I don't understand how these spikes keep happening.
For dinner I had a pizza, a small piece of chocolate cake, and a very tiny cinema sized pot of ice cream later on, I had injected 30 units of Novorapid.
Your meal was very high in carbs? You gave yourself a high dose of fast-acting insulin but it hasn't reduced your blood sugar to an acceptable level.
Don't panic but look at these possibilities:
Is your insulin in date and are you storing it correctly?
Reduce the carbs in your meals. Pizza, chocolate cake and ice-cream aren't ok for you. Eat maybe some fish or chicken, some salad and/or green beans, some fresh raspberries and fresh cream ...
Try sleeping 8 hours a night (I can talk, haha!) especially when on holiday!
Rotate your injection sites.
Take care and look after yourself!
@dodge13 . What was your blood sugar prior to eating your pizza, cake and ice cream? Where you start will always dictate where you finish.
Could be many reasons tor your high sugar. Do you carb count?
One thing you may find a lot of fellow T1's will tell you is that your meal isn't a good meal for a T1. No matter how much insulin you pump in you're gonna struggle.
I don't think the reason for the site can be considered any great mystery. With a meal like that everyone, diabetic or not, will probably experience a significant blood sugar spike. A non diabetic can have random blood sugar up to 11 without being diagnosed, that will happen after a particularly carby meal. To manage blood sugar spikes as a type 1 diabetic and reduce the spikes as much as possible (maybe if you really fancy pizza, cake and ice cream you might occassionally put up with a spike up to 11 or 12 if it's a temporary spike, even though that's not ideal) you need to be sure of quite a few calculations:
It's a tricky meal to deal with. When you found you were 29.1 did you test for ketones? Did you correct?
- What was your blood sugar pre meal? Did you need a correction? Did you give a correction and wait until you were in range before eating?
- How many grams of carbs are in your meal? Do you carb count? Are you confident that your insulin to carb ratio is right for you? Are you confident that your insulin to carb ratio stays the same for particularly fatty meal or might it need bumping up a bit if high fat foods make you a bit insulin resistant?
- Have you pre bolused and waited for the insulin to start working before eating? Do you have an understanding of when the carbs you are eating will start raising your blood sugar? You've got fast acting carbs in cake and ice cream, but the pizza carbs might not start working until 4 or 5 hours after eating because the fat in the pizza slows them down. You might need a second bolus to deal with this.
- Did you test and bolus for the ice cream later on?
Hi Adam
I totally agree with the advise that Catapillar has offered. I had similar problems until I started Carb Counting, and discussed the same (Pizza) problem with my diabetes team. They advised me to split the insulin dose over several hours, I was able to take 2 injections, 60% up front at the time of the meal then the remainder 2-3 hours later. The ratio and timing of the second injection takes some working out, but you will get there.
Pizza and other fatty foods (the other one I struggled with is chips from the fish & chip shop) do take much longer for your body to process, some people up to 4-6 hours later, so this is probably why you are going high later.
Before I changed how I took my insulin, I used to find I may go a bit low a couple of hours after a big meal, you probably wouldn't get that with the cake and ice cream, that was because the carbs hadn't been digested before my insulin was at its peak.
I have since changes over to an insulin pump, which has made managing this type of thing so much simpler
Hope this helps.
Hey Leelittler,
Thanks for your comments, I have thought an insulin pump would really solve the issue since if I understand it correctly, it's autonomous to some extent? I hope you don't mind me asking, and I am sure it's a ridiculously naive question on this forum of all forums, but how do the pumps work?
but how do the pumps work?
I hadn't considered taking into account the fatty foods and having to potentially inject an additional amount after the first one.
Hey Leelittler,
Thanks for your comments, I have thought an insulin pump would really solve the issue since if I understand it correctly, it's autonomous to some extent? I hope you don't mind me asking, and I am sure it's a ridiculously naive question on this forum of all forums, but how do the pumps work?
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