Hi @Gembles84 To be honest I only use the square ware feature when I eat either a curry or pizza, I find chips tend to get absorbed a bit quicker so I need to pre-bolus about 20 minutes beforehand (I only eat a small handful at the most if I do eat chips though) and as with any meal I test around 3 hours later to see that the bolus delivery hit the mark. Maybe do this a standard bolus delivery instead and report back what happens ?
@Gembles84 - you have it right there as to where the problem is. Basically, your square wave is too short for the meals you are eating.
For chip shop food I use Dual Wave rather than Square as I find I still get a carb rise early on, but the picture below hopefully explains what's happening. In order to manage the late food spike you get from this type of food, the square part of my bolus typically lasts for 4 hours.
*Don't take the timings in this as accurate, they are for illustration only
I wish we drew more pictures. Things like this are much easier to explain with pictures.
Yeah I'm not sure there's any point doing a square wave over just an hour.
Have you got pumping insulin by john Walsh? It's a good guide on what the pump can do and how to use it.
I had been advised square wave would help with the more higher carb meals and both tea time meals I had chips. First meal being sausage and chips from the chip shop (naughty treat I know!) my blood was 9.0 before hand, I counted 100g carb (going by my carb book, chip shop looks very high carb) and took 10 insulin dose as square wave over the hour.
Thanks @noblehead I've been looking at the dual wave options as well. So would it depend on what you're eating and what your bg is before meal as to how long you do the dual wave for?
Thank you @catapillar. Yes I was on 10:1 ratio, but I feel I'm having too much around the big meal times for this to be happening. So would the more insulin I'm receiving at tea times be more active in my body for longer? (could explain the hypo 2 hours after food) whereas if I took less, is it in my body as active insulin for less of a time?Were you on 10:1 before starting your pump? Usually, insulin delivery via a pump is more efficient and so when people start on a pump, their ratios drop a little bit. If this is only happening at dinner, it might be that you need different ratios at different times of day.
You might also need to check that your correction factor is correct.
To look at whether your basal rate is correct, have a look at the info in the link - https://mysugr.com/basal-rate-testing/
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