Spathiphyllum
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Regarding the test results: The thing is, if your blood glucose is going up to the 20s despite eating low carb, your body is definitely producing far less insulin than normal! So your C-peptide test-- which measures how much insulin your body is producing-- is bound to come back low. For practical purposes, you will definitely need to inject insulin, whether your autoantibody test comes back positive or not.
The main thing at the moment is for you to avoid going DKA again!! And to try to take the edge off the crappiness. ; )
You say "if I don’t eat normally they won’t know what dose to put me on". But, if you keep a record of:
1) what you are eating, and when;
2) how much insulin you are injecting, and when; and
3) what your blood glucose levels are, and when--
then your team will be able easily to estimate how many carbs you are consuming, and they will see clearly, unquestionably, that you need more insulin.
As Barbara says, it may be that you need more basal-- that's the once-a-day (so much terminology to learn!! I was puzzled by so many terms in the first few weeks)-- or it may be that you need more bolus-- that's the before-meals insulin-- or both.
Presumably your team have told you that you should, every day, be checking your BG first thing in the morning, before injecting your Novorapid or eating? (If they haven't told you this-- definitely do it! And record the reading, until you get your CGM which will record it for you.)
The main limiting factor with basal insulin is hypos, and the main worry is nocturnal hypos.
If your BG is high first thing in the morning, your team will doubtless first of all try increasing your basal. They will want to do this little by little-- because a big increase in your basal might 'overshoot' and give you nocturnal hypos.
(I had the opposite problem, but the same principle applies. On the day I was diagnosed, they started me on 10 units basal, no bolus; instructed me to take BG readings first thing in the morning and then 2 hours after each meal and also at bedtime; and then my DSN rang me up every day. They kept having to reduce my basal because my readings first thing in the morning were hypo or very low; I've ended up with basal 1.5 units.)
Once your basal is stabilised at a 'Goldilocks' level-- not so much basal insulin that it causes hypos, nor so little that you're constantly hyperglycaemic-- your team will be able, from your records of what you're eating and what your BG readings are, to form a starting-point guess as to what your 'insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio' ('ICR') is.
This means how many units of bolus insulin you need to inject for each X number of grams of carbohydrate you eat. We all have our own personal ICRs, and we can only find out what it is by trial and error! (And for many of us it varies by time of day ... and it can change over time ... and it often needs to be tinkered with to account for the effects of exercise, or stress ... but we'll cross those bridges later!)
The BERTIE course suggests starting with an ICR of 10, meaning 1 unit of insulin per 10 grams of carbohydrate, and adjusting as needed:
- If, after the meal, you go hypo-- your ICR needs to be lower, say 1 unit of insulin per 12g carbs (so you are injecting less insulin for the same amount of carbs).
- If, after the meal, you go hyper-- your ICR needs to be higher, say 1 unit of insulin per 8g carbs (so you are injecting more insulin for the same amount of carbs).
Obviously-- don't tinker with your bolus until your basal is settled, and until you've discussed it with your team! This is just to let you know what's likely to happen over the next few weeks/months.
In the meantime, until your insulin regime gets settled: Do you get any exercise?
Moderate intensity aerobic exercise, like brisk walking or slow jogging, reduces BG levels. The reason for this is a little complicated! But, basically, once you've been (for example) walking briskly for 10-15 minutes, your muscles start using a mechanism which enables them to suck glucose out of your blood without relying on insulin.
For people without T1D, this is not a problem-- the normal pancreas responds to this by stopping production of insulin until it's needed again. But, for people with T1D who are injecting insulin-- once your insulin regime is settled, this magic muscle mechanism becomes a bit of a pain! Because, once your long-acting basal insulin is in your body, it's in-- there's no way of stopping it temporarily. So we either have to reduce our bolus insulin for the previous meal or boost our carbs before and/or during our brisk walk or slow jog to prevent going hypo.
However, at the moment-- while your insulin regime is not yet settled, and you're having hypers which make you feel crappy-- try a brisk 30-45 minute walk. Do record it, too, so you and your team can see the effects on your BG readings.
