Hi ive been diabetic for 20yrs and in the last year had problems with my night time sugars. I wouldnt go to bed less then 10.0 and take 20units of lantas, and wake either high or low. sometimes if it above 12 i would take 25-30 units of lantas and my sugars would be 3.2 in the morning. its trying to get a balance. I work long hours and theres days am less active then others, plus its what ive eaten at teatime that can have an effort too. Theres never the 2 nights the same. I worry going to bed about taking a hypo and not getting any signs as ive starting to lose some of them, so i end up staying up till 3 or 4 in the morning and getting a few hours sleep. there alot of factors. Its not easy, if you know what i mean, and no 2 people are the same, so 1 thing might work for me but not for you. Lol
How do you mean, not have an immediate affect? Within a couple of hours it will start having affect on BGs.What about the fact the the change in dose won't have an immediate effect....
I suppose a 10-20% adjustment is large enough to see a difference....
I take it exercise is important to you lol....
If you didn't do any significant exercise, could you stop the daily changes....
Have you tried Levemir
I've heard this before and it's actually a fallacy. It's based on the "once an incident, twice a coincidence, three times a rule" method used by diabetes healthcare professionals in teaching people how to cautiously and correctly determine your correct basal dose.If you take exercise out the equation and your testing your basal just for general changes, each dose change that you do would need 2 to 3 days to see the effect, so you couldn't say that the dose change had worked the next day....
Was taught in DAFNE. I think its to do with the design of the Lantus....
Levemir is opposite though and that's why its better suited in most cases to people with active lifestyles as its split and you can reduce or increase with immediate effect...
HCP advise insulin doses all the time! They also advise and help diabetics to calculate insulin doses, if they didn't, they would be pretty useless wouldn't they? So, if they were doing this correctly, would you expect the 93% of diabetics to miss efficacy targets? Are the ~230,000 T1s too lazy to control their diabetes properly? No. They are not taught how to dose properly. Simple as that. If they did know how to dose properly(which is all you need to do to control T1), 93% of T1s would be hitting efficacy targets.HCPs don't actually calculate the basal doses, we do..........so your comments are correct @SamJB
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If Lantus lasts 24 hours, how can there be some left in the body 30 hours, 36 hours, or even 47 hours later? Does Novorapid that left your body yesterday affect your levels?There will likely be some effect from the previous day
are you saying the HCPs we use cant successfully instruct us on how to change our doses..........? I disagree, the fine tuning of it all is down to us but the basics are passed on, how else would we learn....
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