Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Manual Mode Experiment Hiatus

I'm back... week before last I was trying to see if I could run with Manual Mode more of the time and keep myself in a better range, but after about 2 days things took a turn and became problematic. While the first day or two I was seeing good results, after a few days it got worse and I felt like I was either insulin resistant or I just wasn't getting enough basal insulin. I might turn my basal up to an average number based on my current basal use, and see how that goes if I try it again.

One advantage that I see in using Manual Mode is that I'm paying more attention and it inspires me to think more about blood sugar in general, which also trickles down in to dietary choices and exercise. When I'm in a normal day of AutoMode I'more likely to miss a meal bolus or not think about blood sugar much at all. I guess paying attention is always helpful for better control. 

 Maybe most days I should pay attention, but then use AutoMode for the days when I can't? Do we always know when those days will be?

I heard from Medtronic that I'm in the pipeline for getting the 770 pump. When they call me, I just have to set up the timing so that I pay my upgrade fee after the 1st of the new year. The new pump isn't groundbreaking, it just gives you the ability to monitor your BG on your phone... but, then there's a software upgrade that sounds like it has a better algorithm with more aggressive auto-corrections.

Monday, November 2, 2020

Aha! Manual Mode was more effective on 11/1

 Yesterday I tried manual mode during the day again, and it gave me quite good results. It was a busy day with quite a bit of activity cooking and doing yardwork. I found I had to eat some pumpkin pie a few times, because the basal rate for manual mode was too much for an active weekend day. However, all said and done... I was in range all day, used less insulin than usual, and didn't have any problems keeping my blood sugars close to normal.

Here are the stats for the day: 

90% in target range, 7% below range (pumpkin pie time), 0% above range, TDD 47.3, Basal 34 units 73%, Bolus 12 units 27%, Total Carbs bolused for 65grams, Correction boluses 2.5 in 3 corrections, Sensor average 124 mg/dL, Standard Deviation 0

See, to me it's interesting that to achieve a real average of 124 mg/dL you have to do something totally different than have a pump trying to keep you at 120 mg/dL. If I had my basal right adjusted for the activity, I probably could have used 40 units of insulin instead of eating pie. But, the pie was delicious, and I rarely eat it when I should, so it worked out well. I also had 2 slices of pizza with dinner, bolused correctly for them and took a walk to help my insulin match up. That was successful as well. I think a day with less carbs could run 37 units, and have me a lot closer to the amount of insulin I was using 10 years ago. 

I have found that switching between Auto Mode and Manual mode is pretty easy. All I have to do is put in a BG reading right when I switch back to AM. At night before I go to bed, I calibrate my sensor and put the pump back into AM. 

Today, I will see if the manual mode basal rate will be right for a day at work. If I bounce along the bottom of the low range, I'll definitely adjust it. Being lowish at work is a little panicky. I'll keep some sweet tarts on hand (just adjusted my manual mode basal rate to 30 units from 34). Right now my basal rate is a flat rate all day. So, there could also be some tweaking of that as well.

Sunday, November 1, 2020

Experimenting with Manual Mode during the day

 Almost as quickly as I had pondered the idea, I started trying it. 

Yesterday I took the pump out of auto-mode in the morning and I started correcting toward 90 mg/dL throughout the day. It worked pretty well. My basal was still pretty aggressive and was probably doing most of the work. I stayed in the 90-110 mg/dL range most of the day and things were pretty uneventful. At dinner I had some beer,  soup with pinto beans in it, and then some pumpkin pie, and it was really hard to take enough insulin to keep me in range. I chased it with boluses, and took a walk, and when I went to bed I was at 197 mg/dL and I popped back into AM for bed. During the night my BG came down to 130 mg/dL by 1am. During the night I had a request for calibration or BG (I can't remember) and I entered the last reading it had as a BG and went back to sleep. It's cheating, but being woken up is worse than cheating. 😳 I'm always looking for ways to win against the alerts and alarms on this pump.

Some stats from yesterday: 

Sensor average: 135,  Standard Deviation 49, 6 corrections totaling 7 units, TDD 47.3 units

Questions I have... by not using AM during the day, am I depriving the pump of data that helps it keep me in range better? Or, does it know me well enough by now that it can jump in at any time? The warm-up period for AM is MM with sensor, so maybe I'm just warming it up all day?

Wow... Almost 10 years...

 I'm really glad I have this blog because it gives me metrics to compare as I track my health. I am really interested in seeing how things change over time, and to read back through the 137 posts that I wrote over the course of 3 years, it makes me realize how much attention I was paying to my physical health and my diabetes management. I hadn't realized that I have been using CGMs for over 10 years... I didn't realize that I've been using a pump even longer. I'm not even sure how I found the time to write that much... but, I did. 

I'm going to compare some data from then and now and use it to create some goals for myself. 

October of 2012                                     October 2020

Total cholesterol: 250                            220
HDL: 72                                                53
Triglycerides: 56                                    108
LDL: 167                                                145
CHOL/HDLC ratio: 3.5                           4.1
NON-HDL Cholesterol: 178

A1C: 6.4                                                 7.4

We  can see that my lipids are pretty similar, but the triglycerides are higher. I want to get those lower to support my desire to stay off statins. I think getting better glucose control and eating lower carb will help lower inflammation and also get the triglycerides down. It seems that my total cholesterol and HDL/LDL are about the same, but more exercise might help me raise the HDL for a healthier ratio. 

My current A1C is higher than I'd like, but it's been this way for a while. I noticed that when I started using the 670g pump in auto-mode, my average glucose levels have been higher and my TDD (total daily dose) for insulin also went up. My weight has stuck at 170-180 lbs, and I haven't been able to make much impact on it no matter what I do with diet and exercise.

The 670g pump shoots for a glucose level of 120 mg/dl, and it rarely gets you below that. That being said, my average blood sugars range from 120-180 on a daily basis. This jibes well with my current A1C which is 7.4, or an average BG of 164. I'm wondering if I used manual mode during the day and was more aggressive about correcting to 90 mg/dl if I could get my average down. I would have to get my basal really dialed in to make that work. I think another factor for this current A1C is that I have a transmitter that is on it's way out... and for a few months prior to my AC1 check it was throwing errors and requiring a BG randomly. This would bump me out of auto-mode overnight, etc. I wasn't able to stay in AM for long stretches of time. 

Here are some numbers from the last 14 days: 

82% time in auto-mode, 65% time in target range, 0% below range, 18% above range, TDD 53.8 units, Basal 36.7, Bolus 17, 91 grams of carb bolused for daily,  Sensor Average 149 mg/dL, standard deviation 18.6

The new pump that I'm hoping to get in 2021 is supposed to allow for a target BG of 100 mg/dl. If that works, I think I could improve my glucose control, especially since it also gives auto-boluses to correct when you get really far out of range.