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Podcast Episodes

The Juicebox Podcast is from the writer of the popular diabetes parenting blog Arden's Day and the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal: Confessions of a Stay-At-Home Dad'. Hosted by Scott Benner, the show features intimate conversations of living and parenting with type I diabetes.

Filtering by Category: Algorithm Pumping

#420 Fox in the Loop House pt III

Scott Benner

Kenny Fox is back to talk Loop

Kenny and Scott talk about DIY Loop Management and type 1 diabetes. part 3 of 3

BUT FIRST, Fox in the Loop House part 1 and part 2

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends and welcome to Episode 420 of the Juicebox Podcast today is another episode about the Do It Yourself algorithm called loop.

If you've been following along in this series, it began back in April of 2019, with Episode 227, and that one's called diabetes concierge. Then I spoke about loop again in August 2019. In Episode 252, a loopy few months, February 10 2020, Episode 304, a loop de loop. And then in March of 2020, we had a two parter number 312 and 313. Fox in the loop house parts one and two. And that fox we're talking about is Kenny Fox, gentlemen has been on the show a couple of times, and who you may know, I really liked Kenny because he understands the loop. And he talks about it in a way that I dig on. So I asked Kenny to come back because I think I've made some big improvements with how I think about loop. And I wanted to check in with Kenny. With all that considered. This is Episode 420. Fox in the loop house, part three. Please remember while you're listening, that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan, or becoming bold with loop.

This show is sponsored today by the glucagon that my daughter carries g Volk hypo pen, Find out more at G Vogue glucagon.com forward slash juicebox. Have you ever wondered if that blood glucose meter that you're using is accurate? Well, it might not be. But I can tell you for certain that we love the Contour Next One blood glucose meter for exactly that reason, its accuracy. I also love its bright light for nighttime checks how easy it is to use and carry. And of course, those Second Chance test strips. Check it out at Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox. And if you're a US resident living with type one or caring for someone with Type One Diabetes, please consider supporting the T one D exchange by going to T one d exchange.org. forward slash juicebox. And joining the registry, you too can help T one D research. All these links are at Juicebox Podcast comm or right there in the show notes of your podcast player. Let's get to Kenny right now. I'm just gonna cut the music off and start no messing around.

Recording when I start the recording. All right. Last night, I ordered a new mic for the house here. Because finally after what feels like about two years, Arden's like, Okay, I'm gonna come on the podcast. And I was like, finally, geez. So, so I'm gonna get another microphone, like so if I buy this microphone, that's it, you're definitely doing this right, because she's vacillated a great deal. I don't know if she's embarrassed, or she's afraid of what she thinks she's gonna say, I have no idea. I was like, I don't care what you say. You can say whatever you want. You know, like, I just want to chat with you a little bit. And then I want to talk about, you know, what you've learned so far about diabetes and what you think you still need to know. And we'll go over some stuff. I was like, that's all I just want to talk. She's like, Okay, all right, I'm gonna do it. But I think she's planning on using it as a they have to do a certain amount of Oh, my God, why can I not think of a very simple word. If you send somebody out into the world to do a nice thing. In exchange for that, you get hours to put in the service or somebody service hours, they have to have a certain amount of community service hours to get it done, to get to graduate. So she's like, do you think that would be community service? I said, Ask your you know, ask your counselor, the counselors like it would definitely be

Kenny Fox 4:30
nice, nice.

Scott Benner 4:31
Anyway, Kenny, you're back. I am back. It feels like it's been a minute since you've been here. But that is sometimes on purpose. I feel like I could talk to you every month and it would be valuable. But your last two episodes. The Fox in the loop house episodes have been very popular. People tell me about them a lot. And I've grown in my understanding of the loop and how I use it. I know you have. So I thought end of the year would be a great time to have you back. So thanks very much. Yeah, I appreciate it. I think we should probably start. Do you agree with the beginning of the pandemic? Yeah. Is that a good place to start? It is. Alright. So I was perplexed by Arden's blood sugars for about three or four days. And I was feeding her insulin almost constantly. And not a little bit a lot. It was bad. And I don't know, you know, for all the things I say on the podcast, and the things I mean, are the things I usually do, I should have just turned her insulin back. But instead, I just kept thinking, you know, something odd happened, or this was gonna be momentary. And finally, like, two, three days into it, I realized that the, you know, stressors of being at school, and getting up and going to school and all the things that come with leaving the house, disappeared for Arden, like she's more comfortable in our home, on a laptop talking to her teacher, and maybe comfortable is not even the word I'll have to ask her when she comes on the show. She might not even be aware of it, right? But there's just not that adrenaline I guess from being up and being moving and having to run from class to class. And it turned out that Arden's insulin needs, at least at her basil level, had significantly dropped because she wasn't at school. And I was in the middle of trying to figure it out. And you just kind of messaged me, I don't know, we were just talking, I guess about something. And I mentioned that this was happening and you're like, Hey, I'll I'll lend a hand if you want. I was like, Okay, sure. Sounds good. It's one of the perks to having my podcast Ken. Right. You are literally one of the perks of my podcast, for me personally, and for everyone listening. And so we looked at it for a while. And you said let's try and what did you want to try?

Kenny Fox 6:59
We tried to cut and basil was looking at just your nightscout graph and look like he had a lot of negative. It shows the nightscout as negative iob. In Salaam born overnight, especially but like EDC Arden's blood sugar was dropping, but it wasn't just dropping with positive insulin it was dropping with negative. So Luke thought, hey, you based on the basil rates you have in here, we should have taken away enough insulin that she should be going up. And she wasn't. So that was kind of an easy indicator that basil was too much. And so we ended up cutting it back, I think at the from where you had it in the daytime, like for handling that school stress was I was almost in half, it was a lot It was like 30 or 40%. And then I think I just also happen to coincide with a because you know, Arden loves that we talked about this herd cycle where she needed less insulin too. So it kind of compounded the effect of having Basal too high very temporarily, but we cut it back quite a bit.

Scott Benner 7:59
The Kenny's on a storyteller he took he told the end at the beginning, but that's fine. So first, I want to ask you to describe negative insulin on board for loop. But how people can think about that as well away from loop.

Kenny Fox 8:15
Yeah, so basil, if you think of basil as like we've talked about before just meeting the body's need for insulin like just normal sugar production. If you can find that spot where you're just matching the body's insulin needs, then you should be fairly level and that would be a situation like overnight, you'd have zero. Insulin on board insulin on board would be any insulin above or in the case of negative insulin or below the basil needs of your body. So it's any extra or in loops case, less. So what that means is in an order, like if you didn't have any food or anything stress or whatever, trying to raise your blood sugar, then most of the time when you have positive insulin on board, you give a bolus or the system increases loop gives more insulin, you should expect at some point your blood sugar to come down. And then once you hit zero insulin on board, you've kind of reached that status level where you've your body's insulin needs are being met with the amount of insulin in your in your body delivered in the background as basil so that should be level your blood sugar should mostly level out. Negative insulin on board would mean that this that you've reduced how much like you're not meeting the body's need for insulin at some point. Often because like in loops case, they've it's reduced. The basil rates pick something lower than your scheduled normal need for insulin to the point where you have less in your body than what you should need to keep you level. And if all that's right, if your basal rates are right, what should correspond with that negative insulin board is your blood sugar will start to rise Because you don't have enough, sometimes it happens right away. Sometimes it's a little bit of a delay, maybe you're exercising or something. And once you slow down, it kind of catches up with you. But the idea is that if you have negative insulin on board, your blood sugar should go up. And that for like a normal pumping situation, just like these in the PDM. For example, if you're waiting, if you have really good basil, and you're flat overnight, and in the morning, you wake up. But let's say you want to be a little bit higher before you give a nice big bolus for a bowl of cereal or something in an hour, you could turn your basil rate down, you could do a Temp Basal have zero, for example, for an hour, well, that would should make your blood sugar drift up because you're you've turned off the basil, you've cut it off, you don't have enough in your body. And it's not enough to just let it turn back on to level you out. Once that Temp Basal of zero is is off, you actually need to give the insulin you're missing that last hour to level it out. So in that situation, you would have a negative insulin onboard situation, even though you're not looping, you might not call it that, but you'd kind of need to give that last hour of basil. plus whatever your you know, that would level you out. And then you're gonna need to give the insulin you need for your food. And loops, just tracking all of that for you by modulating the basil rates up and

Scott Benner 11:19
down. And so if we had Arden settings correct, when she was showing negative insulin, there's just no way she should be falling her blood sugar, it should at least be stable and most likely rising. Correct? Yep.

Kenny Fox 11:33
Yep. So that's a nice, objective way. It's one of the few objective things in diabetes, it seems like and loop helps extrapolate that is like, oh, our basil is wrong. And there are a couple situations where that might not be the case. Like if you're, you know, laying on a sensor at night and dropping, because of a compression, but, or maybe even exercising, it might not drift up as fast as you'd think. But other than that, like it really should be, you should really see up when you see it and negative insulin on board, but at a minimum, Yeah, a little bit of a levelness, as you shouldn't be dropping anymore. And so it's nice is like, okay, that's, that means basil somewhere, is too strong. So if you have multiple rates, then you might have to look, in the last, you know, five or six hours insulin last six hours. So you might want to look at your basal rates in the last four to six hours and try to figure out which one is the culprit, you know, How bad is it how fast you dropping? I have

Scott Benner 12:30
to say that this whole concept has, for me, raised my understanding of insulin significantly. And again, I 100% have to thank first the loop, you know, algorithm, because I began to see these things. As soon as Arden went to loop and you, if you go back in the podcast, you've definitely heard me talk about how fascinating I found it to watch the loop takeaway basil, to give it back, you know, just to sort of, it was like a self driving car, you know, it was seeing that it was seeing the road curve a little down or a little up and it was just going with it. And it was and it was not just going with it. But it felt like it had it felt like it had a crystal ball. You know, like it was like, Well, I'm gonna give her more now. But our number really had only moved a little bit. You know, blood sugar goes from 85 to 89. And all of a sudden, her basil goes up a little bit, and you're like, let's not even arise. And it can be scary at first because you think No, don't give more. She's only 89. But it It knows. And you know, and it knows based on what it's done in the past, and what the expectation is based on the setting you put in. And I think this is important for people if they're gonna use an algorithm or not to really understand basil insulin in a different way. And not just how much basil insulin Do you need, oh, I use 20 units a day, that you know, I inject basil and I use 2020 units a day or I have a pump. And my basil is point five an hour, but it's point four an hour overnight. And that's it that that is I now understand that that in itself is such a rudimentary way of thinking about basal insulin, you really have to step back and believe that in every moment of your life, your basal insulin needs are slightly different. They might almost be in perceivably different, but they're constantly fluctuating somehow sometimes they get real super stable. You know, when you're sleeping, or you know, you just haven't had a lot of activity, there's no food and you know, no insulin you But the truth is, is that the needs change almost constantly. And you can see that because the algorithm is like ooh, more or less, more or less. It's not something you could ever duplicate with your you know, with your hands and your eyes. It would just be it would be your entire life. You know, you'd have to sit there and stare forever and you still wouldn't know that things needed to know to make the decisions in a timely way you could kind of catch them. But it would never be out of head like this is. So I don't really know another way to say that for the people listening. But you have to get it out of your head that your basal insulins definitely point five, or it's definitely a unit, because it very well may not be. And then you can extrapolate that idea to when you have food in your system. And I just did this last night because Arden had a cheeseburger and french fries from five guys. And I crushed it with a good Bolus up front. Her first two and a half hours after the food bank, there was a milkshake in there too, by the way, Kenny, actually double bacon cheeseburger, barbecue sauce, Cajun fries, and a milkshake with Oreo cream and Oreo cookies, the crumble part. So I crushed it the first two and a half hours. And then she got into this 130 space that was trying to go up. I tell you, if I did nothing, her blood sugar could have easily been 300. But I kept adding carbs. And this is still where I have a shortcoming. I need to figure out a way to translate fat and protein into a number, a carb number. That's still something I'm trying to figure out. But I just and

Kenny Fox 16:22
that's that's important, because loop is expecting. So it like kind of, I don't know, it sees in carbs, I guess that it understands the world and understand your blood sugar movement based on carbs. So yeah, figure out your way. And it changes I think for everyone and even meal to meal, it's a little bit of a, maybe there's an exact science to it. But we've kind of settled on 25% or so of all the fat grams and the protein grams. So if you had like a nutrition label, I would like take that, add it all up divided by four and add that as some extra carbs into the carb entry. And usually, if you're adding in fat and protein, you'd either want to do a four hour entry to mix all those carbs together. So that way the because the fat and protein is going to hang out a while. So use the pizza icon to make it longer. Or you can do kind of what you ended up doing in reaction last night, which is you could take kind of that fat protein representation and entering the cars. But you could do it ahead of time you could enter change the time on the entry and put it out in the future by like an hour and a half or two hours where you think that fat and protein is going to kind of show its head. And so you could you could put that number out out ahead of you. And then as she starts to come up, we'll see Oh, I have carbs coming. I can go ahead and give more insulin ahead of time. But you ended up doing it reactively, which is you know, sometimes that happens. We get that with Cassidy as a torturously underestimate the delayed impact of the cheese in a case of DHEA. So I, I tried to add more upfront, but oftentimes it's just like, Oh, she's going up. So then I just add some carbs and, and Bolus and I wouldn't call those fake carbs. It's, it's how Lupe sees everything. You can't call it fat and protein. And so he legitimately needs to be handled with some representation of carbs. So I think, I think what she did was was perfect. I mean, pica added more, but that's I

Scott Benner 18:21
didn't do enough, because I ended up fighting with it for an hour or so where she was kind of that 150 160 back to 150, where I could see the the Bolus pushing her down. But it wasn't winning the fight to bring her back to normal and the fat and the protein still existed. And so yeah, you're telling me just for fun, just to make a round number. If I thought, if I could count 100 grams of fat and protein in a meal, I take 25 divided by four, make it 25 and tell the loop, there's 25 carbs during the fat and protein rise, and that probably would have done it for me.

Kenny Fox 19:01
Yeah, something like that could be, you know, good. Some people use like I used to use 50% of protein and 30% of fat. You know, but I think like 25% is a good start, if people find that their carb ratio works well with basic carbs. And then when they add the fat and protein things get out of whack and 25% isn't enough and try 30 you know, like, whatever it is, or do more for protein. But yeah, find a balance some number that represents that as best you can. 25% just a good starting point. Just add it all up and divided by Ford

Scott Benner 19:34
inserted in there. So this meals like mind numbing to people because I think it was like 85 carbs I put in for the food. Right? And so you're telling me that I could have said 85 carbs now you know, let's say noon. And then I could have let that pump in and then told it 25 carbs for the fat and protein but given it a time of 230 You too, right? And it would not have given her the insulin. But at 230, if she would have rose, it would have got more aggressive.

Kenny Fox 20:08
So you would look at the, it's best to experiment with this at home, rather than sending a kid to school and trying it for the first time. But you'll see the prediction will adjust it'll, it'll see a rise coming. And so it will sometimes or usually offer insulin upfront, I usually don't take it, I say I just don't Bolus after I enter that future carb entry. And then I let Luke kind of spread it out over time, because then as soon as your blood sugar starts to dip a little, it'll pull basil back. And then when that starts to come up, usually corresponding with that rise that you're expecting, then it'll start, it'll start giving insulin right away. So it won't, it will give insulin before the 230 mark that you answered it. If the prediction allows it, if it says you're going to be high enough, and not go underneath your suspend or whatever you can do that sometimes what people have to do for certain longer meals, like maybe a pasta or something that doesn't have as many carbs up front. You may it may be safer to use an override, we've talked about overrides before. That is 100% insulin needs, it doesn't change anything around your insulin needs. But it just has a higher correction range, like maybe like I think yours is like 85 9095, somewhere in there, less than 100, maybe you would have a correction range, then you could set an override that would have a range of 95 to 105, maybe a little bit higher than normal for like an hour or two. And you could turn that on. And what that would do is loop wouldn't would be would not be giving you extra insulin for that future rise until your blood sugar came up high enough into that range. So instead of at 85 or 90, it would have to wait until your blood sugar was into or above that range of 95, let's say before it gave extra insulin. So sometimes you're like, well, it's hard to model how you think every meal is gonna go. So sometimes you just need loop to chill out in the middle, right the first couple hours. Yeah, so raising that correction range for an hour, a loop can't give more insulin until your blood sugars into that range. So you might just want to wait, you might want to wait it out. Like we do that with pasta. pasta is just I don't know, depends on the process. Sometimes it hits right away, most of the time it waits, it's seems like it's almost free for a few hours in my daughter. So we'll set a higher correction range, but I still want to have all the carbs entered because they will show up, it just might show up later. So same with fat and protein, you might, it might be safer to just kind of add that buffer for an hour, if you're worried about a low coming so and the other way you could answer it would be either that like a 230. Or you could have put, you know, the 85 plus the 25. all into one entry and just made it have an absorption time of four or even five hours. And so that would naturally give less, it wouldn't give the insulin for all 100 carbs or 105 carbs up front. I guess it'd be a little more than that. But you know, it wouldn't give all the insulin up front because I would expect it to be spread out a little more. So either either way is fine. Whatever people find easiest or most representative of the food, I think for like the meal you're talking about having it separated would be good. I always separate the carbs from the fat and protein and make a future entry for donuts from a donut shop. Yeah. Because if I give it all up front, she'll drop like a stone in the beginning. But there's always a rise like 90 minutes later. So not that we have done it's a lot. So

Scott Benner 23:46
I like I said at the beginning of this. Whereas when I was talking about putting in the 25 and telling it two and a half hours later, you said do that, but then don't give any insulin that it suggests for it, which is basically like giving the loop walking around money that it can spend wherever it wants to.

Kenny Fox 24:04
Exactly Yeah, yeah, you get to let the blood sugar play out a little bit. Before Luke gives too much insulin like it's because it's going to use the trending information if she started. If Arden started dropping a couple of points, a couple of readings right after you gave the 8087 carbs for the meal. It would be wouldn't give as much insulin or may not give any extra until she starts trending back up again. For those extra 25 cards we talked about,

Scott Benner 24:32
let me ask if I do that. If I say hey, 25 more carbs. Not till 230 it says I don't know let's say it says that's six units and I say no no zero don't put anything in. Even if 230 comes and for some reason I was wrong about that need and her blood sugar never goes up. It doesn't give her the insulin.

Kenny Fox 24:53
So even five minutes after you said no loops gonna check the prediction if the prediction still says needs, maybe she starts dropping the next reading and says, Okay, well, instead of six units, she probably needs two, it will give, you won't give the two, but it'll give as much of the two as it can, right. So in the case of like normal loop with Temp Basal, it'll kick up the Temp Basal rate, and it'll start trying to give that to, and then if she drops again, in the next five minutes, it'll probably say, Oh, nevermind, and cut it back to trying to give one. So that basil rate of shift down in the case of auto Bolus, it would give whatever percentage you're, you're letting it so you know, maybe it'll give half if you have it set at 50%. So if she needed 60 units, in the next five minutes, if it still thought she needed six units, it would give her three minutes, which is why I suggested increasing the correction range, because sometimes, sometimes you need it to play out a little bit. So But typically, if you're putting it out two and a half hours, there's usually kind of a dip in the middle, in the prediction, that will be low enough that it will restrict loot from giving too much. But that's why it's an experiment based on the food I think in the case of, of your meal last night, I think, yeah, maybe it would have given a little bit more insulin upfront, if you said, Hey, don't Bolus for it. If so would have given some decent deliveries, but it wouldn't have been a ton and she didn't drop. So she probably wouldn't have dropped very much either. probably would have been timed just enough to kind of catch that rise that was coming. Yeah,

Scott Benner 26:22
actually, as we're talking about this, I realize this is a similar way to how I handle Pre-Bolus Singh meals when her blood sugar is lower. So if Arden's blood sugar is like 65, and we're eating in 20 minutes, but she's not dropping. We don't you know, she doesn't do anything about that she just waits to eat, but we still want to get some insulin going. And so sometimes you'll tell the little part of it. Yeah, right, you totally pay, like this meal is going to be 10 and carbs gonna be 25 carbs. And it you know, I guess for art and let me just use a round number for a it's a it's a 10 carb meal would probably want, I don't know, Arden gets a unit per for carbs. So you'd probably want like two and a half or so units. But I don't want you to have the whole two and a half. It doesn't matter because it's not gonna want her to have any. Because yes, because she's under the number. So what I usually tell her to do is even though it says zero, go ahead and Bolus a unit, like you put manually inserted unit. If there are times when I forget all the time, yeah, there. But there are times when you forget to look back. But it doesn't matter because as soon as she pumps hits 85, it puts the rest of it in for me.

Kenny Fox 27:33
Correct, because that's where your correction range starts. Yes. And so now it has the green light, as long as the the rest of the prediction, as well as her current blood sugar is all above her correction range of 85. Plus, then it's like, Alright, I'm allowed to give insulin and I know you need some. So here it goes. And that's why correction range is an interesting one. And I did took me a long time to realize that's what it was doing. So there are some people who may be usually they have little ones, they may set the correction range up at 120. So then they start a meal at 75. And it loop won't give insulin for you until their blood sugar is going to be up to 120. So that can sometimes be a long amount of time for the food to really get ahead of the insulin. So then they get upset to the end of highlighter. But what you're watching is that there's there's a bigger space for you to kind of see this happening where your blood sugar is at 75. But Luke can't give more until you're over 120. And so that's the correction range in effect. And that's it's not just or lupus aiming to put you. It's also a restriction on when and how it can give insulin,

Scott Benner 28:45
you basically gave them momentum away.

