heasandford
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
I have recently been reading 'Pumping Insulin" (still hopeful!) which has reinforced a concept which I still cannot properly get my head round. It doesn't just apply to pumping.
This is what I read -
"..only half (of rapid acting insulin's) glucose-lowering action is seen two hours later, with about 90% of its action gone after 5 hours."
Surely if half the action is remaining after it has dealt with however many carbohydrates, then by definition an equal reduction will then take place over the next 2-3 hours, leading to an almost guaranteed hypo? It is so dependant on the rate at which carbohydrates convert to glucose and enter the bloodstream? This also seems to vary, I can have the same breakfast every day with the same amount of insulin, one day it will spike, another it will be perfect!
This is what I read -
"..only half (of rapid acting insulin's) glucose-lowering action is seen two hours later, with about 90% of its action gone after 5 hours."
Surely if half the action is remaining after it has dealt with however many carbohydrates, then by definition an equal reduction will then take place over the next 2-3 hours, leading to an almost guaranteed hypo? It is so dependant on the rate at which carbohydrates convert to glucose and enter the bloodstream? This also seems to vary, I can have the same breakfast every day with the same amount of insulin, one day it will spike, another it will be perfect!