Hi,
Welcome and admire you for coming on here and doing you best for your boyfriend.
When you say his blood is high, how frequently are you testing his sugars and is he not eating between the insulin doses?
I have been advised that after a meal along with fast acting insulin including any correction doeses that you should wait 4 hours to do a new blood test and that you shouldn't act/inject/ try to correct a sugar level taken 2 hours after that meal.
It maybe that the insulin has not had time to do its thing yet and if you keep taking more you might result in a sudden unexpected drop.
Do you know what type of insulin(s) he is on?
All the best
Adrian
The early days are indeed trial and error in many cases. His BG levels are high, but the doctors tend to prefer to bring the levels down in a controlled manner rather than in big steps so as to avoid having a hypo. The time that this process takes can vary from person to person, but the levels will come down over a few weeks. Any change in insulin levels can take several days to be fully noticed in the BG readings, so most doctors will increase the dose once a week or so rather than every day, until the BG is down to a more appropriate level.The levels you mention are high, but not unexpected for a newly diagnosed diabetic. I've met people who were in the low 30's on diagnosis.
Getting the insulin levels right and getting the correct balance between a long-acting insulin and a fast-acting insulin (if he is on 2 different insulins) is probably the most difficult thing to master in diabetes and, over time, the balance is often thrown off by a whole lot of different causes. But it does get easier to manage.
Thanks so much!Like people have said, it's a case of trial and error. If he's really really finding it hard, you can do no carbs for a bit (ie just eating meat/eggs/cheese/salad/some veg/ some fruit) but this isn't a long term solution by any means. Take advantage of any support in place is another point; I won't repeat everything everyone else has already said, but good luck! the first few weeks are the hardest, I promise it will start to get easier the more you understand and the closer you are to getting the right dosages
Thank you, really helpful to know!hi becky,i was recently diagnosed as type1 and mu bloods are still all over the place,i can go from panid low to oh sugar high(no pun intended),think we can all agree that type 1 diabetes is personal but as long as your bfriend has a good team they will help get levels down,its a huge change for anyone and i'm also at learning stage,
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