Kenny Fox 28:48
Well, yeah, in that case you did because it's so much higher. But you also get to see that that's why sometimes bumping up the correction range with an override is useful is maybe you you want that to happen. Or maybe in the case of someone with a blood sugar a child with a correction range of 120, they may want to have temporarily have a lower correction range at the beginning of a meal, they might want to just set it you know, to like 90 or something for an hour. And then and then once she once that person crosses 90, then loop can start giving the insolence here getting a little bit ahead of it that way, or do what you did, and which which we do too is just, we know a little bit better than loop loops, really concerned about that suspend, like don't don't give any insulin if they're too low, but we know they're eating so it's fine. Just give a little bit of insulin anyways, manually. That way you're not totally behind when the food kicks in.

Scott Benner 29:41
To me, that's just the loop version of how do I used to talk about it? So you're basically you're, you know, she's 65 In this scenario, you know, she's not falling, you still need the Pre-Bolus so you just, you know, you Just override the pump and do it anyway, you're just like, Okay, well, the

Kenny Fox 30:03
pumps not gonna suggest that either right into the blood sugar, and they're gonna say, Nope, zero, but then you have to remember to come back and give it and the beauty with loop is you told loop about the carbs, right? It's expecting the rise. And so when it shows up, it will take action, but it takes action based on what it knows the carbs and also and basil and everything else, but also the correction range when it can engage. So that's another restriction. Yeah,

Scott Benner 30:28
that's also a situation where I trade a lot of the Pre-Bolus time for the number. So if she's 65, I don't need like a 15 or 20 minute Pre-Bolus anymore, because the 65 is the Pre-Bolus. Meaning if I was going to put the insulin in at 5pm, and I didn't expect to just start working until 515. And she was going to eat at 520 or 525. And her blood sugar was 100. Well, then I like that because then by 515 are blood sugar's moving a little bit, she's 98, you can tell it's getting ready to kind of it's drifting down. By the time she puts the food in her mouth, maybe she's 95, and the insulin is really coming on board. So that's where a nice Pre-Bolus works, because her blood sugar help is helping by being 100. But if your blood sugar 65, you can almost push the button five minutes before you eat. And that way the food goes in turns the 65 into a 7585 95. Right, as the insulin comes on board, then you start the fight around there. It's all about where you're starting the fight between exactly

Kenny Fox 31:30
yeah. And and loop is very sensitive to where that fight happens. I think that's kind of the most frustrating thing for people when they start looping is two things, one, the fat and protein, you really have to accommodate for that and loop. If you don't want to be really angry with loop and being high, especially when you're listening to this podcast, you're used to, you know, correcting if you need to, but keeping things in line. And loops recommendations can often be a little light upfront if you're on the lower end of the spectrum. And so it's gonna give insulin later, but then that fight might happen at a higher number in this case you wanted it to but in other cases it won't. And then once that battle happens, it loops usually pretty happy with it, because it's waiting for the entire meal to resolve over the next few hours. It's not in any hurry to bump it down. And so it just happens. Whereas if you with you can do this with loop or with the PDM or MDI Either way, it's easier with with loop, you can give a little bit of a manual Bolus, if that fight that tug of war is happening at 160. And you'd prefer it to be a little lower, or you see it starting to get up there earlier, you can catch it the better, right? Yeah, you can give a little bit of insulin loops going to disagree with you and not recommend anything. So in return, it will cut the basil back it'll it'll turn the basil either off or lower after you manually Bolus, but that's okay. Because you're you're wanting to kind of reset the fight you're wanting to kind of push it back down a little bit. And by Luke cutting basil, it should prevent the low that would happen later from all that extra insulin you gave that you're usually not patient enough to wait for anyways. So yeah, it can it helps balance it. But where that fight happens, loops, usually fairly content with just letting it resolve because eventually, according to what it knows, you'll be back in range. But we would prefer to have the most of the meal at a number. That's a little bit lower sometimes. So yeah, it is. It's all about the timing.

Scott Benner 33:33
Do you imagine that in the beginning when people start using the loop, and it happened to me as well? Where if I'm not considering protein and fat and later rises, or I've got my settings wrong, and then I try to do that thing where I come back and I try to fake carb, I'm like, Oh, she had 10 more carbs. And then it takes away the basil because it's trying to do its thing now it believes these 10 carbs are going in, and you keep going up and up that frustration really does come from I think I got it through not not specifically understanding how the algorithm was working and what it was trying to accomplish. And then I just couldn't imagine it. I couldn't break free from my, my, my knowledge of how it worked when I was pumping, and that if I gave extra insulin, I still had the basil. And you know, so I think that now that I understand better. I don't run into that as often. I think I'm incredibly good at using loop now.

Kenny Fox 34:32
But yeah, I mean, your last few weeks have been great.

Scott Benner 34:35
Yeah, I just I you know, and it's interesting you say that because maybe two or so weeks ago, Arden started using a birth control pill to regulate her periods. So she's getting this very low dose of estrogen I guess or hormones. I think I'm right when I say

Unknown Speaker 34:53
less, you should probably look

Scott Benner 34:54
at me and it did increase her needs. So Arden's basil need one From like point nine to 1.5 to combat the pill, but her meal ratio didn't change. And her correction ratio didn't change the insulin sensitivity, actually, excuse me, I did have to make it slightly stronger. Maybe

Kenny Fox 35:17
not a lot, though. It did a few points. Yeah,

Scott Benner 35:19
from like 43 to 40, or something like that, if I'm remembering correctly. It took me about two days to figure it out after the pillow kicked in. So the first couple days were wonky than about day three and four of the pill I could really, like make the adjustments. And I think by day five, I

Unknown Speaker 35:34
had it.

Kenny Fox 35:35
Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of the challenge people have with at the beginning is their bezels are often wrong. Like we've talked about before, I I prefer the idea of at least starting with a single Basal rate so that it's easy for you to see at least the lowest parts of the day, where that negative insulin on board might show up, or you may have the basil off, or maybe it's too strong. I do find that that number of basil typically for most people does apply. All day like it's it's kind of a, I call it a floor like I don't have a metabolic metabolic floor, where if you give no matter what you should see blood sugar stop falling when you hit zero, and so on board or negative at pretty much every hour of the day. But there are situations where you would need more than one. But if you start with one tune to that like weakest part of the day, and then you know that you're pretty close, typically, secondary basal rates are not that far off from the main one that you find. And then at least that gets you in the ballpark. And now, what like like what we found with Arden, when we started at being in the pandemic is, after pulling away that stress that you were trying to combat, you're actually combating that stress and other stuff with basil. So her carb ratio ended up being almost half of what you had it. And that's actually not uncommon, from what I see with those with teens is the not in your case, necessarily. But a lot of people are too afraid of or just can't fathom that their kid went from 10 or 12 to one carb ratio. And a couple years later, they're down to like a four or five, six to one carb ratio. So instead they increase the basil. And then when you get to loop, you find that the basil is a little bit too weak for part of the meals, and then it causes lows later, because your Basal is too strong. And you're you're definitely not winning with loop because it's expecting to see carbs, and you're not matching it with the appropriate amount of insulin and the settings are off and all this stuff goes on. That's so yeah, that's a big problem.

Scott Benner 37:42
Yeah, I end up saying that to people privately all the time. Because though, first they come in there, the telltale is always a real jagad graph real high, low, real high real low,

Kenny Fox 37:53
and not enough insulin with the beginning of the meal, and then too much at the end with basil being too high.

Scott Benner 37:58
And then so you just say, look, this is either it's gonna be I always say we're gonna start with your basil, we're gonna find out if it's too high, or it's too low. And I just asked this simple fishing question like, do you find yourself feeding insulin more frequently, or bolusing for highs more frequently, because I can't be there. And I can't just sit and watch it forever, right. So if they find themselves feeding lows, I go, okay. And that to me, says, you know, maybe the bass was too high. And if it's, we're always bolusing ago, maybe the bass was too low, and we just start there. And then I just, I take the person's weight, and it gives me an average understanding of about where their basil is gonna fall for most people. Some people don't correlate to their weight at all. But I find that many people do around point one per 10 pounds. But then once you get over a unit that seems to not play out exactly the same angry, right? And so but again, there's nothing scientific about that. It's just just experiencing a lot of people's graphs, right? So you know, you my kid weighs 50 pounds, you know, they're not in, you know, puberty yet. All right, so you've got their Basal at point, one, five, probably not enough. So let's try point three, and then you see it get a little better. And I keep moving up, we'll go point four, you know, maybe point four or five. Now this looks pretty stable. Okay, now we have some stability at a lower number. Let's look at how long your Pre-Bolus in. A lot of people like to say they Pre-Bolus but then they always say, You know when I can? And I'm like, yeah,

Kenny Fox 39:29
that means not that off. That's what that means.

Scott Benner 39:31
And so Mike Well, we're definitely going to Pre-Bolus now, five minutes. Yeah, let's start at 15 minutes. Now you need to remember we just took your basil from point 152 point four, five, your meal ratios are probably going to be lower, you know, weaker than you think. So if you're doing one to 10 it might end up being I don't know, one to 12 or 13. I don't know we're gonna find out you know, so pick a meal that you're really good at bolusing at and You know, let's cut it back a little bit, cut it back a little bit. Now we get the Bolus, right, then all jump up, they don't have to correct later the corrections don't cause lows. And they stay off that whole roller coaster. And that's it. Like I'm, there are times that I help somebody. And when it's over, like, you know, you know, it's like two or three days later, and you've talked to me a handful of times for a couple of minutes. And they're like, look at this graph. There are times where I act like Yeah, that's great. You did a great job. Isn't this wonderful? And why hang up the phone? I think I can't believe I did.

Kenny Fox 40:31
I have a lot of those conversations. My wife is you gotta you gotta come look at this. I just replied back. Oh, yeah, good job. And then I see what I just didn't like 24 hours or 48 hours. That's pretty cool. Because it's really important that people understand that when your settings are off that when you're, it's like your meals are like mediocre, they're okay ish. But yours, you know, late, low, later, high, early, whatever, but generally not too bad, then we need to increase basil, or decrease. So you got to trade it with the current ratio, you do often flip those up and down in reverse of each other. So it's important to as long as you're in a pretty decent spot of control. Most of the time, it's really important that they remember that. So if they find that looking at negative insulin on board or learning, excuse me track the iob. overnight and Luke because you have so much more data than just a graph to look at. And you figure out what your basil is. And I can do that with a fair amount of precision. If you're running a single basil rate, it's pretty easy for me to figure out how much higher or lower you need to be based on the exact amount of insulin on board. And that happens in those waves overnight. Yeah. You just once you make that change, so you don't have a so much struggle the rest of the day, you got to make sure you're adjusting your carb ratio after you're like, Oh, look, I found my basal rate. You got to make sure you change your carb ratios, or you can be fighting highs or lows depending on where you're at. And

Scott Benner 41:55
I think it's important to know that we're talking about right now if you're in a place of just dumpster fire, and you're trying to find it, that all counts for that if you're in a situation like Arden was recently where she started the birth control pill, but she still it but her settings were rock solid before then her all of her needs just increased. Like Yes, there's a concrete thing that happened. It's not variance or, you know, what we alluded to, you know, when we started and never got back to which was when Kenny and I were looking at Arden's numbers way back at the beginning of the pandemic, she was in her easy week. So Arden has like three different weeks every month, she has an easy week where her blood sugar is super simple to take care of. Then she has sort of a pre menstrual week where it's more difficult, it kind of ramps up and gets more difficult as her period approaches. And then as the period begins, it actually starts to get easier again. And then it gets easier and easier as the period progresses. And then it goes back into that easy week. So we were in the easy week when we set it up. And Kenny set up a single basil system, which What do you think it for five or six days? It looked like Arden didn't have diabetes? Right?

Kenny Fox 43:09
Yeah, I mean, you had he had standard deviation. And like the 20s, you had super high time and range. You know, I like I didn't I don't have that many weeks that are for that length of time that are that stable. And that was that was pretty good. And like we figured it out. I mean, we had to dial things back a little bit every day. Right. And, and it but it was Yeah, it was pretty solid. It was much different than the days you before when you were struggling.

Scott Benner 43:36
But but it was super steady and super low. And and before I get into this, I want to I want to ask a question, and I'll answer it as well. How frequently does your daughter's blood sugar out of nowhere surprising to you drop low.

Kenny Fox 43:53
Drop low. Yeah. Oh, hardly ever

Scott Benner 43:55
meet. So

Kenny Fox 43:56
I find that when you have basil pretty steady and you trust. And you've seen over time, especially with the precise loop data you get in terms of insulin on board. When you see a drop in like like 3am, for example. It's I mean, I, I don't even get out of bed, if it's a 55. And it won't go from 85 to 55 in two or three readings. unless she's laying on the sensor. Something's wrong. It just doesn't happen. So I tried to explain it to people that once they have a good basil rate, good settings, those drops are not something you run and treat, like maybe you fingerstick that's probably a good idea. But you're going to have much more consistency than you thought some people are struggling enough that that dumpster fire situation where they're used to seeing ups and downs so much that Yeah, but once you have good settings there's I mean, there's not she doesn't just drop, right isn't unless the stem usually when I'm struggling with the technology itself. It's not It's not our blood sugar.

Scott Benner 44:55
Right, right. I had to yell into the shower for my wife. The other morning. We were up earlier and the kids are still sleeping, and I just yelled, she's not really 55. And I just kept Oh, yeah. Yeah, she doesn't worry when it beeps,

Kenny Fox 45:07
my wife doesn't wake up to the beeping. So I roll over and look at the drop and look at her in some onboard on my phone and go and not worried about it. And then I go back to sleep. And then if it beeps again, then I'll get up and check because it means we're struggling with the sensor. It's what actually grandma's dealing with right now we have my wife's 94 year old grandmother living with us. And she has type one diabetes, and I have her looping. And the sensor we put on your sensor last night and just ended up it's reading low a bunch, so we just had to go figure out if it was real or not. But it was it's unusual for us to see those kinds of drops unless it's the sensor kind of just having its moment.

Scott Benner 45:45
I'm actually gonna put a G six on as soon as you and I are done. Awesome. Yeah, this is gonna go up after the other ones. I can just say whatever I want here. And then I'll get back to my thought. Kevin Sayer, I'm going to record with Kevin Sarah this afternoon, Kevin's going to talk about some things that Dexcom is doing. I'm going to kind of in tandem be wearing a G six, two. So people who listen to the podcast can see what a functioning pancreas looks like, I pushed Dexcom to to let me do that. Because I think it's going to be incredibly helpful for people who have stress about small rises and things like that, where they think if that lines not completely straight that, you know, it's very unhealthy where it's very helpful.

Kenny Fox 46:31
I mean, I've worn a sensor, you know, with a little bit of time left on my daughter's transmitter before. Yeah. And, and I've had one of my oldest son when my daughter was first diagnosed were one. And just to kind of get an idea of like, what is normal, like, I'm a little overweight. So like, well, I'll check my son too. And these numbers are very close to mine, like, you know, it's, it's comforting to see that, you know, you can hit like higher numbers 130 4050 very briefly, then some of these patterns that you see, are real, like they're not just something you're doing wrong. So for example, if I ate a bunch of ice cream, right before I went to sleep, I stayed higher for many hours, longer than I would have if I had just stayed awake, you know, that growth hormone idea when you your body's doing its thing, when you go to sleep, your digestion is affected and all kinds of stuffs happening. Yep, that will keep you higher, I wasn't just making up that my daughter was shooting up out of nowhere. It wasn't something I was gonna attack with basil. It was it was variable based on the food and the she ate and how close to sleep. She ate it. Because I saw the same thing for me. And so now it's like, okay, and it's not. It's not unusual, it's not different. When other people are telling me you have to increase basil or whatever, they don't really know what they're talking about, like this is what a normal pancreas would do for an eight year old or,

Scott Benner 48:00
or someone who's older than that. So it doesn't really matter. Jenny said this recently that when you fall asleep, all your body functions slow down.

Kenny Fox 48:08
Yeah. And I was like, everything's just different.

Scott Benner 48:09
Yeah, it's why you get heartburn, if you eat something, and then go to sleep, because your body's in the middle of processing the food. And suddenly you take the power away from it that it needs to process the food? And it's Yes, and just, you know, I'm sure that's not a very technical explanation of it. But yes, so I, I just thought, you know, there are so many people listening this podcast, it's just gonna give a great opportunity for a lot of people to have that experience that would not normally have that experience. So I contacted Josh from sugar mate who I didn't know previously. And he set me up so that I can live stream my blood sugar on my blog, so that people can actually go right to it, watch it all and put the foods that I'm eating so that people can see what happens. And yeah, and then I thought,

Unknown Speaker 48:52
wow,

Scott Benner 48:54
what if, after that, I took volunteers who were like, I'm really good at bolusing for pizza, or I'm really good at doing this and let them kind of run like little, you know, basically showcases where they say, Alright, I'm gonna Bolus this pizza here. And you get to watch it if you want to, and then see where the insulin goes. And so people can kind of have that experience. But But back to just me wearing one without diabetes. It just really occurs to me that people need to see that because there are too many people freaking out about a 130 blood sugar that lasted for 45 minutes. Like, there are some people who put graphs up in my Facebook page. And they're like, I don't know what I did wrong. And I look at it. I think they put the wrong graph up. I don't see where you did anything wrong. You know, like it went to 130. And it came back down and it didn't get low. It looks pretty good. You know,

Unknown Speaker 49:43
how do I say that? Yeah.

Scott Benner 49:45
How do I stop that from happening to me be more perfect, I guess. But that wasn't terrible. And right. And a lot of the things you're achieving with insulin are superhuman compared to what a pancreas would do.

Kenny Fox 49:57
Yeah, the idea you get the people that are shooting for like an 80s blood sugar. They think that means all day every day, and that's what would normally happen. And that's not really what would happen with a functioning pancreas either. And, you know, some people have it's, I found it useful for me because I put it on my son who kind of a similar build. So I'm assuming similar genetics to my daughter. And you know, where does he fast overnight? Well, his fasting blood sugars like in the 90s, not in the 80s. So here's a one see, if I got it, check is probably a little bit higher, probably in the high fours, low fives. So I don't think my daughter would normally be someone who would have a four and a half or a four a one see that some people try to shoot for that, or I think a little bit crazy. But some people would my third child, he, his blood sugar will be tested as always lower 70s and 80s. So you know, some people would and some people wouldn't have a certain number. So I thought it was comforting for me to say, Oh, I can keep my daughter's a one C, you know, like between five and five, six so far. That's probably where she would be without diabetes. So that was comforting to me. I don't need to try and push the envelope lower. I have no desire to do that. Because especially after watching my son, like his average blood sugar was kind of in that. That same range. So I'm like, Okay, well, I'm I'm doing okay, so

Scott Benner 51:21
yeah, well, if, if people want to check it out, it's Juicebox Podcast comm forward slash CGM live. And whenever I have a volunteer, there'll be a live graph there. So

Kenny Fox 51:33
yeah, it's pretty cool. Yeah,

Scott Benner 51:35
I thought that that was a good use of it. And Dexcom has this. It's, it's, you know, text. The reason I have it is because Dexcom starting a program that I actually think they announced they're announcing today, that is called Hello, Dexcom. And so you'll be able to go into a doctor's office, if you had type two diabetes, and just say, I'd like to try a Dexcom CGM. And they'll give you this little package that has a sensor, an applicator and a transmitter in it. And you can try it for 10 days without a just like that. That's wonderful. Yeah. So that, you know, was like, Well, let me take advantage of that. I was like, Can I get one I have an idea.

Kenny Fox 52:15
A family members that are struggling with type two M just started wearing, like a Libra or something. And when they see test gear, and they understand that, like, you get readings all the time, and those benefits, they, they, they kind of want it, but it's hard for them to get started. So and see and try to measure if the additional cost or whatever might be worth the change. And I think being able to try it out would be a big deal.

