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Diabetes Discussion
Type 1 Diabetes
Suddenly very insulin resistant and experiencing constantly high levels
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<blockquote data-quote="MeiChanski" data-source="post: 2076643" data-attributes="member: 503481"><p>Hello! </p><p>With Tresiba, you’ll need to give it 4 days or so for it to settle when changing doses. It is a flat line insulin, so whether I’m running high due to hormones, changing Tresiba didn’t do much so I just correct. However you can consider a basal test to see if you have a correct amount of tresiba on board or too little or just right. This would require you to fast after dinner and wake up at midnight to test and another test at 3am. </p><p></p><p>Maybe it’s some of the carbs or high fat content foods you are eating that go beyond your novorapid insulin window - some people split dose for it for better coverage. </p><p></p><p>It could be dawn phenomena in the mornings where your liver does it’s sugar dump.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MeiChanski, post: 2076643, member: 503481"] Hello! With Tresiba, you’ll need to give it 4 days or so for it to settle when changing doses. It is a flat line insulin, so whether I’m running high due to hormones, changing Tresiba didn’t do much so I just correct. However you can consider a basal test to see if you have a correct amount of tresiba on board or too little or just right. This would require you to fast after dinner and wake up at midnight to test and another test at 3am. Maybe it’s some of the carbs or high fat content foods you are eating that go beyond your novorapid insulin window - some people split dose for it for better coverage. It could be dawn phenomena in the mornings where your liver does it’s sugar dump. [/QUOTE]
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Type 1 Diabetes
Suddenly very insulin resistant and experiencing constantly high levels
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