Don't use extended or multiwave. Just whack on a high tbr if needed.
Went out with parents n hubby tonight. Just the pudding had 110g in it. The dinner 59g and the starter guestimated at 40g. So over 200g in one meal!!!!!
So bolused for that and then stuck on a tbr of 250% for 4 hours.
As this is actually 4 times the qty of my whole days food then even this 200% tbr is not going to cope with the inbalance between of my 50/50 basal/bolus ratio. So at end of 4 hours will do another tbr probably of another 4 hours, depending on levels though.
The pudding of millionaires shortbread sundae wasn't worth 110g carbs though!!
DD I don't understand your reason for doing a massive TBR on top of bolusing for the carbs. Is the TBR just for the fat in the food?
That one meal is about twice my daily average.
I thought I was throwing the boat out with my homemade chocolate fondants at 30g apiece
I am curious though. What doesn't work about extended bolus for you? What happens when you tried to use it?It works for me as multiwave or extended just doesn't cope in my body.. We all different though.
Ah that's a write up of the same Wolpert 2012 study I linked to earlier. Thank you though.@Spiker, the Joslin Study conducted some research into dietary fat and how it effects bg levels and insulin usage in type 1 diabetics:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130327190328.htm
I am curious though. What doesn't work about extended bolus for you? What happens when you tried to use it?
In principle I can't see the difference between say a 4 hr TBR and a 4 hr extended bolus?
this tag'er wrote some programs that might be worth looking at and googling to get to the authorInteresting. I'll have to reread that. I can see how it could be good to have a "third arm" - TBR to deal with fat, extended bolus for protein, normal bolus for carbs. (Maybe in a few years we will have pumps or dose calculators that will just let us explicitly enter the three values.)
I still worry that the TBR doesn't have any way of corresponding to the amount of fat or carbs or protein ingested. The TBR isn't the inverse of insulin resistance, after all. So I can see how an increased TBR could compensate for an increase in basal requirements caused by transient insulin resistance, which is useful, but how could it also compensate for increased insulin resistance vs the carb and protein bolus?
Anyway thanks, and I may give it a try, because what I am doing now ain't working.
OMG - reading this thread over and over again just makes me realise how little I know/understand about food, TBRs, extended boluses V insulin. I have to say most of the time my 'wing it' and gut feeling response, having had diabetes for over 16 years now, seems to work on the whole. I use a TBR quite often but only for illness, time of the month and every other mysterious high blood sugar periods I get - never thought to use it for different foods. You certainly learn new things every day in this game.
So, as a Type 1, new pumper and interested in the LCHF info on these boards, can I ask (politely because this is not rhetorical - I really would like to know the answer) what are the benefits of long term LCHF diets for Type 1s if it doesn't allow you to reduce your total intake of insulin? ( I am not contrasting with high carb here - just a more moderate carb/fat/protein approach). Or are you not talking about LCHF - more about protein intake and effects on insulin? (The benefits of LCHF for Type 2s seem very clear - just wondering about Type 1s).The summary of Wolpert 2012 is that for a 10gf low fat (LF) meal compared to a 60gf high fat (HF) meal, in T1 subjects, same gpr and gch, similar GI, crossover study, the high fat meals needed 50% more insulin per unit of carb, and were still showing higher BG than the low fat meals. So that's an acute effect in T1s, and a significant one.
.
Very interesting TAG links, thanks.this tag'er wrote some programs that might be worth looking at and googling to get to the author
https://twitter.com/ten3six
V3... 2013
http://jdrinc.webatu.com/iD-Cal.html
list of progs
http://jdrinc.webatu.com/
Well a 50% or even 100% increase in carb ratio still means less total insulin if you reduce your carbs by more than half, vs whatever baseline diet.So, as a Type 1, new pumper and interested in the LCHF info on these boards, can I ask (politely because this is not rhetorical - I really would like to know the answer) what are the benefits of long term LCHF diets for Type 1s if it doesn't allow you to reduce your total intake of insulin? ( I am not contrasting with high carb here - just a more moderate carb/fat/protein approach). Or are you not talking about LCHF - more about protein intake and effects on insulin? (The benefits of LCHF for Type 2s seem very clear - just wondering about Type 1s).
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