Scott Benner 52:40
Yeah, I also think that Dexcom is gonna make a pretty big push into the type to market. So maybe that maybe they'll be able to get bonuses though, to cover and I agree, my brother has type two, and I wish I could get him a CGM. He definitely needs one. Anyway, give me give me one second before you get to your thought. Sure. All the stuff we just talked about, about basil and, you know, settings and everything. It's why and tell me if I'm wrong. When people say to me during activity, my blood sugar falls all the time, like how am I ever gonna get my blood sugar to stay up? During, you know, my kids, you know, soccer game or something like that? And my my core answer, the thing I just want to say is, we'll get all your settings right, and your blood sugar won't fall when you're running around. Do you feel that that's

Kenny Fox 53:28
true? I feel it, that's critical to having a chance at getting it right. So again, understanding of insulin on board is as critical and it's really only super valuable if your basil is right. Because then you know how much more insulin is in your body. What I find with exercise, something I cover when I'm helping people is exercise does a couple things, right? It slows down your digestion because all the blood flow goes out to your muscles instead of your stomach. So what you were eating is no longer being processed as quickly. So that insulin on board and the active carbs as represented in loop are going to be mismatched plus you're moving around so that increases your sensitivity. So going into activity with insulin on board, you can kind of gauge like how much is too much based on the activity that's more of the art form of it. But you know, if you have more than a maybe one hour of basil equivalent insulin on board going into some fairly intense activity, you're likely to drop even if you have carbs on board. So what I do in loop is is I will take any active carbs My daughter has especially if it's not planned, I'll take the any kind of active carb entries, I'll make them longer, like go from three hour to four hour for example. And then I might even cut back some of those carbs or if I plan to the activity ahead of time, I would probably enter fewer carbs for the meal prior to any activity because Because activity also consumes some carbs for energy. So it's going to eat up some of those, as well as stretch out what we have. So I will, I will enter fewer carbs ahead of time, I'll stretch them out. And then if there's still a decent amount of insulin on board going into the activity, I'll maybe give a couple of carbs on an entered are not going to put them into a loop, I might put one gram in as an entry, just so I know, hey, that's where I gave the granola bar or something. And then if I miscalculated chins up high later, I know which were to go in and add a couple more carbs. And for that granola bar, whatever, it is a caver. And so it's just balancing that food and insulin, but your your food impact slows down at the insulin is a little more effective. But if you can enter with if you have really good basil settings, and you can go into activity, you know, with zero insulin on board, like waking up in the morning and going for a run, I would tell you that with loop you, you could set a higher correction range, and you probably should when you're exercising, but you might not have to like you could probably do a run at 90, and not worry about dropping if your insulin on board is zero and your basil is right, especially with loop in case there is a little bit of a dip, it will pull it back, you might see a little bit of negative insulin on board and you might kind of stay flat and then once you stop running loop will give you the extra insulin for that negative on board if you end up having a little bit. But and people can exercise pretty stable if you can, like I'm talking about use the insulin on board to find your basil almost every time. And if it's too if your basil is too much, even just by one click of the basil rate. It has dramatic impact on activity actually just helped. Someone has a CDE with her, I think six or seven year old, having crushes at recess at school. And we simplified the basil rates and mostly dropped the ones that were running during the day at school to match what was working overnight. And then she gave us a couple of carbs on entered. And recess was fine. Like that was that was in less than 24 hours. I was after school in the afternoon, she was posting a message, we chit chatted across Facebook overnight, and then by the next day like it was looking better. And she understood the mechanics after I explained what I just said, like what happens during activity. So yeah, I think with the right settings, you have a much better chance of not crashing during activity and being nicely in range and being able to perform your best, right

Scott Benner 57:32
and settings means not just your basil, but your carb ratios understanding the impact of the foods that you're using the correct amount of insulin, so that you don't have a bunch of insulin leftover after a meal. And that's it. I feel so badly by the way. Great job that that's really cool. So you're telling me the kids blood sugar wasn't just magically falling at 9:45am? It's not about that the the diabetes fairy was not tapping him on the shoulder or on the shoulder as they're running around.

Unknown Speaker 58:01
Right? Um,

Scott Benner 58:02
I just I feel badly. When when I understand and it happens, it gets thrown in my face almost every day, like how many people are just either struggling wildly with these fluctuations, or almost as odd to me having success by mistake? Yeah, like the people who use who are MDI who use way too much basal insulin, and just basically are feeding their lows at mealtimes before they happen. Yep, you ever seen that? Like, every meal is do or die. And it has to go into the rarely certain time or they experience a low because they're, they've blanketed themselves with so much basal insulin, that it's just a matter of time before they crash. But they can find a way to put the food and that to me seems absolutely just, I would think that would take every ounce of energy out of me if I had to live that way.

Kenny Fox 58:58
The two wrongs to make a right or multiple wrongs to make a right. The chance goes up with something like a like loop. Because you can have your ISF off to you have more settings to kind of mixed together in the wrong way. Something that we'll maybe we'll talk about some of the time because it takes a while and I'm going to try and do we have a YouTube page the group of us have it's called looping learn on YouTube. And then we have a Facebook group too. But I'm trying to put together some shorter videos on this instead of my long, long presentations I've done before but ISF is, is critical in loop because it loop is tracking when you enter a meal. I'll give the short version when you enter a meal and you Bolus for it based on the carb ratio, that's great. But then as soon as the meal progresses loop is trying to track like how many of those carbs have shown up again why it's important to have fat and protein in the mix is astounding. To see like you told me this is a 30 gram meal. When are those 30 grams done? And it does that based on your basil has to be right. Otherwise it might be hiding carbs or showing more carbs. If your basil is not right, it'll use the carb ratio. How much insulin Have you given or how much insulin does it take to kind of counter what's happening, but it's also using ISF how much your blood sugar is moving. And that concept a little bit hard to explain. But it's using ISF also as a measure for if your blood sugar goes up or down, how many carbs has it seen. And so as the meal progresses, once you once it's seen 30 carbs, it thinks your meal is over. So if your ISF is too low, let's say dramatically too low, and you enter 30 carbs, you Bolus the full amount and loop. If you have a way off, it may be inside of an hour loop will say oh, I've seen all 30 carbs. Well, we all know there's not really anything but maybe juice that you could have a 30 grams, that would be completely done affecting your blood sugar in an hour. But based on your settings, lupus said Oh, it's over now. So it's probably thinking you're going to go low, because you have all this insulin leftover from your meal Bolus, and the food's gone. So at least what it thinks is gone, and then you end up drifting high. So then what people often do is they will lower their ISF more thinking, Oh, it's a sensitivity problem. And eventually, they can kind of get it to where it's not awful because they have their ISF solo at the meals absorbing a radical amount of time very short. But then it's low enough that Luke can still correct that rise. Because it thinks your sensitivity so low, it'll give more insulin to kind of keep that that rise from happening even though loop is saying your meal was over in an hour or hour and a half and that's not really realistic. So that you can end up with two wrongs make a right and that situation same with having your basil too high to compensate for maybe not enough carb ratio that can help for most of the day you can kind of be okay if you had ISF too low basil too high and carb ratio too weak, you can sometimes get a balance where, you know most meals are like okay, but you're not really seeing the success you'd like to see and consistency that you'd like to see. So it's to me it's more levers to mix up. Now.

Scott Benner 1:02:13
Can you put into words for me what you look at when you're adjusting someone's basil insulin on loop?

Unknown Speaker 1:02:19
Sure, yeah.

Scott Benner 1:02:26
We don't usually think about that meter that we use, right? I know for us Arden's doctor just gave it to us and walked around with it for years, used it all the time counted on it, and never once asked myself, is there a meter that's more accurate than this is the one I'm using even accurate at all. And then I checked into it. And when I did, I immediately went to the Contour Next One blood glucose meter. Eventually they became sponsors. And here I am today talking about them. Go to Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox. To learn all about the Contour Next One meter, the strip programs that they have, and you may even be eligible for a free meter. There's a lot to learn on the webpage. Really good stuff there. I love the meter because it's easy to use, and even easier to use in the dock. It's simple for Arden to carry and the test trips allow for a second chance test without interfering with accuracy. So that means you hit some blood don't get enough, you can go back and get more and still get a great test. I'm telling you this meter is absolutely terrific. This stuff is completely inexpensive and there's just no excuse to be carrying around a janky old busted up meter that you've never even looked into when you can have the Contour Next One. g vo Kibo pen has no visible needle, and it's the first premixed auto injector of glucagon for very low blood sugar and adults and kids with diabetes ages two and above. Not only is chivo hypo pen simple to administer, but it's simple to learn more about. All you have to do is go to G Volk glucagon.com forward slash juicebox g vo shouldn't be used in patients with insulinoma or pheochromocytoma. Visit evoke glucagon.com slash risk.

Can you put into words for me what you look at when you're adjusting someone's basal insulin on loop?

Kenny Fox 1:04:34
I kind of created like a quick four step process. But there's a lot buried in each one of those steps. So first thing is always

Scott Benner 1:04:43
candidates. Do you have a quick four step process that has 75 sub steps?

Kenny Fox 1:04:48
Right? Yeah. And once you understand how to work that's it. I kind of just do it without thinking but essentially it's a look at their settings. So the Profile Editor in nightscout will tell you what their settings are And then I go look at Basal. So we'll scroll back and nightscout, the first 24 hours. And you can also run this report and knightscope, call it day to day report. But you have to check the iob box, you can see what's the iob, that loops reporting all day long. And I'll look for negative and so important, if I can find some and see that they're dropping, when that's happening, then we know it's a basil problem. So then we'll try to like, estimate what the basil rate should be if they have multiple rates, kind of take an average of that time frame where we saw that situation occur. And we'll pick a number in there. If we're really not sure, you can just take all your basil rates and look at your total amount of insulin and just take the average for the whole day and start there. But we always always check basil using the insulin on board, so I check for negative insulin on board, adjust basil. And then if you check the CLB box in the day to day report, or you like hover over that loop pill and nightscout obsessively after meals, you can kind of see how many carbs loop is reporting back at a given timeframe. And so if meals look like the carbs on board is just happening really quickly, like the meals are being sucked up and absorbed very fast. But blood sugar is still higher than most likely you start with needing more insulin. So we'll usually adjust the carb ratio to be more aggressive in that case. If you're seeing lows at the beginning, then we'll weaken the carb ratio. But again, this all depends on how much we just changed basil during the day, so we might have to let it play out first and then adjust. And then I also look at ISF. It my rule that I have that seems to work pretty well is one to you know, maybe to basil rates what we start with one, and then is a carb ratio should be pretty close to the same like breakfast and lunch and dinner like maybe breakfast will be a little stronger and dinner could be a little bit weaker. But I mean really they should be fairly close for most people unless they are fighting significant morning rise situations that you've covered in other podcasts. And then ISF should be you should have it's easier to just dial in your settings if you have one ISF that covers your whole mealtimes anytime you could be entering carbs, so kind of wake up to go to sleep one ISF. And then I tend to encourage people, what I find works is to have a couple of blocks of ISF overnight, maybe like in two or three hour blocks, and the strongest or lowest ISF setting will probably be right after you go to sleep. And then it could get weaker, and every couple hours until you wake up and then you have that that weak one. Now some people don't need that. But that's kind of like a starting place is just make a couple of ISF blocks. So we do that. And then the last one is pretty much like we talked about the beginning, fat and protein, like you have to have some representation of fat and protein in and then you know in your carbs. And then you also have to make sure that you're using, like I noticed you were doing these last couple weeks is mostly just using the three hour absorption time I used to when we started use the two hour absorption time thinking Oh, a bigger spike loop sees a bigger spike, it'll give me more insulin. Want to Be bold with insulin. So I want to give more upfront, but you find out that a lot of foods lasts a little bit longer than that. And so you need that three hour time is really good for most things. And because I talked about how carbs absorb as you go, in theory, you could have a five or a 10 hour absorption time on your meal. And if it was really, you know, an apple that was done in an hour to

about two hours loop will seal those carbs in two hours and you'll be fine. So you could have a longer absorption time and get in less trouble than if you had to short and then all of a sudden there's still carbs around but loop thinks well you said it was only two hours long and it's lasting for then it's not going to try and help you anymore because it thinks well that carb entry has timed out so yeah, yeah, Basil carb ratios, a couple ISF blocks mace mostly one during the day, and then adding fat and protein in for for for that stuff. And then the last kind of pro tip one is more like a what I call being bold with loop would be super bolusing. Like it's okay, to manually Bolus if something's not going right. And if you're starting a meal and you think it's going to be kind of spiky, it's okay to give a little bit more upfront with a meal like for cereal. I'll give a Pre-Bolus and then I'll give an once you start sit down to eat. I'll give about three hours equivalent of her basil because I figured that food will last three to four hours. So I'll give her all three hours of her basil, insulin. Right now as a Bolus, as she starts eating a loop turns off the basil for those three hours. And she ends up having a pretty steady line through the whole thing. So

Scott Benner 1:10:07
you put that basil in, and then let the loop backwards manage.

Kenny Fox 1:10:11
Exactly, yeah, cuz it's not gonna be bold for you. It's not, it doesn't care if you're gonna go if you're predicted to go to 250, as long as you're going to come back down where you're supposed to come down. So I've just come to be okay with saying, you know, what I know a little bit better than looping the situation. So we'll be a team will work together, I'll give the insulin I think she needs now to fight that high glycemic food, that initial spike the carb count still, right? It's just how fast and hard it's going to hit. So I'm going to hit back. And I'll let Luke kind of balance it. And the risk is that you have to keep her it link near her. So that that keeps working. And the whole system has to stay functioning. But I know I did it. And so if something went wrong, I didn't know what to do to fix it. So you just build your kind of the things I I'll step people through over a period of a day or two.

Scott Benner 1:10:58
Yeah, you just made me think of like, I'm always like, how do you walk away from this thing after pancakes, but stay with it after a salad? Like Like, I need the connectivity right now. Like we need the kids stay with

Kenny Fox 1:11:11
me. But that's the word the horizon stuff will be nice to stay connected. No

Scott Benner 1:11:15
kidding. Hey, a couple things. First of all, there's a pro tip I did with Jenny Smith. It's Episode 263. It's called diabetes, pro tip fat and protein. If all this fat and protein talk has rattled your brain a little bit, Jenny, and I kind of simplify why fat and protein are important in Episode 263. And I want to say that what Kenny was just talking about putting in, you know, to kind of be bold and crush some sort of a number, if you have to, you can't just put in, you know, you can't look at a 160 blood sugar and know that a unit would make it 90 and put in just the unit because then loop believes that it has too much insulin that takes away your basil. So you're basically they're just trading the basil for the Bolus, and you're not affecting the number. I used to just open the loop up. So basically put the, you know, make it impossible for the loop to turn off the basil. And then correct until the last time you and I spoke and you were like, Listen, you can just you can just over Bolus, this whole thing. And that way even when it takes the basil away. You've still replaced it. You still win. Yeah. And that works terrifically.

Kenny Fox 1:12:22
It's nice because you don't have to remember to close the loop again. That's that's the biggest hassles, you can't just remotely open and close it. So yeah, that's, that's a big deal. And the other, you know, humping that I hope people try to pick up as they go into loop and you can balance how much time you end up spending on it. But when you're high, just like when you are using an MDI or pump or whatever, it doesn't really matter. If you can try and figure out why. Again, once you get that stability, and you figure out your basil is it's most of the time is the food to blame, right? It's you didn't you underestimated the carbs or the fat and the protein. And so you just need more insulin. And if that's the case, you can go back into loop and either add carbs like you did yesterday. Or you can edit the current carb entry and just add some more carbs to that. Or maybe you need to make it longer. Maybe it was a three hour entry. It used to be a four because of the fat and protein. You can do those kinds of things and and fix the situation if you can figure out what's wrong. If you can't figure out what's wrong. That's where you need to kind of guess as to how much more maybe to give as a correction Bolus, just the way I do it. And let Luke kind of just take the basil away. And then we'll kind of find a happy medium at some point. Like sometimes it's more than a couple hours of basil Holmes, this four or five hours of basil. Because I know when other meals coming same thing I would do on MDI, like if she was 160, and didn't seem like she was coming down, but we know we're going to eat an hour or two, then I'll just give most of what I think she'll need for dinner, for example, now in the afternoon. And then whatever incident on board is present. When you start the meal, you can say okay, well, that's not her carb ratio, she needs a little bit more because you've used up some of that insulin on board, but you can check the insulin on board right before a meal. But with lube, it's doing that for you you've Bolus manually, it turned off the basil. And then when you go to enter carbs for dinner, it's like oh, you need more. So I took away too much. But it didn't know about the carbs. So people freak out when they manually Bolus or if they were to manually Bolus a high and I just call it an early Pre-Bolus for whatever's next. It freaks out because the prediction shows such a low number maybe like a negative 150 or something. But that's not that scary because you know, you're going to be inserting carbs in an hour when you're going to eat well, that number will come right back.

Scott Benner 1:14:39
That's funny you bring that up because what I was gonna say is I think I did my first episode about looping back in April of 2019. You and I are talking in December of 2020. And for the first at least six months, I felt like I was fighting with it the entire time. And right now I can tell you that I feel like I use lube as well as I use the other You know, the bolt with insulin system if we're gonna call it something that I talked about on the podcast, I can do either of those things equally well at this point. And to prove it. I will tell you about Thanksgiving morning, which will roll into what you just said. So on Thanksgiving morning, my family has a my wife's family had this tradition of eating these cinnamon rolls in the morning. And I'm not talking about their mom was not some master Baker. They were buying like, you know, those really crappy cinnamon rolls that come in like the cardboard tube and you just dump icing on top of them. So my wife buys them because I think it makes her feel like she's eight years old. And should we have them on some holidays? I figured out how to Bolus from there. No problem. So Arden's upstairs getting dressed the cinnamon rolls in the oven, and I give her a text. I'm like, Hey, we're gonna Bolus for the cinnamon rolls now. And I gave her a number. Well, she responds back, I can't. I'm like, I don't know what that means. Like what is I can't mean you know, and and so I'm like, just Bolus this. And what I thought when she said I can't, I thought maybe it didn't want to give her the insulin like I don't know, I was cooking. You know what I mean, for for Thanksgiving candies, I wasn't really paying much attention to anything. So I was just like, just manually put it in, like tell it to manually Bolus seven carbs. And a little more time passes. You know, and while we're having this exchange in, you know, on text messages, time is passing. And as time is passing, the muffins or the cinnamon rolls are baking. And then she finally says, No, I don't have enough insulin, this pump is empty. I can't and I was like, Oh, geez, I was like, Alright, well, Bolus is much of it is this left in the pump, and then get down here and we'll switch. And I thought I did a good job at the pod that came with a pod change. But I'm telling you, she's eating this cinnamon roll that was just him. I said, 60 carbs in it, you know what I mean. And for the first hour, I was I had it, her blood sugar wasn't moving, everything was great, then all of a sudden, it jumped and we had the highest blood sugar we've had in forever, it must have been close to like 280 with dinner coming in a couple of hours. And I just I turned that 280 back into a 94. And I didn't even think twice about it. I was just like, here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna go back to manual open the loop up Bolus this much. I'm basically going to put you into a nosedive, and we're gonna pull it up with dinner. And it's exactly what we did. It worked phenomenally. And that on Thanksgiving was the time I thought I really do understand all this now, because I close that loop back up went right back into loop and her blood sugar never went up from there.

Kenny Fox 1:17:39
Yeah, I mean, it's it's a, I was trying to actually explain that same concept to my test endo. Just last week is this Yeah, I mean, if you're hi Bolus for the next thing coming and create that nosedive and put the food in at the right time. And you're okay. And then it works. Not looping. And looping and looping, you may have to give a little bit more or you went to a little bit more patient, because if you do it manually, if you didn't open the loop, then then loops gonna pull the basil back, right, which is fine, it might just tag us to take a little bit longer to create that nosedive, or you may just need to give a little bit more. But in either case, the beauty of it that is easier for people to access, being that bold, is that loops done the math for the most part. So when you go into enter the carbs, it'll tell you how much more or less you might need. So I recommend zero, or whatever it is, that might be okay, but you'll you don't have to worry about, well, how much is left? And how much do they really need? And how many carbs did I give earlier? You don't have to track all that math, the math is in the system. So but you can but you have to create the nosedive loops, not going to do it right.

Scott Benner 1:18:47
So I've learned that a dive and did exactly what you said, close the loop up before the meal, and then put in the carbs. I was still I was still Pre-Bolus thing in my mind. You know, I put in the amount of carbs that I thought she was going to eat about 15 minutes before even though she was dropping, and then loop she was just like, well, I'm only I only want like a unit right now. And I was like go tell it the bullet. So she's like 130 and she's falling. And it wanted a unit. It's like it must feel pretty comfortable that she's gonna stop. So I'm like, Okay, put in the unit. close that up. And then as she was eating and she leveled out, I said, Hey, check for suggested insulin. And there was a bunch of suggested insulin. I said, Go ahead, put that in now. And then that was it. So it was a kind of a hybrid, I use the loop and I used what I knew from before it.

Kenny Fox 1:19:35
You have to be willing to accept the fact that you can no more than loop sometimes. And sometimes you'll find out that you know what you entered plays out and what was in the prediction was actually more accurate than you care to admit that they were going to in fact come down in another 20 or 30 minutes on their own. You didn't need to give them an extra unit manually, but but you sometimes need to know better than Luke because for example with food, when your settings and everything else, if you don't put enough in, you're gonna be high. If you know the food is spike here, it's gonna hit sooner lube only has one model for carbs, it just assumes all carb entries are going to impact your blood sugar in the same way in the same timing. So you have to know if it's a, if you need more upfront, like super bolusing, or you expect to spike and you need to give insulin anyways, even though it doesn't suggest any more, you need to give less, because it's a slower meal, you may have to still know just just enough to be a little bit smarter than loop. And then you can work together when you know where it shortcomings are.

Scott Benner 1:20:38
Can I ask you one last question that before I let you go? How much of all this that, you know, and now I know and other people know about using loop, which, you know, is, is quite a steep learning curve, how much of it's going to apply to control like you or on the pot horizon or some of the other, or I'm sure Medtronic will have one at some point that people will like, and and you know, how much of this knowledge will translate out to those retail systems.

Kenny Fox 1:21:10
Yeah, so we have a on the loop and learn YouTube, we had a recorded meeting with someone I forget their name, but they're really deep into this closed loop predictive stuff. And he walks through the different kind of methods for building these closed loop systems, the approaches. And loop is more of a with a called predictive model, where it's basically you tell it everything, and it's trying to predict out what's going to happen over the next six hours. And some of these other systems have, they like to take a hybrid approach where they're a little bit predictive based on what you've told it. And then in other areas, it tries to do its own calculation, like risk analysis, if it can give you more or less. And so control IQ and horizon both and we just had an interview with someone at Omni pod that talked about that one that's kind of VP over horizon has done all the clinical trials. And she talked about how it works a little bit. And so the system to try to do their own learning. I'm not a big fan of because I don't feel like they're not going to show you behind the curtain and you're not really going to understand what's happening. But they're, they're mostly controlling Q and horizon both seem to heavily rely on the total daily dose that it either sees, or that you give it to start with more than your settings, control. IQ uses your settings as a starting point. I think horizon does as well. And I don't know for sure, but I think control IQ leverages those settings, pretty like it uses it a fair amount. But at some point, after a few days in or weeks in the system, we'll use more of what it's seen, and your total daily dose that you're getting, as its guide for how much you can give the correct and suspend and all of that. And you pretty much are setting your car ratio. So that's important to set your carb ratio. But it's not necessarily totally relying on your sensitivity and basil as much as you'd like. But those basil settings and all that stuff will kick in, in a open loop situation where the Dexcom is not giving you readings are something where it can't do its thing that's its fallback. So it's still important to make sure that those settings are tested every once in a while. But not as much as I would like I guess is my answer, but they still use it. And so that's my concern about the upcoming commercial systems is there, they're going to be better for most people, because most people are not listening to this podcast or looping Yeah, and understanding insulin and how to use it. And so they're begging these systems to basically handle bad settings from doctors and people and just trying to take it over, as best they can and learn you. But the downside of that is that you can't be as precise and if you end up being sick or you have hormone swings, or other situations where your needs overall you're gonna be using more or less in a significant way. Those systems will take days to catch up with you. And so you'll probably be like she mentioned the lady mentioned with the horizon interview, is you just have to make your carb ratio lower and Bolus a little bit more change your correction factor and and just manually Bolus until it figures you out. So it'll use some of our settings and I think the principles and understanding that we know about insulin will still be useful but if they're trying to make something that you can mostly just enter carbs and walk away from it and achieve a moderate a one C and timing range and not go low.

