Hi thereHi Catsbd, If you haven't been feeling well and your sugars are getting higher, have you been checking your ketone levels and following the sick day rules?
http://www.mydiabetesmyway.scot.nhs.uk/resources/leaflets/SickDayRulesForType1Flow.asp
Hi,
There are only two ways to do a basal test. Do an overnight test, or fast throughout the day.
A zero or low carb meal will NOT provide you with an accurate basal reading, despite what your DSN says. When you eat and food enters your large intestine, the walls of the large intestine stretch. This causes the cells in the large intestine wall to release glucagon so that you can immediately benefit from the meal that you have eaten. As a result, you will get a BG rise from any meal that you eat.
To do an overnight test, don't eat or inject fast acting insulin for around 4 hours before bed, if you do it will interfere with the reading. In Gary Scheiner's Think Like a Pancreas book, he suggests that for every 1.6 mmol/l change in BGs between your pre-bed and pre-breakfast readings should be compensated for with a 10% change in basal insulin. This method works perfectly for me.
I'd thoroughly recommend the Gary Scheiner book, I learned loads from it even though I'd been diabetic for a decade. It's got so much useful info on how to "think like a pancreas" and get your insulin dose correct.
As others have mentioned, steroids have been known to increase your BGs, so it might be a good idea to do a basal test for when you are taking steroids and a basal test when not.
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