Samanthajayne98
Member
- Messages
- 18
I take novorapid and lantus, I dont usually take lower than 14 of novorapid and I take 34 of lantus, I don’t eat to much I’m basically on my feet all day so I dont have much time to snack. So just porridge or something for breakfast. Sandwich or salad for lunch and then I don’t usually eat loads for dinner usually jacket potato or something.Hi @Samanthajayne98,
Could you tell us what insulin and how much you take of it (or them) and when?
Also what types of food do you eat for each meal and snack?
And is your weight said to be in a normal range?
@Samanthajayne98 - in addition to the questions @kitedoc has asked, do you have many hypos, along with the higher numbers, or are they just consistently higher than you'd like?
Hi! Just need some help/guidance, I’m 20 and have been diagnosed for 9 years, I’ve never really been good with my blood sugar level, I’ve always been on the higher side and never really in target, I’ve noticed it more since I started using the freestyle libre sensor in February which is handy because it’s made me much more aware of this but I’m starting to worry. I feel like I’m taking way too many units of insulin then I should be and it’s not really doing much, so just wondering if anyone is similar or any bit if advice would be such a help. I’ve been in touch with my diabetic nurse as well! Thank you!
Hi sorry to read you are going through a bit of a rough time, it's good that you have been in touch with your diabetes nurse, can i ask what they have advised ? can you email a 3 day food, carbs and Insulin doses to them so they can get a picture of what is actually going on ? My DSN was helpful with timing of my doses and also splitting the dose, but as we know Type 1 doesn't always play ball. Take care
Hi again @Samanthajayne98,
Just some thoughts to discuss with your DSN:
I wonder whether you are injecting your insulin close to the same areas you have been using over the years.
Some of us find that scar tissue builds up and the insulin does not absorb as well from that tissue under the skin than if we use new sites or a slightly different length needle?
Best Wishes
So just porridge or something for breakfast. Sandwich or salad for lunch and then I don’t usually eat loads for dinner usually jacket potato or something. [/QUOTE said:Hi there! Your meals would be too carby for me. If you want to reduce your insulin, you have to reduce your carbs. Do you count your carbs? It's a good habit to get into. You don't want to take more insulin than you need for the amount of carbs you eat otherwise you will hypo, so be careful.
Have you ever tested your mdi basal rate? Basal rate testing is not a pump only term. It’s done on mdi. It’ll tell you if the amount you’re taking is enough to cover.
I don’t like basal rate testing either. But sometimes it just has to be done.
I’ve never heard of this? No idea what it is, sounds interesting
Hi, Samantha, definitely look into basal testing, it makes a huge difference to managing T1.
Your basal insulin, Lantus, is meant to hold your bg steady overnight and between meals when your novorapid shot has worn out.
Inject too much lantus, your bg will be dropping slowly all the time and you might find yourself having to snack a lot to keep above 4.
Inject too little, and it'll be constantly rising after the last bolus has worn off, so you might end up injecting novorapid between meals to calm it down a bit.
Get it right, though, and you should end up riding more or less steady between meals, and that makes a huge difference - trying to adjust a wrong basal rate by tweaking with food and bolus shots is never going to be pretty.
Basal testing isn't difficult. It just involves not eating stuff and being lazy for about 8 hours or so, and watching to see if your bg goes up or down or stays about the same.
I sometimes just have a long lie in on a Saturday till afternoon and watch a few movies to see how things are working.
If it goes up or down a lot (say, 3 to 4), raise or lower lantus by about 10%, and see how that pans out over the next few days.
Once you get basal more or less right, all the other stuff, like ratios for meals, is a whole lot easier, because you're not having to use novo for the sort of thing which lantus should be taking care of.
We can't advise on doses here. My weight in kilos divided by 5 seems to work well for me, your diabetes may vary.
Use your libre to help figure this out. Watch the lines you're seeing each morning, whether they're rising or falling and tweak the lantus dose.
I take novorapid and lantus, I dont usually take lower than 14 of novorapid and I take 34 of lantus, I don’t eat to much I’m basically on my feet all day so I dont have much time to snack. So just porridge or something for breakfast. Sandwich or salad for lunch and then I don’t usually eat loads for dinner usually jacket potato or something.
Yeah my weight is a normal range
I take novorapid and lantus, I dont usually take lower than 14 of novorapid and I take 34 of lantus, I don’t eat to much I’m basically on my feet all day so I dont have much time to snack. So just porridge or something for breakfast. Sandwich or salad for lunch and then I don’t usually eat loads for dinner usually jacket potato or something.
Yeah my weight is a normal range
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