Scott Benner 1:24:50
I do think it's gonna be amazing for most people, honestly.

Kenny Fox 1:24:52
Oh, yeah, I mean, you're gonna get people that you know, a win seasons 789 and more or there's highly variable and it's going to stable them quite a bit. And you can see the data from the horizon clinical trials that she was able to share. There'll be more as they publish. And same with control IQ that they achieve pretty good results. I mean, it's, we would love it if you could lower the targets and take a little more risk of potential hypose. I think some of us would prefer that, but they're doing really good work at all the closed loop system so far that I've seen other than, you know, the older Medtronic con is doing really well in that regard.

Scott Benner 1:25:29
Yeah, I mean, you're trying to, but you have to think of the bigger picture you're trying to reach the masses of people with with type one, and give them all successes that will lead to long life like it really is what you're shooting for, right is to make their day to days easier and make their life longer and healthier. And they're definitely I listen, I sent an email. I'm, I don't know how you got Dr. Lai. I've been trying to get trying to lie on the show for a while I don't get anybody response, your Facebook,

Kenny Fox 1:25:57
talk to Joanne

Scott Benner 1:25:59
Facebook pages swinging a pretty big, you know what I mean? Over there. And so I don't know, I might ask the wrong person. But anyway, that's, that's pretty much how I've thought about it too. And, and I definitely want to listen, horizons got the algorithm built in to the circuit board, which means you don't have to have any connectivity to your phone for the algorithm to run. moment, the most Bolus and a set

Kenny Fox 1:26:29
change settings,

Scott Benner 1:26:31
and styrofoam that is absolutely huge. So I would like that I'm going to be

Kenny Fox 1:26:36
if I could push the lube algorithm onto the pot, and then I I'd be much happier.

Scott Benner 1:26:40
Like you could sneak sneak into on the pot up there in Boston and make yourself a couple you should see, Kenny, I've seen their production facility. It's automated. And it's stunning. It looks like it's out of the future. It's absolutely amazing. Trust me, if you snuck in there, you just get wide eyed and go, Holy God, this is crazy. And you definitely would not figure out how to do what you wanted to do. But it's really cool. I hope to see it again. One day really. I actually tried to interview the guy who set the whole floor up. Because he I think he might be brilliant. He's just a manufacturing guy. I think they got him from Pepsi. I think he used to set up the manufacturing floors for Pepsi Cola. And

Kenny Fox 1:27:23
that's intense. Yeah, I

Scott Benner 1:27:24
think that's who I gotta try harder for him. Actually, I'm gonna get him in 2021. He's an interesting person. I met him once. Anyway, all right, well, let me let you get back to your life and tell you thank you very much for doing this. I hope you have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. This is gonna come out in December very soon. And I just really appreciate you giving so much time and and sharing so much of what you've learned about loop. It's really been valuable for me and for a lot of people who are listening.

Kenny Fox 1:27:50
Thanks. And for those juice boxes out there, you know, feel free to practice with that super Bolus as you come up on holiday meals. Depending on how the holidays look for you. Yeah,

Unknown Speaker 1:27:59
get a little bold with loop, right?

Unknown Speaker 1:28:01
Yeah. All right.

Scott Benner 1:28:02
Did you just name the episode a little while ago, Kenny. You might not you knocked your name right off the episode. Good job. This was gonna be something you know, cutesy about Fox. And instead, I'm calling it bold with loop.

Kenny Fox 1:28:20
I guess you could do Fox and loop house three bolt with loop. But it's a long title.

Scott Benner 1:28:24
It's not a Schwarzenegger film.

Kenny Fox 1:28:27
But you gotta be able to find all of them. Right. So

Scott Benner 1:28:29
yeah, I see. I got to keep it together. You're right. All right, Kenny.

Kenny Fox 1:28:33
Bolus loop. That's kind of what I've been. I've make a little like, out of my mind. My little catchphrase that I've been trying to share with people sometimes it listened to the podcast and lupino

Scott Benner 1:28:42
Yeah, no, I listen, I I tell people all the time. That's absolutely true. I have a mantra, it's, it's I'd rather stop a lower falling blood sugar than fight with a high one. That Yeah, everyday with diabetes, thinking about that.

Kenny Fox 1:28:54
And it's about finding a way to become a team with loop rather than feel like you're fighting it. You know,

Scott Benner 1:28:59
I'm there. I have to be honest, I want to thank Gina who forced me to do this a year and a half or more ago, and you who've come on and talk about and all the other loop users who came on helped me work through it and Katie for coming on and explaining what loop was, I just, it's been a process and I think we've been able to pull a lot of other people along with us. So and I hope for everyone else, they're hearing the value of, of algorithm based pumping. I think it's a, it's gonna change everybody's life and 2020 one's gonna, I think it's gonna really explode for people with type one. It's exciting.

I'd like to sincerely thank Kenny and all the people who've been on the show over the last year and a half for helping me understand the loop DUI algorithm better. And they do really hope that all of you listening understand that as these algorithms become more and more available in retail pumps. It's gonna be lifetime Thanks also to the Contour Next One blood glucose meter. You can check them out at Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox. And of course, the T one D exchange can be found at T one d exchange.org. forward slash juice box. I'd also like to say a huge thank you to one of today's sponsors, g Vogue glucagon, find out more about chivo Kibo pen at G Vogue glucagon.com forward slash juice box, you spell that GVOKEGL Uc ag o n.com forward slash juicebox. At this point, there are a lot of series within the podcast I mentioned at the beginning. And I'd like to mention again, the algorithm pumping series, which goes Episode 227-252-3043 12 313 326 and of course this episode 420 but I'd also like to tell you about the after dark series 274 about drinking with type one 283 about weed smoking 305 about trauma and addiction 319 about having sex with Type One Diabetes from the female perspective. Episode 336 is about depression and self harm. Episode 365 is sex again, but this time from the male perspective. Episode 372 talks about co parenting and divorce Episode 384 bipolar disorder Episode 393, bulimia and depression and Episode 399. A tea one who was addicted to heroin, I really think the series within the podcast are incredibly valuable. Don't forget to also look for the pro tip episodes that begin at Episode 210. And of course, sprinkled throughout defining diabetes short episodes to take everyday diabetes terms and put them into an easy to understand definitions. And they're not just definitions, but Jenny Smith and I talk them through. And if you don't know, Jenny, you really have to find those defining diabetes, pro tip episodes. And even the Ask Scott and Jenny. Thanks so much for listening. As the sixth season of the Juicebox Podcast winds to a close I find myself really looking back and reflecting. And I'm just very grateful for everyone listening for all the hard work you do sharing the show and for this connection that we've built. I'll be back soon with another episode.


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#326 Medtronic 670G Insulin Pump

Scott Benner

Jenny Smith RD, LD, CDE & T1D talks about her time using the Medtronic 670G

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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode 326 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's show is sponsored by the Omni pod tubeless insulin pump, and the Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor, you can check out dexcom@dexcom.com forward slash juice box and find out everything you want to know about the Omni pod, including how to get a free no obligation demo of the pump sent directly to your home at my Omni pod.com forward slash juice box.

You know the podcast is about a lot of different things surrounding type one diabetes. And very often we talk about management. When we do we kind of speak about it on a macro and a micro level right? You know, the idea of using a Temp Basal increase or decrease for instance, that works with every insulin pump. But when you hear me speak specifically about a pump, most of the time, you'll hear me talk about Omni pod, because that's what my daughter has been using for 14 years. Same with CGM, my daughter's had an Dexcom. Since I don't even remember what the first one was called, but a really long time. So when I talk about CGM, you might hear me talk about it macro how to use the data to make good decisions or micro how Dexcom works. But we've never been able to talk about the Medtronic 670 g in a micro way, because I've never used it. So what I did was, I brought Jenny Smith on, because Jenny's worn the 670 G and she trains people on how to use it. So this is Jenny's experience. Please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan are becoming bold with insulin. Of course, you know Jenny Smith from the diabetes pro tip episodes here on the Juicebox Podcast or defining diabetes episodes. We do ask Scott and Jenny together as a matter of fact, this Thursday, there'll be a live ask Scott and Jenny on my Facebook page, that's going to be Thursday the 23rd. He says because he's not 100% sure what today's date is, I'll look for you hold on Thursday, the 23rd at 3pm. Eastern Time on the bold with insulin Facebook page, Jenny and I will be doing a live hour of ask Scott and Jenny. Jenny is a certified diabetes educator. She's had Type One Diabetes for well over 30 years, she works at integrated diabetes. And Jenny is adept at walking people through using different pumps and cgms. And enough of you have asked about 670 G. And I thought well, let me get Jenny on. And we'll find out what her experience was, while she was wearing it. I would like to talk about and do an overview of how it works and how to use it. And what's good about it. What's bad about it about the Medtronic 670 g Ah, so this is not meant to, but start off like this. I think we all know that Jenny doesn't love the 670 G. Like she doesn't hate it. But when you talk about it, there's not loving your voice is what I'm saying. And and but there are plenty of people using it. And they should know how to use it as best as possible. And that's sort of what my goal is for this. I started off by familiarizing myself with the system a little bit online. And I was surprised to see immediately it's going to sound like I'm I'm not a fan. But I don't mean this in any judgmental way other than, you know, ardent users. And on the pod, I open up a little plastic thing. There's a pod inside of it. And that's the entirety of what we use, right. So I'm looking at this and there's a pump itself. There's a reservoir, glucose monitor and infusion set inserting device, there's an infusion set, and I was like, wow, that seems like a lot of stuff. But I get it like you know, it's it's a different situation, a different setup and everything. So anyway, so those are the pieces. There's the pump, the reservoir, the CGM, which is a proprietary Medtronic CGM. Correct?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 4:24
Yep. Got Now today's it's called the guardian. It used to be if you're still using it, you could potentially maybe still have the enlight and the old old one, I think it was called the soft sensor. Okay. So they've had quite a number of up updates. Um, yes. So current is guardian. That is,

Scott Benner 4:46
that is the exact lack of love I was talking about. So then there's the infusion set for people who aren't pumping or using an omni pod is a it's an adhesive thing with a plastic thing on top that Yep, you know, it's like a port. I guess the goes to a piece of tubing, the tubing goes to the insulin pump and you can disconnect that. That set right like to take it you have

Jennifer Smith, CDE 5:07
to take a shower to get in the pool to do all of those things. There's also a little piece that whether most people use it or not, there is a little extra piece that you pop into the infusion site, once you disconnect from the tubing that's supposed to and you you pop it, it's almost like a cap. Yeah, it's you're supposed to technically put it in, in order to prevent extra things from you know, getting in there.

Scott Benner 5:33
So when I disconnect that cap, I'm supposed to cap this like,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 5:36
okay, yes, you're supposed to cap it. Yes.

Scott Benner 5:39
So those are the pieces. And then there's the I'm sorry, the insertion. So it's sort of it to me, it looks like it's maybe palm size, sort of like a cup, I guess you set it on your skin and press on it or squeeze a button or something. Yeah,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 5:51
that would be for one of their one of their infusion sets. In all the pump. companies that have tube pumps have different types of sets dependent on you know, your body type. And what works well for you the one that you're talking about, it usually works with their, it's called the Quick Set, you kind of it comes with this little like, almost looks like a little pod, sort of like a like an alien UFO, almost as what I call, okay, and you open it up and you pull, there's like a little like a lever inside that you sort of pull back and you caulk it essentially. And then when you squeeze the buttons on the side, it pops the infusion set or the in the Yeah, the infusion set underneath your skin. There are other ones like the silhouette, which is more, it's an angle that's not 90 degrees, like the Quick Set. The Neo is another one, that's a 90 degree that they have. And the silhouette is an angled one that does come with an inserter I would say a good a good 75% of people, though, who are using the silhouette are self inserting, they're just pushing that infusion set underneath their skin. They're not actually using the insertion device. I myself when I when I was using Medtronic, I had tried using the silhouette and I wasn't using the inserter I was just doing it myself.

Scott Benner 7:14
So you just Fried my brain a little bit as a person who's never used the tube pump. So you're telling me at some point, there was an infusion set, and it still exists now that I press into my body, like metal with the covering canula on it. Yeah. And that's how it's meant to be used.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 7:33
It is so in two ways that that set in and of itself is it comes with an inserter the inserter. In fact, I think as a visual for people who can't see us talking, the insertion device looks much like the old g five inserter for the sensor. That's what it looks like. It's like it's almost like a thick pen. The infusion set goes into the end of it right. And then the button on the end, you press and it pushes the infusion set under your skin. The big thing with it is that you really it's meant to go in at a certain angle under the skin. And you know, with that device, it's like a very fine rocking of your own hand to keep it at a 45 degree angle. Okay, so you could technically insert it too shallow. Or you could insert it too deep. Not the way that the infusion set is technically supposed to be inserted. I myself found that the inserter did not work well for me. Okay, so I, even my husband, he was like, What are you doing? Now? I'm like, I'm putting my infusion set in. He's like, that's a really big needle. Thank you very much. I'm quite aware of that. So yes, it's a selfie. And it does. I mean, for people who are using it, they get used to it. I can say it's not my favorite thing to do. And of all the set. My favorite set of all, even compared to Omni pod, which you don't get a choice in a sec, right is just what it is. It's built in. I've never had any problems with Omni pod set, thankfully. But my favorite for any tube pump is the one that's called it's a steel canula so it's almost like a thumbtack that sits under the

Scott Benner 9:25
skin. Okay. And you Why do you like it? I like

Jennifer Smith, CDE 9:28
it because it goes in at a 90 degree angle. I had so many problems with kinked bent, problematic tubes that were the typical like Teflon type of canula under the skin. I never I've never in my almost 15 years of using Omni pod now, I have had maybe two kinked sites, maybe two with the two pumps, however, I have had my supply of way more than I've ever wanted. So the nice thing about the steel canula for Medtronic, it's called the shorty for if you're a tandem user, it would be called the true steel. So they both make a completely steel canula pops under the skin like a thumbtack popping into a cork board. There is no hassle to using it, it stays in place. No kinking at all. There's a lot less site irritation for many people with it. There are a lot less site infections with using it. Um, so yeah,

Scott Benner 10:40
I can say that. I know Arden has had one. One Candela problem in the entire time she's used on the pot and I was doing the math on it the other day. She started when she was four, she's gonna be 16 so Wow, it's been wearing

Jennifer Smith, CDE 10:54
almost as long as me

Scott Benner 10:56
Yeah. Arden's been wearing an army pod for 12 years every day. You know? And so we and we've had one and when I look back on it, it happened like it was a pump we put on like at a pool side. And I remember it all being a little like, like I want to get back in the pool. Like you know, like it wasn't

Jennifer Smith, CDE 11:14
like Quick, quick, quick, quick.

Scott Benner 11:16
wasn't, it wasn't it wasn't being done maybe exactly right. But you know, it was obvious the CGM made it obvious that it wasn't working. So right. Actually, it was funny. The CGM made it obvious it wasn't working after we got our away from the pool. It actually turned out that, you know, I think her exercise had kept her blood sugar down for the for the couple of hours away from the pool, then all of a sudden, you could tell, hey, this thing's not working. Right. So anyway, okay. Now, that seems like a lot to me. I'm not here. I'm not here to critique the, I really want everyone to understand it. It's tough, because there's the side of me that feels like um, I don't know, I A lot of what you just said, I think, Wow, a lot of that doesn't seem necessary, but okay,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 12:02
you know, well, and I can say to from, from just giving credit as well, of all the pumps on the system on the, you know, on the market today of which there are only three brands that are out there right now FDA approved, with Abi mipad is the easiest by far. So if you're going to rate them in ease of like, filling using even a canula and a reservoir, Omni pod is the easiest. Medtronic honestly is the second easiest, okay? As cumbersome as it looked to you having never really done it yourself or needing to, it's actually the second second easiest tandems is it's a weird system. I mean, and I say that from the standpoint, it just has a lot more steps in the filling of the reservoir, the filling of the tubing, and every it just takes longer. Yeah. So, um, there's some credit to Medtronic there.

Scott Benner 12:57
Hey, Medtronic, you're not as bad as the tandem when it comes to use. Congratulations. Put that on a box,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 13:03
reservoir and filling.

Scott Benner 13:06
Excuse me, specifically reservoir and filling use that. Wouldn't that be a tagline? Medtronic, we're not as bad as control IQ for filling the reservoir. This is getting out of hand already. I'm sorry, Medtronic. users don't leave. We're gonna get to the good stuff.

Unknown Speaker 13:20
Yeah, yeah.

Scott Benner 13:21
I do. I would, I would be remiss to say that, to not say that I could change it on the pod in about 45 seconds. Like it really doesn't take any time at all. I am. Jenny has a pump changing story that she won't let she won't tell on the podcast. But apparently, you can do it almost anywhere. She's like, I shouldn't tell people that I've done that. I'm like, Okay, well, sorry. You keep that private then. Anyway, Alright, so what the goal of this system and this was, and I I do say this all the time. This was the first like, closed loop system out the door, right? Like, this is the first one that got, you know, FDA approved. Yep. And, and on the market. So points for being first because, you know, just like in the military, or firefighting or anywhere else, stuff first guy through the door doesn't usually end up so good. So. So the point here is, is that, you know, this was early on, how long has this thing been available now?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 14:25
Oh, gosh, um, I even I'd have to check online exactly when

Scott Benner 14:30
it's gonna be a number of years now. Right?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 14:33
Correct. It has been a number of years, I would have to look exactly, but I feel like, gosh, it's got to be at least three. At least two, if not three years, because I'm trying to remember when I did my 670 training, and I feel like it was very soon after my three year old was born. Okay. So that would be about at least three years, I would say,

Scott Benner 15:03
Okay, let's call it. So first things. First. It's a it's a system that's making decisions about insulin on and off, right? does it increase? bazel? It does, it does. Okay. So

Jennifer Smith, CDE 15:15
from Yeah, from that like, kind of like hybrid closed loop system? Yes, it does that, as your glucose changes, it will temporarily increase or do these incremental adjustments up in insulin delivery, as your blood sugar changes and drops, it also does an incremental adjustment down. It also will temporarily suspend based on, you know, where glucose is going to get to it will do a suspend for you. It does not, it does not do, like an automatic Bolus, Bolus Bolus kind of thing. Um, it's it's bolusing. structure is truly around food.

Scott Benner 16:03
Okay. And that's still on you to tell it how much you're eating and all that stuff.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 16:10
It is in fact, that's the only, that's the only setting in the two modes of use of the 670. Pump, which you can use in manual mode, which is just like your normal conventional pump, use all the features all the settings everything you have set work as they normally would, you're the controller in auto mode, when you slip that on, then the only setting that is used for true calculation or exact calculation from a math standpoint, that the user can figure out his carbs, their carb, the insulin ratio stays true to what is set in the pump. So if you have set a one to 14 ratio, the pump is going to use that along with the glucose value to suggest a bolus for that food.

Scott Benner 17:04
Okay, can you adjust the bolus? Can you say, Oh, I would like this to be No you can't. Okay. So in a situation where, you know, you know, like, say the glycemic load of food is going to hit you heavier than the carb count. What do you do then?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 17:21
So that's the there are no longer temporary Basil's there is no longer in extended bolus. And on Medtronic pump, their extended bolus is referred to as either a square wave or a dual wave, right. None of those features are now available once you are in auto mode. So you're right. The hard thing is that for a meal, such as and we've talked about it so many times, but like pizza, right, right. I mean, a lot of people are not going to get the hefty management in the afternoon. And in the aftermath, for fat that they've been used to getting, when they're using maybe an extended bolus for fat or a temporary bazel to offset the later impact of fat, that feature isn't there. As an option with the auto mode, now, as glucose does start to change, you will get those microscopic adjustments in insulin dosing off to accommodate for the change that is happening. But it's not going to be like your very robust, temporary bazel of 60 plus percent above your normal in order to

Scott Benner 18:38
take care of experimental and smaller,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 18:40
correct and correction boluses it's another place to kind of bring in correction boluses are there they're very difficult to navigate within auto mode, okay? Because the system is it's more conservative, right? its target that it's aiming for is 120. And it doesn't really start to adjust or aggressively navigate blood sugars until you're higher,

Scott Benner 19:07
what is higher mean?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 19:09
Right, like the 161 80 range

Scott Benner 19:12
that it starts to crank on the bass or

Jennifer Smith, CDE 19:14
and then it starts to crank based on the trend and you know, it is referring to the trend and glucose that's happening, right. But overall, you're not getting an aggressive enough nature to assist so you know, many people are many people are learning when to potentially shift out of auto mode when to potentially shift back into manual mode or a you know, back into auto mode. So there are some tricks and or tips to using the system to your advantage

Scott Benner 19:51
right I think we'll be talking about that. So I just I I'm trying to understand just one more thing. So yeah, take some when I put a bunch of insulin in For something, right? I don't know how it's going to know. Is there a way to tell it? Hey, this is pizza, it's not really going to hit me for an hour. You can't You can't tell it timelines of food or absorption rates or anything like that. Okay, so this thing throws in, I say I'm gonna eat two slices of pizza. I tell it, it's 60 carbs. It throws all the insulin in, does it then work with the bolus? Meaning does it take the bazel away to let the bolus work? Or is this the basal still stay? in play?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 20:34
kind of depends on what the shift in glucose? Is situation? What's happening? Yeah,

Scott Benner 20:40
so we could so it could take away the bazel. If it thinks you're gonna get low, and then let the bolus try to work. But then that doesn't feel

Jennifer Smith, CDE 20:49
right. Yeah. And yeah, and it does it along with, as I said before, the only true setting that's sort of carried over from your normal setting mode is the insulin to carb ratio, and then it also utilizes the active insulin time that you have set as well. Okay, so that's a piece of, you know, how long should this insulin really be working? If you've got it set for two hours? Well, then the pump is going to think that two hours from now you're clear of any active bolus insulin. So it may allow you to take some correction within the automatic mode. But yeah, it doesn't use your current basal rates, it doesn't use your current sensitivity or correction factor. Again, it targets a blood sugar of 120.