This helped me a lot when I was at your stage! Physically and mentally. (However NOTE: high intensity aerobic exercise and 'resistance' exercise tend to raise BG levels; so, for the time being, do not, for example, go weightlifting!) All best wishes; things will get better.
The main thing at the moment is for you to avoid going DKA again!! And to try to take the edge off the crappiness. ; )
You say "if I don’t eat normally they won’t know what dose to put me on". But, if you keep a record of:
1) what you are eating, and when;
2) how much insulin you are injecting, and when; and
3) what your blood glucose levels are, and when--
then your team will be able easily to estimate how many carbs you are consuming, and they will see clearly, unquestionably, that you need more insulin.
As Barbara says, it may be that you need more basal-- that's the once-a-day (so much terminology to learn!! I was puzzled by so many terms in the first few weeks)-- or it may be that you need more bolus-- that's the before-meals insulin-- or both.
Presumably your team have told you that you should, every day, be checking your BG first thing in the morning, before injecting your Novorapid or eating? (If they haven't told you this-- definitely do it! And record the reading, until you get your CGM which will record it for you.)
The main limiting factor with basal insulin is hypos, and the main worry is nocturnal hypos.
If your BG is high first thing in the morning, your team will doubtless first of all try increasing your basal. They will want to do this little by little-- because a big increase in your basal might 'overshoot' and give you nocturnal hypos.
(I had the opposite problem, but the same principle applies. On the day I was diagnosed, they started me on 10 units basal, no bolus; instructed me to take BG readings first thing in the morning and then 2 hours after each meal and also at bedtime; and then my DSN rang me up every day. They kept having to reduce my basal because my readings first thing in the morning were hypo or very low; I've ended up with basal 1.5 units.)
Once your basal is stabilised at a 'Goldilocks' level-- not so much basal insulin that it causes hypos, nor so little that you're constantly hyperglycaemic-- your team will be able, from your records of what you're eating and what your BG readings are, to form a starting-point guess as to what your 'insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio' ('ICR') is.
This means how many units of bolus insulin you need to inject for each X number of grams of carbohydrate you eat. We all have our own personal ICRs, and we can only find out what it is by trial and error! (And for many of us it varies by time of day ... and it can change over time ... and it often needs to be tinkered with to account for the effects of exercise, or stress ... but we'll cross those bridges later!)
The BERTIE course suggests starting with an ICR of 10, meaning 1 unit of insulin per 10 grams of carbohydrate, and adjusting as needed:
- If, after the meal, you go hypo-- your ICR needs to be lower, say 1 unit of insulin per 12g carbs (so you are injecting less insulin for the same amount of carbs).
- If, after the meal, you go hyper-- your ICR needs to be higher, say 1 unit of insulin per 8g carbs (so you are injecting more insulin for the same amount of carbs).
Obviously-- don't tinker with your bolus until your basal is settled, and until you've discussed it with your team! This is just to let you know what's likely to happen over the next few weeks/months.
In the meantime, until your insulin regime gets settled: Do you get any exercise?
Moderate intensity aerobic exercise, like brisk walking or slow jogging, reduces BG levels. The reason for this is a little complicated! But, basically, once you've been (for example) walking briskly for 10-15 minutes, your muscles start using a mechanism which enables them to suck glucose out of your blood without relying on insulin.
For people without T1D, this is not a problem-- the normal pancreas responds to this by stopping production of insulin until it's needed again. But, for people with T1D who are injecting insulin-- once your insulin regime is settled, this magic muscle mechanism becomes a bit of a pain! Because, once your long-acting basal insulin is in your body, it's in-- there's no way of stopping it temporarily. So we either have to reduce our bolus insulin for the previous meal or boost our carbs before and/or during our brisk walk or slow jog to prevent going hypo.
However, at the moment-- while your insulin regime is not yet settled, and you're having hypers which make you feel crappy-- try a brisk 30-45 minute walk. Do record it, too, so you and your team can see the effects on your BG readings.
This helped me a lot when I was at your stage! Physically and mentally. (However NOTE: high intensity aerobic exercise and 'resistance' exercise tend to raise BG levels; so, for the time being, do not, for example, go weightlifting!) All best wishes; things will get better.