Welcome! Yes it's great isn't it?I’ve just recently been given the Libra Sensor it’s transformed my Diabetes and after all those years doing finger tests I feel liberated lol. Your thoughts please ?
Thank you for the information a great bit of advice. Being a novice I really appreciate you taking the time to reply. Thank youHi @SharonC
I too am a Libre'tte (??).
I never had a problem with finger pricking except not knowing what was happening between the pricks. THe libre gives me so much more information.
I would add a small note of caution - make sure you understand its limitations and don't become 100% dependent upon it.
- many of us find that it can be out for the first day or two after applying as our bodies acclimatise to the foreign object in our arm. I insert my Libre a couple of days before activating it for this reason.
- CGMs and Libre, measure Interstitial Fluid and apply an algorithm to work out the blood glucose value, This could mean a delay of 10 to 15 minutes, Libre 2 attempts to accommodate this delay but this can result in "overshooting" when the trend changes such as when you treat a hypo or start exercising.
- Libre are calibrated to be most accurate at "normal levels" (between about 4 and 9 mmol/l) and can become very inaccurate outside this range, Therefore, it is recommended to check with a finger prick before correcting a high or treating a low (unless you are obviously hypo)
- sometimes, Libre readings can drift over the lifetime of the sensor. Therefore, I make sure I do a finger prick test at least once a day when my levels are stable and "in range" to check that the sensor is still "accurate enough"
- some Libre fail. Some people seems to be more susceptible to failures than others and human nature is that more people complain. If you sensor fails, Abbott usually replace them. I have always called them but they have been advertising their online service which may be more convenient.
Absolutely agree. I’m still doing random finger tests just to compare. As naturally a bit anxious but on the whole am very happySame here, wish libre was around years before, something so simple can change quality of life.
Thank you for your message. Interesting isn’t it. Even after 34 years I’m still learning. That’s an interesting point about fats and carb absorption. I’ll try and see what happens. Back in the day it was U100 syringes and a clumsy big testing monitor, progress eh albeit a long time coming. Thank you againI agree. Wonderful bit of kit and until this sensor I'm wearing now they have been pretty accurate when compared with finger tests. This is the first one that seems to be out and I'm getting a lot of hypo alarms which are just not hypos when I do a blood test. One thing I am starting to notice is quite how much fat slows down the absorption of carbs. That's the kind of information that might have been hard to pick up without Libre.
Absolutely agree. I’m still doing random finger tests just to compare. As naturally a bit anxious but on the whole am very happy
It's the kind of thing that's mentioned in the structured education like DAFNE, BERTIE online, and mytype1diabetes. Such courses are unfortunately sometimes only offered to relatively recently diagnosed people (after 6 months or so) so those of us diagnosed in the last millennium can be forgotten about.That’s an interesting point about fats and carb absorption. I’ll try and see what happens.
Which were wonderful upgrades on what came before, of course. I'd also mention the really good lancet devices like the Accu-Chek FastClix. Getting a drop of blood is vastly easier with one of those than with naked pointy bits of metal.Back in the day it was U100 syringes and a clumsy big testing monitor
Me too. In my case it was showing I was going hypo every night, and (obviously) fixing that made me feel much better!For me it was a complete game changer.