Scott Benner 21:37
So you just said if the action time is short enough, then you know, say two hours than two hours later, you'd be eligible to make a correction bolus,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 21:46
then potentially depending and it'll only suggest correction boluses if your blood sugar is above 150.

Scott Benner 21:53
Okay, so I can't decide. I'm 130. I want this to stop, I'm gonna give myself some it's, I have to be over 150 40 even allow that. Yes, but I could go out of auto mode, and then do whatever I want, then it's just it's all

Jennifer Smith, CDE 22:10
good, then it's just an insulin pump like you're normally using. Yes.

Scott Benner 22:14
But I just thought the problem with that is that it's been making decisions about insulin based on what it thinks is going to happen. And then I come in and make different changes. How do I get back into auto mode without a problem? I don't know about you. But here we are five weeks into our social isolation. I don't think I've been out of my house more than a few times, except the wander around in my yard. And it's starting to get a little weird. It's starting to be difficult to care about things. I don't know how I mean that exactly. Let me let me think it through for a second. I didn't comb my hair yesterday. And I didn't care. And I went outside and my neighbor saw me and my hair was sticking in 16 different directions. I just thought, whatever. I'm worried though, that that attitude is gonna bleed into other parts of my life. And I'm worried that it might for you as well. For instance, were you just about to find out more about ways that make yourself healthier right before all this happened. And now you just feel like you're on pause, just waiting for the world to pick back up again. Well, I know that's true for some things, but it's not for everything. For example, right now, with very little effort, you could get on the pod to send you a no obligation free demo of the on the pod right to your house. It's amazing Miami pod.com forward slash juice box. You go there you fill out your information, and a box will arrive at your home with your Omni pod. Now you'll probably like you know, it'll be on the front step and you'll be shooting it with Lysol and stuff like that. But after you do that, inside, you're going to find an omni pod. And it's all for you to wear to try to test to shower when you can find out how the Omni pod looks on you while you don't comb your hair. For a while you're sitting in a chair, staring off into space. Once you understand how that's gonna work, you'll be ready to wear your Omni pod as you launch yourself back into the world with your new insulin pump, ready to make these kinds of adjustments that you hear us talking about all the time on the podcast. Temp Basal increases, decreases. Extended boluses not having to disconnect your pump for a shower, being able to set up bazel programs which sounds really difficult but isn't but just think of it this way. If you're on MDI and you get low overnight, but not during the day and you think I don't know if I take away my insulin, my basal insulin, so I don't get low overnight. I'll get high during the day but on the on the pod you don't have to worry about that. You could set up one bazel program for the daytime and One for the night time. on time, you need more insulin. And one time you need less. You can keep that pump on while you're showering, swimming, walking around in your backyard, trying to remember what it was like to go to the movies. And then, you know, once everything's back to normal, all the other things that your life is Miami pod.com, forward slash juicebox, get a demo pod sent to you today, you're not doing anything else anyway, please don't put your health on pause. Now, when you get done with that, here's the next step dexcom.com. forward slash juice box. Find out today, why I love the dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor. So very, very much. The information that comes back from the dexcom is not just to keep you safe, it's to keep you healthy, it's to keep you ahead of the curve, that is your blood sugar, you can stop the blood sugar curve a lot easier than you can flatten other curves. By just Pre-Bolus Singh a little bit more understanding where you need more or less insulin, or how some meals impact you differently than others. You can get all of that, and so much more@dexcom.com forward slash juice box. Examples are from my daughter's life with Type One Diabetes, your results may vary links available at Juicebox podcast.com. And right there in the player of your podcast that their show notes look around, you can just touch on it, boom, you'll be right there. At the link you want. It's magical. How do I get back into auto mode without a problem?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 26:35
Yeah, it's a and that is the that is the difference. Sometimes it is just a button push right, it's a turn the auto mode back on. So it seems as though it would be an easy like fix. But when you go back into auto mode, it's then looking at the sensor data for like an accuracy. And then it's evaluating. And it may require some additional information it may ask you to calibrate, it may ask you to add a glucose, which isn't really a calibration, all it's doing is requiring a glucose value to be added. Which kind of goes into a lot of the alarms and things that people get annoyed with within the system. Because it just needs to see that glucose value and reevaluate where things are at this point. So you may get going back into auto mode, some of those some of those alerts and alarms, before it starts doing things. And then they're also limit, you know, to how much in auto mode, the basal insulin will be allowed to increase. And it does, it's interesting, because it does vary sort of person to person. Um, it's about from what we can kind of tell it's about like, two to two and a half times your average izle rate, excuse me, is what it'll allow, as far as an increase in the bazel adjustment that it's giving. And again, remembering that any temporary bazel increase isn't really like a bolus to correct. So if you're seeing a trend that's going up, and you're waiting for the system to kind of kick in, that temporary adjustment is also going to take time to start affecting that blood sugar. So it's like, it doesn't really adjust quick enough. And it's only a portion of how much you would put in if you were making a bolus in that situation. Right. So not only is it a fraction of what you need, but it's going in is bazel. And probably taking up to an hour for to actually be an impact potentially impactful. Exactly. And you're

Scott Benner 29:00
130 is gonna make it 200 by the time it's there. And it's not going to be enough by the time it's there to begin with. Right. Okay.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 29:07
And then and then on the opposite end to you know, if you're looking at like lower blood sugars. And this is true, even in conventional pumps, if you're low, now you need to treat the low, right, you don't expect that a temporary bazel adjustment or even one that's being augmented by an automatic system like this. If you're low, you have to fix it, you can't expect that a temporary adjustment down is going to offset where you are now my blood sugar's 50, it's 50 a bazel off isn't going to turn a 50 into 100 and any kind of reasonable amount of time right now if I ever if I ever right.

Scott Benner 29:41
So when I correct that 50 do I tell it that I did that? Do I tell it carbs? Because I find that to be an interesting problem because they're such quick acting carbs. You know that, you know, within reason if you're if you're you know if you're if you're reasonably good at correcting You're gonna take in enough fast acting carbs to get your 50 back to 80 or 90 or 100. Hopefully, you don't want any insulin for that, because it's that little, that little bumps not going to send you to the moon. So you don't want all of a sudden, I've just taken in 10 carbs, because will it then when you get to 90 start bazeley at the carbs. You're I mean,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:23
it's basically not based on any of the carb information it's giving you in fact, if you entered carbs, if it didn't, if it didn't think that you needed a bolus based on where you are, it would offer a bolus, but it's only really, it's not intuitively looking at that carb stamp and saying now I need to change the dosing because there are carbs in the picture. It's only looking at the change in glucose. So if

Scott Benner 30:47
that if that fast acting carbs did cause a rise, then it would start affecting it but not based on the carbs, it would be based on the the sensor data

Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:56
based on the sensor data. And again, based on where does the glucose start to be adjusted by the auto mode system, it has to be a certain height in order for it, or a certain like trajectory towards a high number, that it would start to offset things.

Scott Benner 31:13
What is that number? Where does it start to? Correct? You know,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 31:17
I'm trying to remember whether it's, um, I haven't used the system like personally in a while. And I have to think and I'd have to look that up, actually, and see if I can find that because I can't remember the exact number that it starts to correct. Like, at or above. I do know that you know, if for corrections, as we were kind of just chatting about to some, some users might already be thinking, well, gosh, I just I just enter some extra carbs when I'm high even though I'm not going to eat them. And so it generates the Bolus for me.

Scott Benner 31:54
Okay, so they're

Jennifer Smith, CDE 31:55
doing and a lot of people are calling that like, like ghost carbs, carbs that you aren't eating, but you're just putting them in because, hey, I know if I enter 20 grams of carb, I can get that one unit Bolus that I really need because my blood sugar is higher than it want it to be. But the system isn't offering anything outside of this. So I'm going to enter it in the problem is that it can offset data analysis then. Right. So when a practitioner or a caregiver or somebody is looking at data using it can get very confusing with where to make adjustments. So you know, if you if you did use that strategy, the one thing that we would really recommend doing is making a note in whatever your logging system is. tide pools a nice place to make notes like that, because they pop up right on that daily trend, to be able to say, Hey, I see a 10 gram entry here with a bolus. Yeah, that was a ghost carbs. I've got some people just enter ghost carbs. As a take note, you know. But again, it's it's also kind of, in practice, it's kind of discouraged, even though people do do it very often, well,

Scott Benner 33:10
is it a problem in inside of the system? Because you've now told us that carbs exist that don't exist? So what happens an hour from now if you've right? If you do, yeah, or you vote, right. But you know, your your examples better if I do want to eat, it believes there's carbs in there, and now it's going to change the Bolus somehow, either more or less, or

Jennifer Smith, CDE 33:32
because it'll be insulin on board for a purpose. Right? Right. So it will have effect on you know, auto mode for hours after putting in that corrective ghost carb entry to generate it and it is accumulating, then, you know, if you do that at three o'clock in the morning, you're not going to eat until nine o'clock in the morning. That's not really going to have any major impact overall, other than just hopefully navigating you down safely. If you're trying to stop a rise an hour before

Scott Benner 33:59
dinner, then right? It's gonna get messy

Jennifer Smith, CDE 34:02
and everything gets messed up. Yes. Mm hmm. I mean, and this all kind of goes back to the beginning of what we always educate is get your settings right also, right, before you go into auto mode. Okay, make sure things are good. And it's really I think, in in the the hybrid closed system, that the 670 is, this is even more important. Mainly because before you switch on auto mode, and all the system is gathering like insulin dosing data in the days before you switch on auto mode. So it essentially we'll update its algorithm of insulin use at midnight every night based on your amount of insulin you've used over the years. about the past week, okay, so we've found that it's best. And I'm not quite I don't remember exactly what Medtronic says, I think that they're saying two or three days, we've found that it's most advantageous for people to be in manual mode of normal insulin dosing with well set settings for about a week, before turning auto mode on.

Scott Benner 35:25
You're not gonna buy this thing, slap it on and be like, fix me, right?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 35:28
No, no, it's not. And that's where it is very different comparative to tandems control IQ. Okay, control IQ, you put your settings in all of your settings, work in control IQ mode, you can slap it on out of the box, put in all your settings, turn control IQ, and you're off

Scott Benner 35:45
and running just starts working. Okay. Not so with 676 70 G's actually trying to learn is that it fair statement are now

Jennifer Smith, CDE 35:55
in a very, in a very beginning sort of rudimentary way.

Scott Benner 36:01
Yeah, so it's just collecting data, like you used 50 units on Tuesday, 45 on Wednesday, but all of a sudden to end it. Somehow that's helping it make decisions.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 36:11
Correct. Now, there are there are also some drawbacks to that. Right.

Scott Benner 36:16
I see them as you're talking, but go ahead.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 36:19
Yeah, and and you probably do, I mean, you're intuitive about all of this, because of the years of experience that you have in managing with Arden. But you can see where this leads to, especially from a female point. Right? If you are in that time, potentially, before your cycle start, where you have these high insulin needs. And everything needs to be ramped up. Then what happens when your cycle starts and all of your insulin needs plummet to sometimes for women 10% less than what their standard profile is running for a day or two of their of their first two days? And this thing's made a decision based on when you've been resistant for a whole week? Correct? Right? For people who've been using steroids because they're sick, or people who've had like, an unbelievable amount of stress for the past three days because their father passed away or whatever, well, that could be two things being in auto mode, more aggressive really

Scott Benner 37:19
is so the thing that that is pretty common. Within You know, how people talk about diabetes that I completely discount, I don't pay attention to it, and I don't believe in it. 100% or even maybe 10%. But the idea that, you know, three days makes a trend. I'm like, okay, it makes a trend, it doesn't mean it's gonna keep happening. For all the reasons you just said, like, okay, I finally figured out I need my base, it'll be point five an hour. And then I get that set up and something changes. There's too many variables to say that any one trend is an indicator of the month. Do you mean? Like it just that doesn't make any sense? Male or female? I don't like buying into that at all. What if I just, what if one week I decide, I don't know, man eat more vegetables than red meat? Or then you know what I mean? And then the next week, it's different? I don't know, right? Like, there's just too many, there's too many things, I work a little harder at work this week than I did last week, I get a little more sleep a little less sleep. If you're looking for that, if you're trying to find a repeatable pattern in that. I don't imagine that exists. And if it does, it's well beyond what an insulin pump or me can figure out, you know, so I'm just more well, even

Jennifer Smith, CDE 38:35
for the people who have done the testing. And let's say they'd have for the most part figured out like, I always need about this much more for this time period, or this much less or whatever. Well, for the again, of the woman who sort of figured out her monthly, like cycle changes and how much more she needs and what bazel profile to set on and whatever. Well, what if you start training for a marathon? Or you've decided to now you know, go swimming for an hour every morning? Yeah, that is going to create a difference in need into this next month. And so it probably will look like, well, gosh, everything's different again. Well, you brought a variable into the picture that wasn't there when you were doing the testing to begin with,

Scott Benner 39:17
right? You can't turn to your pump and say, Hey, pump, listen, just you and me this week, I got a report, do it work, a lot of pressure here, my bonuses riding on this, I'm probably gonna be a little jacked up just so you know, 20 more percent. You know, I think I'm gonna have some stress, high blood sugar, there's that doesn't exist. So you need to be able to be flexible. For those things. I don't know, it, just it. I've just never been a fan of the idea that, you know, three days is a rule. It's a rule for those three days. It's not, you know, and so and so, if that's the case, what people always end up doing is spending three days trying to figure out what's going there. Stare at high blood sugars or stare at low blood sugar trying to find out if it's gonna be Um, uh, you know, it's gonna become a thing that they can count on. I'm always just like, I think you should deal with diabetes in the moment. And then whatever happens is now gone. And I don't I mean, don't get me wrong if Arden's needed less insulin on Saturday, and it looks like that's how it's gonna be on Sunday. I remember that. That's part of being flexible, right? Yeah, but I don't but but if I wake up on Sunday, and all of a sudden she needs more insulin. I don't say to myself, well, that's not true. Because yesterday, she didn't need a lot. So we're just gonna watch your blood sugar be 300 all day today? Like, I don't, that's not it. Like, I think diabetes is a in the moment situation. But, but okay. So I've got my, let me ask you this. I say this all the time. And maybe maybe it's not true for this one. And maybe it is I'm going to get your opinion. I think that for most people living with Type One Diabetes, these systems, you know, the 670 g that's available now. And obviously, it's been out for a couple of years, the the tandem system and the, you know, the forthcoming horizon from ami pod, which we should be seeing pretty soon from hope. Well, as long as the code that Coronavirus doesn't keep their own things. So, so those things exist. And for most people living with Type One Diabetes sorted up to like 1.8 million people now and like that habit, for most people, slapping the systems on is probably a huge improvement for them, don't you think?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 41:26
Yes, in fact, we've had quite a number of, I wouldn't say quite a number. But a good enough number of people that we work with who the 670 has smooth things out considerably. It has, you know, they were they were up down roller coasting consistently day to day high to low, high to low, no assistive management to help with that variance in their blood sugar. And overall, while there's weather still probably averaging a blood sugar of 140 to 150, the system has smoothed out the variants, and it's kept them more stable. That's a beautiful thing. Yeah, and, and for most people that that's the case, they're happy with it, getting them to a target of 140, it targets 120. But for the most part, they talk to most people, they're really achieving an average somewhere between 130 to probably 160, give or take, um, but again, stability there. That's a huge piece, right? So

Scott Benner 42:29
if you've gained stability, and you're an average of 160, instead of 220. It's an incredible improvement for you in the moment and probably for your entire life as well.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 42:39
And a lot of people still even in auto mode, they're still reaping the benefit of these, these hybrid kinds of systems, especially in the overnight. Most people without food in the picture, a system like this is a huge advantage for the overnight,

Scott Benner 42:56
get some sleep and you don't get lowest. You're not you don't get those crazy highs overnight is right. What about, I feel like we were missed if we don't mention the Guardian sensor? So yeah, obviously, we're I, my daughter uses the Dexcom g six, they're sponsors of the show. You use the Dexcom? Yep. The the, you know, the scuttlebutt for me from what I see on the street from the kids, is that people don't think the guardians as accurate as the dexcom. Is that Is that a fair statement from what you've seen? Or how do you even I

Jennifer Smith, CDE 43:32
think that's a very fair statement. It is, I mean, even from my personal sensor use of two of their sensors I tried the enlight years ago, I all when I was training, you know, on their pump to begin with. And then when I trialed and the 670 with their guardian, I would say that it's definite, it was an improvement from what I had had with the enlight it was it was definite improvement, but it was still not for me, anywhere near the accuracy or the consistency in accuracy that I get with my dexcom. In fact, when I was using the 670, I wore my Dexcom at the same time, okay, to compare, I mean, when you're wearing like, several things, and who cares about another site, right, like, I'm just gonna be the ultimate like robot person. Right. Right. Right, exactly. So, you know, and I, I mean, I follow there are certain you know, things to definitely make sure that you're getting the sensor to work as well as possible to begin with, from the Guardian standpoint, because it is, I would say the best word for it. It's finicky, comparative to Dexcom. And I personally tried all those tips, tricks, things that could possibly be done, and it never really worked well for me, and I think that that's the biggest hang up then that I had with it in automotive. It is that it drove me crazy with all of the requests for additional glucose entries and calibrations. It wasn't accurate. And thus, in any of these hybrid systems, if you have a sensor that is not accurate, the adjustments in something like auto mode or in control icube closed mode, you're you're not going to get accurate adjustment because your sensors not accurate to begin with

Scott Benner 45:29
when you say it asks for calibrate, so it knows well enough that it's not okay, but it doesn't know where okay is, is that.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 45:37
So for the most part our our go to recommendations for getting your sensor to work as well as possible. We recommend calibrating that sensor. And it does require calibration on like g six for Dexcom. The Guardian does require calibrations. But we recommend calibrating about three to four times a day, at more regular times of day. But the biggest thing is really to ideally do it when your glucose is more stable. In order to avoid what we know, in all of the sensing systems, there is lag time, based on if something is trending down or trending up right now. There's lag that's happening, your finger stick is often either lower, or it could be higher based on what's happening trend wise. So the goal is to try to calibrate when you've got a horizontal kind of angled trend happening. Also, the accuracy of the glucometer that you're using to calibrate with is a big deal too. Yeah, that's a huge deal. I mean, if you're using some off the market, like, well, not off the market, but like random, generic brand. Don't take out, right? Hey, that's easy. It just just don't, don't I and I know that some people it, it's based on what their insurance is able to cover, right? Right, or what they can afford, I get that. But then also understand that your calibration of these systems may actually mess up the natural sensing of what it sees as being

Scott Benner 47:20
you're wearing, you're wearing a state of the art glucose sensing system and calibrating it with something you got out of a bubblegum machine, it's not going to go well, because then you just confuse the sensor by by telling it, you know, let's say the sensor thinks you're 110 you're really 120 and your meters like no, no, we're at, and you put that information in that the sensor is going to go there, and it's not going to know what to do. And it's gonna confess it, you know, and you have to be careful.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 47:48
The thing with Medtronic, it does come with a monitor that connects with the pump, which is nice, it's the best one that's on the market, it's the Contour Next One, if you get it with the pump, use it, because that is the best rated as far as accuracy on the market. And that goes for anybody that's out there.

