower carb meal like 30g instead of 50-60g and adjust the eve meal carb ratio in order to achieve it. Once youve done that, start doing some basal rate tests and any bg tests that are high, adjust the basal rate 2hrs beforehand and cancel the rest of the test. So, try to eat eve meal no later than 7pm and start basal testing 4hrs later every 90mins. At the moment, the weather temp is a bit up and down, so wait until the temps stay a bit more even (hopefully weekend) and then start the adjusting and the bg testing. Yr DP is a problem but whats wrong is that yr basal need for insulin is changing and so youve got to sort out the changes to the offending basal rates by testing them out.
Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
No I was not talking down to you.
My point was you must test your basals until you do, nothing will move. So put brain in gear and do the obvious, you know where you are high so increase your basal 1 - 2 hours before the high number then you have a better starting point the next day for testing.
Your way of thinking or total inaction means your blood sugars will stay high. Thus a complete waste of time and money having a pump.
As to DP sometimes and not others is normally caused by the type of food eaten the evening before. IE., High fat or protein will quite often leave type 1's high the following morning unless they use the right type of bolus for it.
To be fair, this did come across as talking down to someone (and like you've ignored the point completely).
I can totally understand the frustrations as I have issues of massively fluctuating blood glucose which no amount of basal testing and recording of what feels like bloody everything seems to be able to solve (food, carbs, insulin, activity, amount of sleep etc etc). Unfortunately though the chances are the pump is the best way to control the problem because there's very little injections can do about dawn phenomenon (unless you inject as and when it happens, but even that would be easier with pump).
It sounds like the best thing you could do is see if you can get more CGM monitoring, maybe for a month, make sure the food (incl fat and protein details) and activity is logged perfectly for that time period, and if there are still no patterns I'd agree with Spiker and say make a case for keeping the CGM- that way you can adjust your basal rates for the majority of the time and the CGM will protect you from the odd nights where you don't have DP.
Type One Diabetes since 2001, Coeliac Disease since 2003 ish, IBS, and on and off depression and diabulimia.
Current HbA1c 11.7%
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?