@Fearless36 You shouldn't have been changed over against your will. Different regimes suit different people - as do different insulins
Hello everyone
I have noticed that the vast majority of diabetics (at least type 1 like me) use basal bolus regime but rarely if at all I've seen someone using premixed insulin. What is the advantage of basal bolus over premixed insulin?
That actually fits me, my breakfast and dinner are always the same..With Basal/Bolus you effectively have total control over the amount of carbs in a meal and when you eat. With mixed you need to stay within a much tighter range of carbs and timing and it may not be so easy to keep your HBa1C down low enough without hypos. Mixed may be adequate if your have some beta cells left.
Sorry to hear that but the major thing that I hated about basal bolus is the hypos tho never tried it... i like my sugar to spike a bit then go down slowly which is something the Mixtard 30 does
Worried about hypos because my doctor told me that I have low rate of absorption of food at night so I want to avoid fast acting insulin... but still I take 4 to 5 units Actrapid alongside with my NPHI'm confused - are you saying you already tried basal bolus but had hypos? Or that you're worried about hypos?
Worried about hypos because my doctor told me that I have low rate of absorption of food at night so I want to avoid fast acting insulin... but still I take 4 to 5 units Actrapid alongside with my NPH
That shocks me @Fearless36 You'd given basal bolus a go, hadnt liked it, so should have been allowed to change back in my opinion.
With Basal/Bolus you effectively have total control over the amount of carbs in a meal and when you eat. With mixed you need to stay within a much tighter range of carbs and timing and it may not be so easy to keep your HBa1C down low enough without hypos. Mixed may be adequate if your have some beta cells left.
Actually I use NPH plus Actrapid at night only and yeah I can adjust my dose I'm still learning it to see what fits me the best. Sure I get more flexibility with this..But actually you can do the same with mixed insulin, in fact when I was on mixed insulin sometime I'd be very active and sporty and other times not hungry so I'd adjust my insulin dosage to match this. Other times if I was at a party and wanted to pig out I could again adjust the insulin dosage. It is possible with mixed insulin although it took some time to learn how to adjust it but that was prior to basal bolus. Going from 2x a day to 5x a day (and I don't care that the prime minister does it) is just too much of a change for my liking and its more restrictive in that you have to always have your insulin with you.
But actually you can do the same with mixed insulin, in fact when I was on mixed insulin sometime I'd be very active and sporty and other times not hungry so I'd adjust my insulin dosage to match this
Reducing or increasing it for activity would then either give you more or less of the slower acting portion and vice versa, so although it can be managed well after years of using it and noting patterns for your own personal needs, on paper at least, it wouldn't normally be recommended for any newly diagnosed diabetics....
if you like it, you should be on it though...
curiously, where you given any dose adjustment training?
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