Scott Benner 48:06
If you want to know why the Contour Next One is sponsoring the show. Now it's because Arden's experience with the Contour, Next One meter has been head and shoulders better than any other meter she's ever used. As far as consistency, ease of use, portability, and end how closely it agrees with the G six is fascinating. I don't know if that speaks well, for the G six or for the meter or for both, maybe honestly, but it's I've never seen so much consistency between technology before. And you know,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 48:40
according to I mean, one of the last conferences I went to, when I was able to fly and actually be within six feet of somebody else. I stopped at the actual the the Roche were accucheck their guide or guide me is also one of the highest rated accuracy on the market. So if you can't for some reason, insurance coverage wise, use the contour that accucheck guide or guide me it is also not very good. Yeah. So but that that goes along with sensor, any sensor that you're calibrating, but definitely one that could have some finicky component to it for The Guardian, try to make sure that your glucometer is a good one. So and then, of course, you know, any sensor, it's the insertion of it. Are you putting it in the right way? are you cleaning your sight? Are you making sure that you're the transmitter for The Guardian needs to be charged? And so unlike Dexcom, which you just slap it on, and it continues to work every time you put it with a new sensor until it's dead at 90 days. The transmitter for The Guardian has to be charged that's just confused me

Scott Benner 49:49
can I try? I can't charge it while it's on my body right Oh no. Then how does so I have to pop it out and charge it. How often do I have to do that?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 49:57
Oh, the charging Another one that I'd have to look back and see exactly, it doesn't take long to charge it. Okay, but I know that it's at least it's at least every five to seven days. But don't, don't you know, directly me on that. But yeah, it is it requires charging and there's like a little, you know, that comes with the system, there's a little charging like, port that you pop it into, and it charges and then it's ready. And then, but if you're, if your transmitter isn't well charged, or it's kind of at the end, you know, don't put on a brand new sensor, and then you're gonna have to pop it out and it just weirds up the system.

Scott Benner 50:37
We're selling the hell out of this thing, aren't we? So? Geez. Alright. So being serious, like, that seems like more work. I so I have to take so every

Jennifer Smith, CDE 50:50
number of days, if you do want a positive, good, it lasts longer than your transmitters. Okay, that's a huge positive. So right in

Scott Benner 50:59
place the actual devices frequently,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 51:02
you don't have to write this set at the transmitter is there you've got it until it's no longer working for you. And that's a nice thing.

Scott Benner 51:10
It's a great point. I only ever have our experiences, I've I've never experienced a gap where we didn't have Dexcom supplies. But I you know that very well, maybe because I'm on top of ordering them or because my insurance doesn't argue about I don't know why there's probably a number of different reasons. But okay, so there's there's the good and bad, so you have to recharge it, but it lasts longer,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 51:32
it lasts longer, it does require some taping, oh, it

Scott Benner 51:37
tries to fall off does it?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 51:39
Well. And all I think all the sensors on the market, depending on body type and what the moisture level and you know, everything in your skin is everybody's a little bit different. I mean, I occasionally in the summertime need to, you know, need to tape down or put up a thing around my decks calm as well. But the Medtronic sensor specifically has to be taped down. It's not a, I could choose to do it. It's kind of a funny, I wish we had like visual. But once the transmitter is popped into this little sensor piece, the transmitter bounces. Like it's like if you imagine a beaver with its tail. The tail is the transmitter

Scott Benner 52:23
Jenny, Jenny is making a hand motion that's making me feel like Has anyone anyone ever been driving in like snow, and you're the back of your car gets like a little light and starts bouncing around. And you know, so she's she's basically saying that, uh, that the back of her tail, the back of the transmitter is bouncing?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 52:43
Yes, if you don't take it. And obviously, you don't want it bouncing because it could easily come disconnected. It's pulling out the adhesive and it's pulling it the sensor wire and all the other stuff. And then that decreases accuracy. So Medtronic supplies you with all of the adhesive tape that you do need to tape it down and keep it in place, they give you directions to tape it the right way and pop it in and everything. So again, it's not extra stuff that you have to remember, it comes with your supplies, but it's an extra piece of use that isn't there for the other sensors.

Scott Benner 53:14
I'm holding in my laughter because I'm trying not to be a hater on this situation here. But my brain is going maybe don't design it to do that. And then or when you design it, you go, Hey, this thing's bouncing around, like who's the person that was like, we'll give them tape? Not maybe we should redesign it.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 53:31
Right, right. Well, the question in my mind, honestly, always comes and this is not specific to Medtronic, but it's any product that comes out on the market. People with diabetes, get it? And they're like, why did they do this? Why is it designed Like this? Like, did they not ask people with diabetes, how their life would work if we did this weird part to it? Right? Yeah. So I I just, I don't know, I'm always like, well, I guess somebody thought it was a good. Yeah.

Scott Benner 54:05
Well, some engineer maybe who doesn't have to wear it, right? Thought about the usability of it, and it works like it works. And that this shape, we can make it rechargeable. And you know, all that I listen, I'm imagining it wasn't by mistake. I don't think they were just like, I don't care, you know, but there's sounds like there were trade offs made. And you know, as we're having this conversation to, I don't know what the date is for g7. But g7 is going to become disposable, right? Like you're not

Jennifer Smith, CDE 54:32
I that's what I've heard as well,

Scott Benner 54:34
yeah, that you're not going to have that transmitter with the battery, you're gonna put it on and when it's over, the whole thing's gonna go in the garbage and you're going to start over again. And it's, it's gonna have enough battery life in it for the life of the sensor. Right. And that's it. So, yeah, I mean, things are moving forward quickly. I think I think from a personal perspective, as I watch Medtronic and their pumps, it feels to me like they're Like they're making a five pound bag of cereal, you know what I mean? Like, it's mass market. Like, like, like

Jennifer Smith, CDE 55:09
the ones that cost like $2 on the very bottom bed, and you're like, well, that's the best deal.

Scott Benner 55:13
But she gets so much of it, right? Like, I feel like they're just, I feel like they're the, they've put themselves in a position where they're giving pumps to more people than the other two companies, right. And so what they're saying is quantity over quality, like, that's how it feels to me, like, we're going to serve these pumps to as many people as we can, it will work for most of them, and it won't work for some of them. And that's just the price of doing business. I don't know I could be wrong. It's just how it feels from the outside. Because of all the things that I mean, listen, Jenny's just been sharing her experience wearing the device, and she's not, you know, and she hears people talk about it as well, and she's doing her job. But there's a lot here that seems fixable. Except it doesn't change ever, it's just sort of like they won't change this thing till they change the system, they're not going to come back and make an adjustment to it or anything like that. They are making them they're pumping them out, no pun intended. And this is what they are until they're done. We're just going to give people tape and then we'll fix it next time, I guess. Right.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 56:13
And we do. And there are I mean, speaking to that, specifically, from what we know, clinically, and the bit that's been shared, they are already on it, as your as a company there, there are products that should be coming out in the future, when I don't have any idea or not privy to that information. But there are, there will be a new sensor that will be more accurate, more user friendly, from what I remember and understand it will not have that beaver tail transmitter kind of piece to it. It will be much simplified. And their next iteration of this hybrid closed loop system that they have, will be more finely tuned with a lot of these pieces that are they're kind of a pain to have to deal with. Right. So they are working on it, as are all the companies out there, right? They're continuing to build and, you know, yeah, make changes and listen. And

Scott Benner 57:18
I meant what I said, when we started out that I think it's, it's not a great position to be in to be first. You don't I mean, because you probably had to do a lot of things to get through the FDA. And that's been softened for the pod and tandem now you know that that stuff is that past been cleared out a little bit for them. So there's a lot of good, you know, somebody's going first is and to be honest, if it was going to be anybody, it makes sense that it was Medtronic honestly because they're well,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 57:44
they're the oldest on the market. Honestly, of all of the pump systems. They are the oldest that is still around. I mean, all the rest are pretty much gone. Right? There are lots of people who love their, their combo pumps and their animists and things so

Scott Benner 58:03
they're all gone. They're all gone. Was it cosmo? What was that one that people? Cosmo's no pump, right. Yeah,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 58:09
yeah. In fact, another Scott Scott Johnson, who has his own little like diabetes blog, and he works with the my sugar group now. Um, he was like, he Bade his Cosmo and

Scott Benner 58:24
as long as he should

Jennifer Smith, CDE 58:25
hoarded supplies in order to keep it going, as long as he could, he could, he probably I don't know what he's using anymore. But he probably go back to because he really loved

Scott Benner 58:34
his cosmos. That's a nice person I've met. Awesome. So what's the overview here of this, if you have the system, and it's not working the way you want it to? You're going to have to go out of auto mode sometimes to address some meals, but not all, or you're going to have to understand that your blood sugars are going to be higher than maybe you want and just let it be.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 58:59
You have some kind of standards of when to go out of auto mode. Honestly, you know, the the initial question you asked a while ago about, well, what if I'm eating this really slow digesting or really high fat meal or, you know, my normal peek is going to be way out here and whatever. And you were used to using a square wave or a dual wave Bolus before you know what it might be best to temporarily switch back to manual mode, use what you knew work from the get go. And then when it's done, switch back to your Mac to your auto mode. I mean, that's, that's really one of one of the settings of switching out of auto mode. Another one might be honestly sick days, high stress, those kinds of things or even like I said, high fat meals etc. Where you really, let's say you always know that when you've got this really nasty, like cold that you use 25% more insulin, you've got a temporary, you've even maybe got a profile set for sick days. Right? You know what, don't hesitate to switch out and go back and use that because you knew it worked.

Scott Benner 1:00:11
Does that system allow for me to set? Could I set up multiple? Like profiles? No, but so I can't have a pizza profile on a regular profile. But see, that was because that would fix it. If I if I suddenly made the sensitivity, and the you know, the insulin on board times differently and changed, like my carpet is

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:00:29
remember why it's gathering data over the past several days of insulin sensitivity, I keep changing it

Scott Benner 1:00:36
around because it will. Correct. Okay.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:00:40
Yeah. But that's a that's a great question. Again, you know, days, I even think of days, like, my brother in law works for Disney. And so we've gone down there more times than I can count. And we've enjoyed the parks and whatnot. And I know that a full day of getting up. This was pre kids, my husband and I were just enjoying the parks as adults like running around like crazy kids trying to get to everything, right. I had to use not only a temporary bazel all day long, but also overnight to avoid running too low. Well, you know, what auto mode would would not benefit me in that scenario. Because I would just be running too low, it would be consistently trying to probably suspend me not just temporarily decrease things. And that is also a limiting factor to the system that is different than the coming hybrid systems that are going to be on the market or are already, there's only a certain timeframe that it will high temp, your bazel for or Low Temp or suspend for before the system kicks you out of manual mode and say, Hey, this is all on you now, okay, you're and it will alert you. It's not like it's all of a sudden gone. And you're waking up at three o'clock in the morning. Great, I would have loved to know that you kicked me out. There's an audit, there's an alert that tells you you are out of auto mode you are back in manual mode. And it's because either you've reached the max amount of insulin delivery in a time period that's divined or you've been suspended or decreased bazel for a certain amount of time as well.

Scott Benner 1:02:23
Interesting.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:02:24
So in a day, like I was describing, yeah, that's to switch out of auto mode, go to your Temp Basal that worked. Mine was always setting a Temp Basal decrease of 15% for the whole day that we were the year and into the overnight. That worked beautifully.

Scott Benner 1:02:39
That's it's a great advice. And it also feels like it's, it's a little sad, because you're telling me that this pump that I'm I'm thinking what's gonna stop me from getting high, it's gonna stop me from getting too low, it's gonna be great. It's gonna take my mind off of blood sugars, blah, blah, unless I go to Disney and run around all day, and then it's back on me. Or I have pizza. Or you know,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:03:04
and remember, if you are going to Disney today, and the last four days, you were in some type of horrible business meetings that had you all jacked up and insulin needed, it's gonna crush you insulin. sensitivity is Yeah, exactly. You can't whisper and be like, Hey, 670 on vacation. Now I got

Scott Benner 1:03:22
a Fast Pass today. So keep up, right? So keep up with Oh, it's gonna thank No, for the last three days, you've needed more insulin?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:03:29
Correct?

Scott Benner 1:03:30
Exactly. So you go from I've needed more situation to I need less situation and it can't, it can't

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:03:35
adjust it. It can't adjust again, fast enough is kind of the issue, right? And then I guess one of the last ones truly, which we've all experienced on every single pump is an infusion site problem, or a site failure or something, you know, and if you're in that high blood sugar, and you know it's a sight problem, and you go ahead and you change it, it really is best to switch back to manual mode, change out your set your tubing, maybe even your insulin, give a bolus we usually recommend via injection instead of through the new pump site. And then once your blood sugar is back in range, switch back to auto mode, right?

Scott Benner 1:04:15
Okay, I am at pump changes. I do something very similar pump changes. Like I don't rely on the new site right away like I tried to. And I also do not stare at bad sites like when sites no don't. When you know, you know how I say when when when an insulin pump site stops doing what I expect it to do. I do not stare at it for 10 hours wondering if it's gonna get better again, you know, right to bosses. It doesn't do what I want it by time. Yeah, right. Yeah. And it doesn't have it's not like you know, doesn't happen constantly. I'm just saying when it happens. I don't look at a pump and think oh, I have three more hours left on this one. I can't wait. That's an that's a rookie move. Right? Like that idea of like, oh, there's three more hours. Here, I don't want to waste those three hours, there's five more units here, I don't want to waste those five years, I mean, money aside, I understand insolence expensive, you're gonna have diabetes, for abs, you know, I mean, so like it just trying to cheat two hours here and three hours here and four hours here, you might think oh, I'm, you know, I'm saving myself an insulin pump set or something like that every month, what you're doing is you're costing yourself three and then two, and then four, and then six. And before you know it 20 and 25 hours and 30 hours a month of high blood sugars, by trying to sneak an extra two hours out of your pump. You know, I think, I think you have to, if you can afford to, you have to think about it the other way or supplement with injections, if that's crass, not working?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:05:40
Correct, or something like you know, a frezza, or something that works very rapidly, and you know, that it's going to work and it's going to get things down, or, you know, whatever, I don't get

Scott Benner 1:05:48
a 180 going, Oh, it's only for eight more hours until the right, come on. You know, don't do that. Just

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:05:54
don't do it to yourself. Yes, yeah, yeah, exactly. Health is what your

Scott Benner 1:05:59
health is, first health is the goal.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:06:01
And I think you're talking to you know, you're kind of like hiding from a situation that you can, you can visibly see, it's there, and you're like, we're just gonna like, it's gonna fix it, kind of like even you know, going along with like the auto mode, we really try to recommend not hiding things from auto mode, too. Right. And one big one that is often forgotten, especially if you've gotten into this routine before having auto mode. And if you were an omni pod user switching to this system, you wouldn't even really think about because you've never disconnected. But when you disconnect from the pump, in auto mode, suspend your pump, so the system knows that you are not receiving insulin, okay? Because if it thinks you're receiving auto mode based adjustments of insulin counts, when you're really not getting them pumped into your body. It may, it will then continue once you do plug back in, it'll continue to think that there's insulin there that wasn't

Scott Benner 1:07:07
okay. So you have to tell it up if you just connect to bathe or something like that.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:07:11
You suspend your suspend

Scott Benner 1:07:12
the pump so that it realizes nothing's happening, correct. Okay. Yep. And I'm assuming that's an easy thing to forget to do. But do people forget,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:07:21
I would say it's an easy thing to forget to do. I, you know, some people, especially in conventional mode, coming from conventional mode into using an automated mode like this system has, because I'd say probably 50%, at least of people who disconnect from their pump, because their system isn't connecting with a CGM to do anything with that insulin. They're just disconnecting, letting it pump. They reconnect when they're done with their shower done with their swim or whatever. Maybe they're maybe the really meticulous people are remembering to suspend their pump and then remembering to resume their pump. Once you reconnect.

Scott Benner 1:08:03
I used to be surprised by the number of people who would tell me I took my pump off to get a shower and three hours later remembered where I forgot. Yeah, yeah. And I guess and like I said, buy used to be surprised. They used to be surprised because Arden uses a pump you don't disconnect from I never considered it. But you know, after you think about it for a while it's reasonable. You can be rushing around or right doing whatever it's you know, I don't know. To me, it's a selling. Yeah, no, I hear you. Okay. Well, alright, I don't know what we've Do you think we've done anything valuable here, like if a 670 g person heard this, but they'd be like, I've heard something that might help me.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:08:38
I think if you're a person currently using it, there are some there are some tips if you didn't know about them already, to maybe put into action to make it work a bit better for you, especially if you're somebody who is using auto mode, pretty much 9095 maybe 100% of the time and you feel like there is something to tweak but you're not quite sure where to start maybe some of these tips. While we spoke about some of the drawbacks, I think the tips that are in here for people who are using it could be an advantage if they're already not trying them. Um, you know, I think another another big one that often times again, with these hybrid types of systems is often a forgotten piece of teaching someone when they start on it is how to treat lows.

Scott Benner 1:09:30
So you're not over treating your lows,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:09:32
correct. The age old 15 grams every 15 minutes kind of thing. A lot of people are still following that and on a conventional pump, especially if your settings aren't really dialed in very well. Maybe it does work quite well for you. Maybe you even need to use 20 grams are 25 grams because you're really not sure how much insulin is there and that's always seems to be brings me up and I don't get low again. So I keep using this well, you can guarantee that on any of These hybrid system systems that are augmenting the insulin delivery, right, you have to remember that in auto mode, if your blood blood sugar is decreasing, the system is has already seen that. And if it's decreasing, and you're going to get below a certain value, or to a certain value, depending on the rate of trend, the system is either temporarily decreasing, or it may already be suspending.

Scott Benner 1:10:32
So it's already created a void of basal insulin correct with the food in. And once you stop the drop, there's nothing else there to help with the food.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:10:41
Correct. Because that bazel deficit, remember how long into the future that can make a change? So think about under treating your lowest?

Scott Benner 1:10:52
No,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:10:52
I think easiest way to say it,

Scott Benner 1:10:54
I think those are the little pieces that that get lost, especially in a low situation, because there's a panic, I got a really lovely note from a person today, just this morning, who said how much the podcast has helped them just with that idea, you know, they used to get low, and then eat a bunch of food. And then just let whatever is going to be be after that instead of recognizing some of this food was for the low. And some of it was because I'm ravenously hungry, because I'm low and I'm scared and all these reasons that this food needs insulin, you know, some of this food needs insulin, right. And the person said that just that idea from the podcast has really changed their, like their days, you know what I mean? Like they're not spiking and dropping and spiking and dropping all the time. And that's the stuff nobody talks about. And it's tough. And not to put that on a pump company, either.

Unknown Speaker 1:11:40
No, no.

Scott Benner 1:11:41
I don't know if people understand like the pump companies, through FDA regulations can't tell you how to manage your diabetes, they can tell you what the pump does, and how to technically make the settings like how to use it. They can't tell you when to use it. They're not allowed. You know, I mean, and that's supposed to be for your doctor, but then your doctor is busy telling you, you know, just keep eating 15 carbs and 15 carbs and fat and carbs. And then you know, see what happens afterwards.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:12:07
And along with that, you know, we bring into the picture technology, right? Our technology today using CGM, you have to remember that CGM is leg, especially in times of lower blood sugars or in times of rapidly changing blood sugar values. So if you've treated your low, especially on an automated system like this, if you've treated it, you've you've got to wait, yeah, unless you're willing to do a finger stick and a finger stick to see that things have now up they've stabilized up I'm rising, my blood sugar's coming up. But look at that my sensors still reading at 52. But my finger stick is at three, stop eating your 15 grams every 15 minutes,

Scott Benner 1:12:47
you have to stop caring about this. It's an interesting situation, you've corrected the low. And now you're going to wait for your body to respond, your body begins to respond with a blood sugar that's rising. The sensor doesn't figure it out quickly enough. So you're still looking at the 52 going, I probably need more food. If you fingerstick you might be 65. Right? If you wait 10 minutes, you might be 74. And the CGM might believe you're 74 too. But it's that panic time right in there. Yeah. And I I'm a fan of testing. I like testing in that spot.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:13:18
I do too. You know, I do too. In fact, when I you know, in a conventional pump sense, I usually enter the carbs into my PDM. Because when I do that for a low blood sugar, if I enter too many grams of carb, the PDM will tell me I need to Bolus and if I have a certain amount of carbs and it's recommending a 0.0 Bolus, I know that it's at least offsetting enough to bring me up. And potentially if I've got insulin on board, it'll allow me to actually then take in enough carbs to compensate for insulin on board. And the low blood sugar without recommending a bolus, yeah, if you enter it, and you're like, I'm gonna eat 49 grams of carbs to treat this low and your pump is like okay, well you need 2.2 units of insulin. I guarantee you probably need that 2.2 units of insulin even though your blood sugar is sitting too low. I will tell a story sometimes when I'm speaking publicly about the time it It struck me like when I finally figured it out and Arden had a bad low. It came out of nowhere in the middle of the night. And you know, everything you described like she's falling

Scott Benner 1:14:34
so fast that the CGM this is years ago. She was falling so fast. That CGM didn't pick it up right away. It was also I think, two generations of Dexcom ago, it was probably the g4 right, and so she's falling fast. And I catch it. I test she's really low. She's like 36 she takes in 65 carbs, right and the 36 I finger stick it holds wait five minutes the longest five minutes your life you stick again. She's still 36 Okay, she's not falling. You know, you're like, Alright, wait again you wait again you wait again fingerstick 42 going up. All right, the CGM still just yelling low, low, low. Yeah. Because it's just waiting. Yeah, it was. It's a little behind now, right? So I'm like, okay, 36 went to 36 went to 42. I'll wait. And I wait. And then I saw 54. And it was that time it was this one time that I was like, god damn, you know what I'm gonna do. I was like, I'm gonna Bolus. It was like, so she had like 65 carbs. And I think

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:15:42
you were like 65 carbs was a lot of carbs.

