Greys
Active Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Hi. Thanks for your reply. I'll take your comments on board and try exercising a couple of hours after eating. I don't exercise before breakfast btw, but I do before lunch. However just gone for my after work walk. Started with a reading of 12.3 and now I'm 3.7. I'm surprised a simple walk would make me decrease this much and 5 hours after I've taken fiasp.Hi @Greys. Not sure I can add much to others comments but just a few thoughts:
It's beginning to sound like your basal isn't correct.
I think you might also have an issue with waiting an hour after waking up before you eat anything which could be causing your liver to dump glucose.
Exercising before eating will mess with your levels too.
To go from 6.0 to over 12.0 before you've even eaten anything is a red flag for this.
If this were me, I would bolus immediately after waking and eat within about 30 minutes. Your glucose levels should increase by about 2-3 mmol/L at the most. I'd exercise 2 hours after eating when levels were at their highest to prevent hypos.
Finally, did I read correctly that you are bolusing at a 1:1 ratio? That seems quite high. Is that normal for this type of insulin? I'm on Humalog and using 1:7 ratios for all meals. If I take more insulin than that I am almost guaranteed to have a hypo if I do any sort of exercise at all.
I think all those things need looking at.
You mentioned not exercising on a full stomach but could you wait a couple of hours after eating and then exercising? If I exercise after my bolus has worn off (equivalent to you doing this pre-breakfast), my glucose levels can go up.
My ratio isn't that high. 1:1 equals 1 unit of insulin to every 1cp. 1 cp equals 10g of carbs.
Last edited: