Rosie Longstreeth
Member
- Messages
- 11
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
Have you been able to do any comparison BG readings? I find the libre is sometimes spot on with registering nocturnal hypos but at other times is up to 5mmol out compared to a finger prick test, the libre reading was always lower than BG reading from a fingerprick test.
Is theres a pattern to when the libre is showing hypos, Id be tempted to set an alarm for a few nights and do some fingerprick tests to compare
Those levels are all over the place bro! When are you having your last meal with insulin? Why are you so high in the evenings? What time do you go to bed?
Exactly.. maybe the basal is messed upAre you treating the hypo with glucose or did your liver pull you out of it?
Any chance your insulin uptake is being delayed by overuse/poor rotation of injection sites?
Increasingly wild suggestions coming up...
Any chance you're T2 not T1
Could your liver be pumping out less glycogen for some reason?
Not so wild suggestion (in fact my best guess)
I'd be looking really really hard at your basal requirements - I assume your clinic have tested and retested your needed amounts. My gut feeling is that you need less basal and more bolus....
Are you treating the hypo with glucose or did your liver pull you out of it?
Any chance your insulin uptake is being delayed by overuse/poor rotation of injection sites?
Increasingly wild suggestions coming up...
Any chance you're T2 not T1
Could your liver be pumping out less glycogen for some reason?
Not so wild suggestion (in fact my best guess)
I'd be looking really really hard at your basal requirements - I assume your clinic have tested and retested your needed amounts. My gut feeling is that you need less basal and more bolus....
Classic dawn phenomenon?It was my liver that caused the high in the morning. My nurse did check all that and I think my rotation is fine at the moment.
I’m not sure about that! I’ll suggest it to my nurse in my next meeting.
Yes we’ve changed it a lot and still trying a few things but yes thats probably the reason!
Thank you!
Classic dawn phenomenon?
There is something to consider:Would the insulin resistance last until the evening?
Is everyday pretty much like this? What time do you do your basal? (20u?), what time did you have breakfast lunch and dinner that day and what did the meals consist of and number of carbs, and number of bolus units taken?
Just wondering if the drop early morning is the liver grabbing back and replenishing it's store from the previous hypo (the morning before).
To state the obviousYou're all over the place! Do a basal test first, then generally treat the hypos quickly (yeah difficult when you're asleep) in the hope of stopping the liver dumping, hopefully that'll stop the roller coaster and then you can concentrate on bringing your levels down.
I don’t know how I can stop my levels from dropping so fast at night so I don’t end up having the hypo!
Levemir's 24 hours though???? Hypo's happening 20 hours in?The only way I can see your BG dropping as it does early morning is because of the liver grabbing back, at that time you would not have any meaningful insulin on board.
by not having a hypo.........
So you're low carbing and therefore not taking much fast acting bolus insulin, you also take a fair amount of basal insulin (I think you need to do a proper basal test TBH) only in the morning, correct? The only way I can see your BG dropping as it does early morning is because of the liver grabbing back, at that time you would not have any meaningful insulin on board. The only reason the liver grabs back is because of a previous hypo. You are in a catch 22 situation.
Do you always hypo at around 5am every day?
by not having a hypo.........
So you're low carbing and therefore not taking much fast acting bolus insulin, you also take a fair amount of basal insulin (I think you need to do a proper basal test TBH) only in the morning, correct? The only way I can see your BG dropping as it does early morning is because of the liver grabbing back, at that time you would not have any meaningful insulin on board. The only reason the liver grabs back is because of a previous hypo. You are in a catch 22 situation.
Do you always hypo at around 5am every day?
So how many carbs do you have before bed? and how many roughly during the day? Thats an odd response, I'm tagging @Lamont D as he might have something to say.
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