Scott Benner 1:15:46
But the leap is, first of all, you have that adrenaline. You just saw 36 blood sugar. The CGM is yelling low at you. All this is happening. But she's clearly coming up. I didn't Bolus Roth 65 cars. But if I remember correctly, I think I did 40 of them. And I stopped her blood sugar like 170 because trust me, 20 minutes later, her blood sugar started shooting up, right. And even that gives you this anxiety because the CGM is catching up, you know, it's telling you low now she's 54. Now the sudden she's probably 65. Now all of a sudden it goes ooh, 40. And then it shows you arrow straight up and the arrows panicky, you're like, Ah, you know, but because I was testing, I knew what was happening. I was like, Alright, forget this first second, I'm gonna stop paying attention to the glucose monitor for a second. And I'm going to go back to knowing what I know is going to happen. She's got food. She's clearly not low anymore. She's moving up. This is no different than a bad Pre-Bolus at a meal. Like it's almost like I Pre-Bolus too long. Like, right, that's all that's happening now. So like, what do I do next? And what I did next was insulin. And I'll tell you, if you've ever seen me speak, speak live like sometimes like I do. I go out into my my hallway afterwards that I leave Arden's room, and I'm like, hey, my arms over my head. I'm like, Oh, I killed this. Oh, my God, I did such a good job on this. And then I go to bed. And that was it. But yeah, you can't if you over treat Lowe's, especially in these auto system, this one specifically, you're just gonna bounce forever, they get it, then it's, then you're not letting the system do what it's there to do for you either. Right, you know, all right. Well, I truly believe that, you know, Medtronic next system will be an improvement over this one. I 100%. Want to give them credit for doing it first, because I think it's a I don't think that I don't think they had a chance for an outcome any different than the one they got being first and probably I'm guessing, dealing with the restrictions from the FDA that they put on a first, you know, hybrid system. So

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:17:48
absolutely, I'm quite sure that the that the restrictions and the parameters they had to stay within were outrageous to actually get a system on the market. That could actually, I mean, the first step really was allowing CGM to replace fingerstick. Yeah, it was 100%. And once that was approved, and they were like, okay, now that that's approved, now, we can actually have a system that doses insulin based on CGM values. And that was the huge first step. So I mean, they put a lot into place I, you know, I would not like,

Scott Benner 1:18:26
we all need to appreciate that we all need to appreciate the speed in which things are moving through the FDA now that they did not used to. And I mentioned this to somebody personally, last night, if you go back a couple of years, and the CEO, Shea see from from Omni pod is on the podcast, I'm asking her about like, hey, am I ever gonna be able to control my daughter's pump from a phone? And her answer a couple years ago was like, I mean, we would love that. But I don't know how we're getting that through the FDA. And now the horizon is going to come out and it's going to be controlled through your phone. And it's a couple of years later. And so for new people who are used to like Dexcom, being like, here's the G four, here's the G five, here's the G six, the G seven is coming. That's not how diabetes has worked. Historically, getting new technology to market, so things moving so much more quickly than it used to. It's really yeah, you know,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:19:16
and it's making a big difference for people. I mean, really even considering just the 670 system, and some of the pivotal trials and the things that Medtronic came out with even years ago. I mean, they really proved that people who used it with a lot of the strategies of applied management to using it mean they can achieve an A one C, kind of shortly under a 7% sort of in like the 6.8 6.9% range. I mean, a good percentage of time in range. I mean, if you were falling short of that 40% 50% if you're using the system well and auto mode, most often you can get 70 75% in range, with that range being like you know that 70 to sort of 180 ish kind of plays such a

Scott Benner 1:20:01
big but yeah, for a lot of people

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:20:03
for that that's huge for many people. So you

Scott Benner 1:20:07
have to remember where you're coming from when you listen like when you say, an eight, one c like in the low sevens. It My mind is like, Oh, that's a point and a half higher than I want it to be. But that's for me, a person who's got to see in a one see who's nine is like, wow, just saved my life.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:20:23
I'll take it. Yeah,

Scott Benner 1:20:24
yeah. No, 100% No, I, I believe I really do. Like I like to tease Medtronic. Mostly, I like to tease them in case they're listening. Because I am not a fan of what you do in Washington, around insurance and the way you throw your weight around and limit other pumps. So it for that, and I'll bleep this later. I think you're a bunch of it. But you know, for the rest of it. We're just here talking. I agree. Yeah, that's all let's Scott Johnson have his goddamn Cosmo pump. It wouldn't have been that bad. Damn, it. wouldn't know he wasn't taking that much money out of your pocket. Medtronic, he could have let it be. Alright.

Unknown Speaker 1:21:01
Right. You can

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:21:02
all these other products off the market right here.

Scott Benner 1:21:04
Okay. Huge thanks to my sponsors, Dexcom and Omni pod. You know, we never mentioned it. But the opinions expressed on this podcast are not those the advertisers probably should say that once in a while to take that thought a step further. I'm an idiot. I don't really know anything. So, you know, grain of salt, though. And I'm sure there's a ton of wonderful people at Medtronic. To find out more about the dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor, go to dexcom.com forward slash juicebox. Please use my link, click on it. You know, you can do it right there and your podcast player right now. And to get a free, no obligation demo of the AMI pod sent directly to you my Omni pod.com forward slash juice box. Don't forget Thursday the 23rd of April 2020 at 3pm on the bold with insulin Facebook page. Alive Scott and Jenny. Jenny and I are gonna answer your questions right there on the Facebook machine. And later, you'll hear it on the podcast. It's actually at bold with insulin on Facebook. So I don't know how you do that Facebook calm. There's some slashes in there but you'll find it. What else? I don't know. I hope you guys are being safe and find the things to pass your time and all that stuff. I am recording this right now in a pair of shorts and it's too cold to be in shorts, but doesn't matter because I'm not going anywhere. So at least I'm wearing the shorts


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#313 Fox in the Loop House - part II

Scott Benner

Kenny Fox talks Loop Management

Kenny and Scott talk about DIY Loop and type 1 diabetes. part 2 of 2

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon AlexaGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio Public or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello, everybody, welcome to Episode 313 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's show is part two of a two parter with Kenny Fox. Now Kenny's name might not ring in your head like, oh, Kenny Fox, is that like Michael Jordan for diabetes? Well, no. But what Kenny is, is the data of a little girl who has type one diabetes, who really dug in to the DIY loop. And he understands it in a way that I find it inspirational. Now, Kenny and I are going to walk step by step through every setting in the loop, talk about it and kind of a big picture way. If you're not into a do it yourself algorithm for insulin pumping, I get that you don't need to be I'm not telling you to be. What I am saying is listen to the episode anyway. Because it's just another way of thinking about how insulin works. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by Dexcom. The Contour Next One blood glucose meter, and touched by type one, you can always go to touch by type one.org Contour Next one.com or dexcom.com Ford slash juicebox. To find out more about the advertisers, there'll be a little more about them later in the show. But for now, I think we should get to it. We're going to start right at the top by saying nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan, or becoming bold with insulin. And today. Also remember that what we're talking about is an algorithm that Kenny and I downloaded from the internet. It doesn't belong to a company, you just completely do it yourself. It has not passed through the FDA. So understand that while we're talking. Now that aside, using the algorithm. And watching the data come back from it and seeing how it reacts will absolutely supercharge your understanding of how insulin is working in your body. I'm telling you to watch a an app, a computer algorithm decide about insulin, it just elevates your understanding. At least it did for me. It's taken me a while to figure looping out and I'm probably not all the way there. But I'm getting closer. And I'm going to keep having these conversations with people who are ahead of me until we're all at the same level together. Luckily, I found Kenny and Kenny understands looping. And that's why this episode is called Fox in the loop house. Part Two. So insulin model, when you have yours, even lower than mine is what's the intention of making the insulin model a shorter time period.

Kenny Fox 3:01
So whenever I try to deal with loop, I'm doing my best to represent reality. So because I know that her incident her bonuses and stuff with good bazel only last four and a half hours. That's why it's four and a half hours. It's not just to get like a performance out of it, it's because I really think that the that's how long the insulin last. The rest of the model is a little interesting. If you see that top option is always that Walsh model, it's always got the line like higher than the rest of them. That's kind of what the pumps use it. It's more like a I don't know, like a straight line steady decay of insulin or insulin is really kind of peaky, right, it's slow to start, it hits hard kind of around an hour ish hour and a half. And it stays strong for an hour or two. And then it kind of fades. And so these other models more more accurately represent like how much insulin is left, because it's kind of more initially and then less later, where that wash model stays really high. And so that's why the that's one reason, even endocrinologist know that insulin lasts longer than three or two or three hours. They like to set people at like a three hour because for most of that curve, a three hour four hour Walsh model will accurately represent how much instance on board until of course, you get to the end when you say hey, it's over after three hours, and there's still two more hours left. And so then people are like, Oh, well, why do I says no more instance on board? Why do they keep dropping? Why is my blood sugar keep dropping? Well, it's because there really is more insulin on board but your pump is lying to you. So you either got to have your pump lying to you the whole time until the very end when zero is zero, or and then you can kind of just round down or you set it shorter and then it's like kind of accurate most of the time and then at the end, you still have insulin on board left for another hour too. So it's a tricky thing.

Scott Benner 4:51
Is this a case of because insulin works in choppy like ways, not smooth ways that you're going To have to lie to yourself or lie to the pump, or have the pump lied to you, however you want to think about it one way or the other. So let's lie on the more

Kenny Fox 5:10
cautious side. Yeah, I think for a lot of NGOs, they use the instant action time of three hours to give people permission to bolus when they're high, like, hey, if it's close to zero, go ahead and correct because after three hours insulins mostly done, rather than tell people, hey, this is how long it's been last. And if you see this number, round down, a better idea would be to use a better tool. But those are limited, right? You can use nightscout has a better, like in insulin action calculator, extra spike, these other open source apps and loop their insulin models they use for how insulin hits indicators is much more accurate than what comes standard in most pumps, where it's just a matter of getting these tools.

Scott Benner 5:52
And what I would do prior to loop is, I just wouldn't pay any attention is on onboard.

Kenny Fox 5:59
Exactly. Yeah, it becomes so inaccurate that you don't trust it anymore. So no one looks at it, which is what we'll talk about, we get to base rates and stuff like that's, that's the the piece people kind of ignore they people look at it and go, Oh, wow, there's a lot of insulin on board when someone's falling, but then they don't really look at it other than that,

Scott Benner 6:15
yeah, I just think of it is, I don't know, like, it's like putting out a brush fire to me, like, I've always got to charge toes ready. But I'm not always squirting it, I turn the water on when I see the flames. And so like it just, you know, I go I put something out, I keep walking around, there's more, there's more carbs, more more insulin. Now stop again, it's just to me. Diabetes is like a common sense. Like you can use insulin in a common sense way. It's when you get out of balance or out of rhythm, that everything gets messed up. And then common sense doesn't seem to apply anymore. Which is why I always tell people like when you get when you start bouncing, the best thing to do is to get low, get down, get steady and start over. Because you're just you're trying to you're trying to grab sunlight otherwise, you know, yeah, like it's just it becomes it just becomes an endeavor. That doesn't make sense. Okay. Kenny, also, by the way, at the beginning of the podcast, we're gonna let people know, this is an algorithm that you downloaded offline. It didn't come through a company it has not by anybody except the people who wrote it, who, by the way, are really brilliant people, but are not the FDA. And that you're not a doctor by any stretch of the imagination, or am I? We have no, not even close. Right. And that none of this is advice. We're just talking through how we do it people should you know, definitely be precaution. You know, take precautions. Keep in mind that when I started the loop with my daughter, I had Jenny to talk to by text, I was able to reach out and speak to Katie, and had I not I don't think I would have made it two days. Honestly

Kenny Fox 7:54
with it. It was it's very frustrating to start to or it could be scary depending on which way you're coming from

Scott Benner 8:01
hundred percent. Okay, so what should we talk about next? Do you think basal rates?

Kenny Fox 8:05
Well, real quick on the model only thing left is that peak, you don't really see it much. But it's mostly like supposed to represent when insulin is at strongest. I use the adult one for my daughter, not the child one. So the child one has like a 65 minute insulin peaking and the adult 175 I feel like a little over an hour's when I see insulin pulling her down the best. So I went ahead and did that. You also see that if you extend the peak out and use the adult one instead of the kid one, you'll often get larger initial bolus recommendations, just because of the way the math works. So I use both a lower insulin action time and the adult peak that's a little higher. a fun thing if you want to test or kind of play with the shorter da instant action time without or peaks. without, you know, really testing it like an open loop or with your PDM or whatever is you can when you do the build. And there's a screenshot in that loop docs on how to change the insulin action time and peak, Katie had a great suggestion, just take one of the models you're not using, for example, we don't use vs. So I took the settings for Fiesta, and I changed it. So I just changed the peak to be what I wanted it to be like matching the adult one for example. And then I change the insulin action time to you know, the five hour one or the four and a half, whatever you're going to test. That way once you build your app, you can just switch between the models, and like use them for what you want to use them for. So if you want to try a five hour interaction time, and then find it's like too much, it's too aggressive or whatever it is, then you can just go into the settings and just tap and use the different model. You don't have to go back and rebuild. Sometimes building causes a lot of stress for people. So if you can do it once then you can just kind of toggle back and forth without having to do a new build. It's helpful. I guarantee you just spoke about most of the people's understanding as well. If they're getting into that Lu customisations. Yeah.

Scott Benner 10:03
Okay. sila rates is good. Yeah, rates is the next place to go. So you just said something, you know what? Maybe it's not maybe those things strategies the next place to go. So that's a cool one. Yeah. And here's why not all of you who even download loop are going to have this setting. So in very basic terms, if someone has written a program, it's an app, right? And this app is an algorithm that takes the data from the Dexcom, and sends it to your insulin pump, and makes these insulin decisions happen around it. There are other people working on additions to the idea. So there's sort of a basic one, is that called the is that always dev? Is that the one that's being constantly being developed? Or am I speaking wrong here?

Kenny Fox 10:51
Yeah, you're right. So the master one is the one that you know, is should be the most stable, it's kind of the one people would mostly download. Typically speaking, Dev is where all the is where some of the playing, there's actually like, kind of sort of a layer beyond that, like a what they call like feature testing, someone might build a little, a little change, they want to try, and they'll build that. And then once they kind of test it, it looks good. And they kind of put it into Dev, and that's where all kind of the fun stuff, the new stuff comes together, and hangs out for a while while people use it and make sure that all those new features don't just work, but they work well together. And then eventually, that gets promoted up to master after it's,

Scott Benner 11:32
everything looks good and proven out. So the very first time someone mentioned to me about an automatic bolusing. So right now, this this, this, this master branch of loop does not does not give you boluses of insulin, it manipulates your basal rates to try to try to get you to where it wants you to be. But I was somewhere a number of months ago, and some guy says to me, yo, have you seen this Auto bolusing? You know, addition to the loop? And I said no. And he told me about it and helped me check it out. And I forget if it wasn't written by a man named Ivan, maybe Ivan. Yeah. And Ivan's was cool. And you could turn it off and turn it on. But the ways to make it work were a little too detail oriented for me. So I was able to make it work pretty well. When there were carbs present in her body, it actually had a setting for like, have this work while carbs are present, or while carbs aren't present. And I couldn't make it work without carbs. And I and I could make it work with carbs. But when I tried to leave it on constantly, overnight, her blood sugar would be like, you know, 80 and all of a sudden it would like be giving her insulin. Oh my god. That's no good. So we got away from that. When an auto brand showed up. Did Pete right it? p pizza and the main steward and developer of lupia. Right. So Pete wrote this one, I gotta tell you, I've been using it for a while now. As a matter of fact, I got a note from Kenny and Kenny, he's like, yo, you seen this developer? This, uh, Audubon springs from Pete and I was like, already got it. And so yeah, you were ahead of it. I was surprised. Sometimes I sometimes I'm out the right out in the forefront. The flag I don't even have a sword. I'm just running ahead with the flag. So I'm the first guy to get shot Kenny.

Kenny Fox 13:24
Someone has to be

Scott Benner 13:25
shoot the guy with the flag first. So. So anyway, we're using that. And I have to say, it's pretty Skippy. So Am I understanding it right that when and insulin is pending, or when the you know, the loop is telling you, we think you're going to need another half of a unit soon. It will give you 40% of that.

Kenny Fox 13:48
gas. Yeah, exactly. So like the by default. So instead of increasing basal rates, it only decrease your basal rate, it will never increase. If you need more insulin, instead of ramping up your temporary basal rate, it will give you a bolus. But then just for safety, there's a a number you can actually change it to in the code, but it just uses 40% of whatever loop thinks you need. And it gives you that as a Bolus in the next five minutes. So I'll give you another 40% of that. So it kind of its slows down. So I mean, in theory, if your insulin need was the same, for let's say half an hour, because that's how long loop kind of can can give you a basal rate for it would give you it end up giving you less insulin over that half an hour because you'd never get to 100%. You know, 40% 40% 40% just gets smaller and smaller and smaller, but never really gets to zero. But it gives you a lot more up front. So Pete did some cool math was basically saying that if you had consistent insulin needs and you're going to run a single basal rate, increased basal rate for half an hour. You're basically getting 17% of what loop thinks you need every five minutes. If you just held steady for that half hour and then but With the auto bullets, you're getting 40% of it kind of right away. So you know, within the first 10 or 15 minutes, you're still way ahead in terms of like timing of the insulin, but after about 20 minutes, you're kind of about the same amount of insulin delivered. Unless you count the fact that we might change the base rate every five minutes, in which case you go back to what I mentioned before, where it starts counting over again to redeliver. So

Scott Benner 15:22
right, so using Arden's current situation, which, by the way, please believe me, no one set up just because it works perfectly during Kenny's conversation in mind right now. Like, so I want you to know, first she comes out of gym, you know, she's lost connection, Toradex calm, while she was disconnected the loop had taken her bazel away completely, so she didn't have any insulin coming in. And she gets back over finds out, hey, my blood sugar is actually you know, 60 I want you to know that we checked that with a finger stick. So she whipped out the Contour Next One meter, she checked her blood sugar, she's definitely 60 she feels fine. You know, I didn't share everything. She said in the tax. She's like, I don't feel dizzy, I feel 100% fine. She was you know, 15 or 20 minutes before that, like in the low 70s. And most of your like, the kid just went the gym class with a 70 blood sugar. But it also is because I knew that for the time prior to that she did not have a glut of even bazel running because this 85 blood sugar that was trying to drift eventually to 60 which it did over a number of hours. Loop has been taking away bazel for a while now. So I was pretty certain that even if she kind of got a little lower, it wasn't going to be a crashing low. It's just going to kind of like float down, which is exactly what happened, which is cool. But I just want to be clear we you know, I my daughter seven units of insulin based on the hope that her CGM pop back on it was right which by the way, it did pop on and it was right she it had her at 64 the the meter header at 60. You know, I'm that makes me comfortable. You might imagine the next reading drifted down to about 60 and then come back up to the meter. Yeah, we're at 60 right now. And but here's the great thing. She's now been eating for quite some time. So just like we talked about earlier with the cereal, like where you know, she looks like she's 85 or 90, but the cereals in there. Clearly, she's going up because she's eating the cereal, but the glucose monitor has not adjusted out of it yet. And we gave her some crushing amount of insulin vino for the cereal. And it still didn't help by the way Arden's coming out of that cereal, she still at one point was 171 error straight up. And the way we stopped that was by opening the loop. And hitting her with a big bolus of like three more units, she eventually had 13 units for that cereal, which, ironically, is how much I would have given her without loop. And I don't know why I didn't just do that it was because it was because I wasn't with her and nobody was around. But we stopped that cereal spike at like 185 200. And that space, it it leveled out. And as soon as it started to come back down again, we close the loop right back up. So the loop could start taking away bazel. Because those three units were too much they were enough to stop the spike. But they weren't going to be needed moving forward. And because ardens bazel rates like 2.5 an hour, I just basically I threw in an hour's worth of bazel to stop the spike, and then took away an hour's worth of bazel. And let that three units act as the bazel.

Kenny Fox 18:25
Does that mean we do something very similar. When I see a spike like that, I just don't bother to open loop because one, I can't do that from the watch. I'm not going to bother my six year old to say Come over here. Let me have your phone. And then I'll do that. But also I know exactly what you said, which is that what I'm giving ultimately is probably too much unless it's unless I miscounted the carbs. So that's one of those situations where it's like, well, if I miscounted the carbs and I'll go in and edit or add a carb entry kind of back in the past to kind of stack on top of the meal. But But even before I can even figure that out, it's just a big bullet. So you just need to stop the arrow, give it a big bolus, let Luke cut bazel I don't care if it cuts bazel or not. And if I think I miscounted the carbs then I go back and I add carbs. If I didn't miss count the carbs and just missed Pre-Bolus or whatever Miss timing, then I just let loose cut the bazel because for the same reason, she's going to go low eventually if it doesn't, so I just let it do it. That may mean you get a couple more ticks up versus open looping. But I just I let it ride. I just give a big enough Bolus to stop it in its tracks and loop cup bazel and hopefully land safer or safe safely or safer than she would have otherwise. I've done

Scott Benner 19:37
that too. I don't it's funny, isn't it like what you just said makes complete sense they but I would have been uncomfortable giving her five units to stop a one at going up. Even Yeah, even though I think you're not wrong. I think it probably would have gone the same way. So I'll try one day like I just like having the bazel back there.

Kenny Fox 19:57
Oh, it definitely helps. Yeah, it makes it makes a difference.

Scott Benner 20:00
So, so now right now at this meal, we've put in seven units for what I'm guessing is like 80 carbs. But at ardens ratio. She has more than that she needs more than that. Now I'm going to tell you right now I've seen it work enough times, going back to Pete's Auto Bolus, those things strategy to tell you that if we don't do anything else, that Auto Bolus is not going to let her go over about 170. That that's what I know is going to happen based on what because I've watched I've let the auto Bolus do its thing a number of times, so I can watch it. And so if there's a if there's a reasonable Pre-Bolus, you're starting with a lower number like this, it's going to stop her up in there, and it'll get her back down again. But the truth is, is that as soon as Arden's blood sugar adjusts, in a way that makes me comfortable that we're seeing some sort of upward mobility, you know, movement in her blood sugar, I'm going to ask her if she finished all of her food. And if she did, then she's going to put in probably three more units on her own put in the rest. Yeah, yeah, it's so it works. And I don't know, the technical side of it is lost to me. I don't know the changes that they've made in the basic Master, you know, version of this since we first started. But when we first started this, I think I've updated the master vert, you know, loop, maybe once or twice in the last nine months, the first two goes of it that I was using, were really, night and day, not nearly as good as what this is.

Kenny Fox 21:32
Yeah, yeah, it was a big, big one was how, how loop assumed that the only pod was delivering those basal rates, how it calculated when to start and stop its delivery. That was the big thing that was off a lot of the Medtronic pumps that had been used before, they instead of they just do it differently, they start, they restart the counter, but then they start a little sooner, without getting the detail to start sooner in like the Omni pod and a couple other of the Medtronic pumps so that and I think they sort of knew about it. But didn't think it was that big of a difference in the amount of insulin delivered and how much difference that would make. But with especially with littler kids like us, it made a huge difference, it would say that she'd have a larger percentage of insulin on board then than she really did, because it thought it delivered insulin and it didn't. So that that was probably the first big change. And the second big change was a the car model how loop expected the impact of carbs the hit, I thought it would be kind of steady like all those 80 carbs, we hit evenly, evenly raise the blood sugar across those two or three hours, instead of like more accurately modeling that most food hits faster sooner, and then it kind of steadily goes down. And so those were the two like significant changes that you probably experienced. And I did too, that sort of made me start to trust the system a little bit more.

Scott Benner 22:55
So let's jump to base. All right, let me ask you, for me, you heard me break Arden's Bolus into two different decision making entries? Yeah, well, actually, it's one it's so she makes an entry. So she said whatever it was, if it was 35 units, two hours, it means it says two or however much it thinks she should have, I always tell her just choose zero and enter it, then get that Yeah, put in the next one that it bundles them all together for the next one, so that you don't have to watch insulin, so that it doesn't deliver the first few units of insulin for the two hour model. And then you have to sit and wait for the to do that. So instead you deliver nothing on the two hour or whatever the first time because you're thinking and the adult delivered on the second go round. But I do that, so that Luke has a better understanding of exactly what you just said, some of these carbs are going to hit faster, some of them are going to stay with her longer. And that used to keep the bazel from going away. And it still would if I didn't have the dosing strategy of auto Bolus on. Because I have auto Bolus on it's now taken her Basal away, but it's going to try to come back with Bolus if it needs it. Whereas if we didn't have auto Bolus on that thing I just did with a two hour and three hour would have tricked the loop into keeping the bazel on.

Kenny Fox 24:15
Yeah, so like that three hour people find what those carbs is that if you put a longer absorption time, the initial impact is less you get less insulin recommended up front, typically you'll get the most insulin recommended up front on a two hour. But on a three hour let's say it's going to last longer, and it's going to the carbs have a chance of outlasting sort of the peak Enos of the insulin and Luke knows that so that it will offer more insulin later to kind of help compensate for that. So sometimes when people find themselves kind of high at the end of a meal, it may not be because there wasn't enough insulin it may just be that you needed more insulin but you needed a little bit later and you seem to totally pay This food actually is lasting longer than I thought. And it will often recommend another Bolus once you modify that absorption time. In the past like, Oh, this one, I thought it was two hours, it's probably more like three, you change it, it'll probably give you a bolus recommendation in most cases. So but doing the like, representing the food properly is isn't is important. And it's kind of a new thing I had to learn with lupus like, I don't know, how long does something take to eat night last in your system? So

Scott Benner 25:26
no, I know. It's interesting. I just, I kind of blank I do two and three hours. And it works every once in a while. If it's something like rice, like with a Chinese food, I might do two, I might do two and four hours. But it's you know, it's not always perfect. Again, I want everyone to keep in mind that Arden's a one c does not come from an 85 line that never moves. Like to be perfectly honest, like, because she was sleeping in. And you know, it all, you know, it all went well for me this weekend. But that's not normally what her it's not normally. Yeah,

Kenny Fox 25:58
it looks like for eight hours, you know, and I think that's part of the secret sauce or magic sauce of like a control IQ or some of these other algorithms is they you just enter carbs. And you don't talk about absorption time even like open APS and other systems, they have other algorithms, they tend to handle the dynamic carb things looks like a little bit better. You don't have to worry about how long the food is necessarily. I think that's that's pretty magical. But loop is, lets you kind of see all the pieces like it helps you understand, like, biologically what's happening.

Scott Benner 26:28
I think that that's really why I'm telling people about I always talk about glycemic index and glycemic load with people like you really need to understand the impact of the food. You know, it's how, how hard is it hitting? How long is it hitting? How long could it go? You know what I mean? Like, is this a? Is this a food that can only make it two rounds? Or is it going to go the full? You know, is it gonna go the full way? Is it gonna crush you? Is it gonna come out like Conor McGregor? And just like jump through the air and, you know, jam its face into yours? Or is it gonna go a little slower and you know, start more of a seductive dance with you before it starts the pummel you.

Kenny Fox 27:02
Yeah, like juice or candy or glucose tabs like I enter those 30 minute absorptions. I mean, they're probably more like an hour, but I do it as 30. So that loop doesn't try to overcorrect those. But I mean, generally speaking, like juices, kind of a hit quick and go away fast. You don't want to put a play introduces a two hour and she's just having it just for fun. Or having grapes by themselves. And that's it. Yeah, they don't last two plus hours and loop will end up making her golo kind of later that when you know because it just thinks the carbs are gonna last longer, and they don't.

Scott Benner 27:34
So let's talk about the basal rates then. And I guess we have to talk about them in two different ways. Like, do if you're using an auto Bolus pizza? And if you're not, so if all right, I don't know, though, it's funny. I have no

Kenny Fox 27:46
basal rates to just bazel Yes,

Scott Benner 27:48
I haven't changed ardens bazel rates, since we went to the auto mode, the only thing to understand is that is is how it makes up for stuff, it doesn't make up for bazel anymore, with anymore.

Kenny Fox 28:00
So I think this is where this is where I think this is where I start with most people that I end up helping out is uh, basically you know, is like switch your body needs some and you and Jenny have talked about that multiple times. So it's like if you didn't eat, or run around or whatever, and just kind of fasted all day and watch TV or something, you should be able to stay flat. Same with overnight. And so that's kind of the goal with Basal. And so but what I've found out get into like how you track it here in a second. But what I found is most people have like one bazel rate, maybe a couple but if you start with one, you end up able to see when those other changes show up. And I came to this just because on shots, Tessa was level that the basal rate and the insulin on board calculation worked all day, every day at any time. Day or night, it would always end up zero ended up being zero when she had no insulin on board. It was everything was done. So I just came from the mindset that she only had one basal rate, but I got the pump and start playing with it. And it just would mess up the math for tracking how long the insulin was working. So I just kind of stuck with one. But I found that with other people, it works pretty well to you just pick one. And then you can kind of see if you need another one. But you start with one I guess I just heard the other day that the sugar surfing guy, Dr. Ponder, I think sort of thinks the same thing. And what I think actually changes throughout the day, which we'll get to in a minute is sensitivity not bazel but when in a world of dumb pumps, all you have for automation is basal rate changes. So I think people are in one sense programmed to think oh, it's probably bazel but really what I think doctors and people are compensating for with base rates is often sensitivity changes not bazel but yeah, so Basal is is what is supposed to be but loop sees Basal as neutral as free insulin as zero doesn't track it. It trust that you said hey, I need this much insulin. Kind of as a baseline for my body. And so it doesn't really keep track of that. So if you have bazel too high, you may end up with the insulin on board number may show that you have zero or maybe even a negative number. And really, you're falling you actually have more insulin in your body than loop is aware of. But because I trusted you, I said, Hey, you said you need to this much insulin all day. So like, that's, that's what I'm giving you. So when you do an override, and you increase those bezels, it also can kind of complicate that calculation. So yeah, I think that's kind of the main thing is, is Basal is free, so you don't really track it. So what I do to test bazel, with closely if I find the search with like the tandem system as well, is you can test bazel without testing bazel in a closed loop. And it's pretty awesome, because you can look at that insulin board calculation, you know, assuming that interaction time is reasonable, anything six is a fine place to start six hours. But if you look at the insulin on board, overnight, you should get to kind of where you want to be in that correction range we talked about, and iob needs to be pretty close to zero and flat. If I obese, not zero, meaning like just bazel is all you have running at night, and you should be flat. If it's not zero, then something's wrong with your bazel. If you're constantly have positive insulin on board, like a bigger number more than zero, then your basal is probably too light, because it loop is constantly having to add more insulin to kind of push you down into your range. And if you're especially if you're above the range, you want to be insulin on board, that's a positive number, especially at night should always mean you should be falling. But if you're not, then something's not Luke doesn't know what it should know. And then the weird one that really throws people off is the negative insulin on board when you see a negative number in there.

Negative is is a deficiency of insulin, you and Jenny have talked about that a little bit before where if you turn your let's say your level when you wake up at 80, but someone wants to be at 100. When they Bolus they could turn their pump off, they could do a zero beta rate for a little while and you'll drift up. That just means your body has less insulin than it really needs just to hold you level. And that's on purpose. So negative insulin isn't a bad thing. But when you see negative insulin on board, you should always see you know, giving some room for sensor lag, you should see either right away or pretty close. Blood Sugar readings should start going up when you see a negative insulin onboard situation. If it's not going up when it's negative, then you're not representing the insulin properly in the body and loops gonna loop thinks you need more insulin you don't. So what happens oftentimes is people are falling, the blood sugar is falling and there's negative insulin on board means their bases are too strong. So as soon as you start curving up, let's say you treat a low loops like oh, yeah, I expected you to come up not knowing that you actually gave carbs. And so it's going to try and fill in that negative because what should work in this situation I talked about where you turn your pump off before breakfast, you actually can't just turn your basal back on, otherwise, you'll still keep drifting up because your body is missing the insulin, it needs to kind of maintain that balance. So loop tracks that negative amount how much you're missing. And it's going to fill it in for you to try to level you out. And then also correct for any, you know, upward momentum. So what ends up happening is you know, getting slammed back down, because you have too high of a bazel you have negative insulin on board and you're falling, and then you correct but don't tell loop about it. And then it's Oh, good, you're coming back out. Let me give you more to level you out and it's pushing you back down again. So you end up in this cycle overnight, we're constantly trying to bring someone up and lips pushing them back down because he thinks you're missing insulin, but you're really not. And that's what that negative insulin on board will tell you. And so you have to adjust your bazel. So that insulin on board is 00 means level, negative means up and positive means down, obviously, without food. And that will tell you so you can kind of scan your day and look for points in time where loops thinks you're kind of around zero and see what the behavior is of your blood sugar. And then you can know if your basal is too high or too low, and starting with a single basal rate will help with that because the insulin runs for four or five, six hours. So feel really high basal rate to catch a nighttime rise like most kids do. And then you cut it back later the insulin that you gave is still running you know until four or five in the morning and it's you're still gonna end up with this like negative iob and falling kind of situation. And it's not the not because your your little basal rates during those eight hours are are too heavy. It's because the heavier when you ran from like 10 to midnight, was probably a little bit too strong and it's just causing an impact later on the night. That was a lot but hopefully that makes sense.

Scott Benner 34:48
No, it doesn't. And I think it's important for people to understand the idea of like sensor like the CGM is reporting behind time a little bit.

Kenny Fox 34:55
A little Yeah.

Scott Benner 34:56
So by way of an example because you spoke there for A few minutes when you began speaking, Arden's Dexcom was telling me her blood sugar was 58. But it's not because she's had food in her for 35 minutes. Right. And so I'm not panicking. It's, even if it's, it's not 58. But let me jump to the end of the story, but it was stable at you know what I mean? So I know this food is now going to do what I expected to do, right? Like trust what you know is going to happen, it's going to happen as food went indoor, it's going to start impacting her as you were speaking, the Dexcom flipped over to 66. So obviously, her blood sugar didn't magically go from 58 to 66. In five minutes, it has been trending up. Like you said, it's now gotten two reports in a row to its to the text comms algorithms now gotten two reports in a row that it believes. So now it's going to start reporting it right. Exactly. Yeah. And so as soon as that happened, it took a little bit of more time for nightscout to know it. So I can kind of see it on a on a different screen, someone watching everything while we're talking for this explanation. As soon as nightscout knew her blood sugar was 66. It put her bazel right back on again. Like immediately, and now I shouldn't be right. And now in truth, this is the moment we should be bolusing that other insulin right now, whatever more insulin I believe she needs for her food. This is the time to put it in probably sooner even. But now for I can be certain with the data. I have backed it. Now's the time. But we're gonna let it go for a little bit just to see the loop does to let let it see what loop does. Now if she jumps from 66 to 90 next time or something like that. I'm bolusing right away. Oh, yeah, maybe even a little bit extra, right. But if she just drifts a little bit here, I'm going to be interested to see because the auto bolus is going to kick in because we only use seven units for something we told her that we told the loop and the loop believes needs 10 units. What's your suspend set up? 6060

Kenny Fox 36:55
Okay, yeah, so it will it could even start giving. That's why it turned the bazel back on. Okay.

Scott Benner 36:59
Right. Yeah, I used to have it at 55. But I she was getting low too much when it was 55. Where's yours? 70.

Kenny Fox 37:05
Okay, yeah, 70. Because again, bazel and curvaceous are locked into the base of the big one. And you got to make sure you you believe that loop will drop you the other big one will be sensitivity we get to but yeah, if you're, if you're not getting down where you want it to be like a lot of people will drop their suspend lower. And I think 60 or 65 is, is fine for the most part. But I find if I'm trying to push that kind of ad overnight, and lose my overcorrect a little and then I get woken up at my 70 alarm. So I just put the suspend a little higher so that mostly so I don't get woken up as often.

Scott Benner 37:38
I believe that I listen, I believe in our basal rates really well, like Arden got up this morning. 630 she didn't eat anything until, you know, just now. Right? And so and you know, she got down to 60 with Jim. So I believe in our basal rates. Perfect. Yeah. And overnight. She's, it's gorgeous overnight.

Kenny Fox 37:59
So I think what's nice about loop and that neutrally makes us all nicer people and talking about having tools is you have an insulin board calculator, right there. So you can see in nightscout, especially, but you can see on your phone too. It's called active insulin in the loop app, as you can objectively measure your basal rates, which is nice. It's not dislike, well, I think it's fine. It's you can at any point in the day, if you see zero and she's not level, then you can kind of question without the bezels right. And I think the other fun thing that comes into play is that idea of school for a lot of kids maybe makes them go up oftentimes, like stress or something maybe work for some people. Once you I'd like to try to tell people get your basal rate, like create a baseline where like to say, like weekends and not school will not work. So you know what normal life is so that you don't have to worry about crushing someone you know, on a weekday, if you can avoid it. And then you play with overrides the override feature increases your basal rate or decreases it however you set it. And use overrides for school and work that way. You can if you feel like maybe you're not as stressed at school or at work one day, and you'll end up meeting it you can just simply cancel the override and kind of go about your day and be fine. But if you need it, then it's there to use it and you don't have to keep fiddling with your settings every Sunday night or Friday night. Things like that.

Scott Benner 39:19
Okay, let's jump ahead here. So to insulin sensitivity now, yeah, it's funny. insulin sensitivity is wildly different for so many, you know, for everybody. Right? Ardennes during the day is 59. And overnight, it's more like 64. But I've spoken to people who have their sensitivity, like you know, it's 120 and so can you. I'll tell you how I think of insulin sensitivity and then please you tell me how you think of it and you know, etc. in my mind's eye, it's just sort of the amount of insulin it takes to impact me. You know, mean like just like this, what what's gonna knock me over? Like, you know, you can give me 59 and 59 will do what it's supposed to do. But if it was at 6565, wouldn't do it 65 would be like getting shoved by a six year old. But 50 nines, you know, like me pushing against somebody who's my, my weight, like, it's, it's the, and I know this is it's not it's not clear, because I'm never clear on insulin sensitivity, like, you know, I'm sure there's a really technical way to say it, I'm sure you're gonna say it in a second. But I find a lot of people get confused by it, and no more so than the idea that a lower number is more powerful.

Kenny Fox 40:39
So yeah, that's weird,

Scott Benner 40:41
right? So a lower No, it's a very basic mathematical idea. But still a lower number is more powerful. So my daughter, five 737 pounds, insulin sensitivity 59, during the day, your daughter, you know, much less. You know, wait, I would imagine

Kenny Fox 40:58
what's hers that? So she's her sensitivity during the day is about 200. And I would probably say realistically, it's probably about 225 250. So it's probably more sensitive. But I've looped dialed it down just a hair, because to make it behave a little more the way I'd like I use that as kind of a, an aggressiveness number to some degree to make loopback a little bit faster than maybe it would normally without causing so much of a low. Yeah, so sensitivity is yes, how much insulin it takes to move you a certain amount of points, your your blood sugars or how much insulin it takes to move you. So yeah, I think it's, it's, that's a good way to look at it.

Scott Benner 41:40
So how so I guess the next question is, and I want to talk about overrides more specifically, but the next question is this. Once I found we had Arden's settings close in loop, then I began to adjust them sort of like an equalizer on a 1991 rack system. Okay. Like I'm like, I don't know what treble point oh, nine is, but what happens if I push it up a little bit? Yeah. Right. Or what happens if I push this down a little bit like that? I, once I was close, then I could start fine tuning without knowledge, then I could start going correction range. Let me try 87 to 85, whoo, that was better. You know, you know, bazeley I wonder what 2.3 does versus 2.2. That kind of stuff. But starting out. You cannot adjust loop to ear? Did you know what I mean? Like it's just you have to start somewhere near? Near good. Somewhere near good. Right. And so my question is, do you know if I came to you today, and I was just like, guy on the street and I say, Kenny, hey, I really want this to work for my daughter. Do you know how to help somebody set this up? Like do you know how to go from scratch? Quick kidding. Add today, the dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor. You want to check it out. It's at dexcom.com forward slash juicebox. type that into your browser right now. If you're you know not good at typing, click on the link in your show notes. It's right there in your podcast player. There's notes in your podcast player, just find them and click last thing you could do is go to Juicebox podcast.com and click from there. All of these options are viable ways to get to the sponsors. While you're there, check out the Contour Next One blood glucose meter, go to Contour Next one.com there's a little button at the top, you can find out if you're eligible for an absolutely free meter. This meter is by far the most accurate one that my daughter has ever used in her entire time with Type One Diabetes. Lastly, if you'd like to see some lovely people doing wonderful things for people living with Type One Diabetes, check out touched by type one.org I'm doing you a favor. I'm shortening up all the ads today. You can do me a favor and click on the links dexcom.com forward slash juicebox Contour Next one.com touched by type one.org that's all I'm asking today. No big sell. Just go check them out. Look I'm done before the music it's like you owe me almost tears there's so much time left it's kind of weird, right? touched by type one.org helps people living with Type One Diabetes amazing organization. Contour Next One best blood glucose meter I've ever seen. Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor game changing technology for Type One Diabetes there. I said I was going to tell you more about it. Weird. Do you know how to help somebody set this up? Like do you know how to go? Yeah Rach

Kenny Fox 44:44
for Yeah, so it took a while a sensitivity was a weird one to wrap my head around to so the my process is look at basal rate, subtract iob. I go back to someone's graph if they've been running it for a little while. Helps I find closed loop is helpful, more helpful than an open Id be a little harder to see it on normal graph, but you could still probably get close. But I like to find how the neg makes sure that negative means up and positive means down and that they're kind of at their range, where they're supposed to be especially overnight. And then we just try to find what I call like that one magic bazel rate. And we pick one that works mostly overnight is easiest way to observe it, run that one all day. And then make adjustments from there we carb ratios and sensitivity sensitivity. I mean, it's so hard to like, really, I'm not going to stop my six year old and doing a sensitivity test that's even longer than a bazel test. So I once we get overnight solid iob, zero means flat, everything's dialed in, I just tell people, hey, turn your sensitivity more aggressive to a stronger a lower number, until you start to see that line that's fairly flat for you start to wiggle start to go up and down and go above your the range you set. And below that range, you set it to make sure it also goes below but doesn't go below, then it's um, you might still not have a strong enough bazel. But basically turn the sensitivity too strong to where you can see that it's obviously too strong and then kind of back it off a little bit. And that's kind of what I use for daytime ISF because I find that people are more sensitive during the day than they are at night. So you find what works overnight, make it too strong and back it off a notch. And the reason why people are more sensitive during the day I think is because growth hormones exists kind of overnight for everybody, me included, were growth hormones, I was reading some studies on this trying to figure out why this rise at night happens for my daughter that just kills me. So what I said earlier is that no matter how much I bolus her during those rises is IRB of zero was still zero. So the interaction time worked well. That seemed to indicate to me that she actually only had one bazel rate or not, it's crazy, intense rise period. So what I found is growth hormones don't make you go up necessarily, but they do make you more resistant sensitivity. But that means something else must also be pushing you up, which I've kind of found a correlation between how close dinner is to sleep or how heavy dinner is to sleep. And so it's probably just this weird digestion process you have when you're sleeping, that stretches out how long the carbs last, and the carbs kind of have a more of an impact because all these growth hormones released during your REM sleep cycles during the early hours of sleep. And so you have more growth hormone in your system at the beginning. So there's just more resistance there. So the only way to really model that and loop is to make the sensitivity, lower a lower number in those first hours of sleep. And then I sort of like ladder it softer and softer or a higher number as the night goes on to sort of mimic the idea that there'll be less growth hormone in the body. And so I might start with like a 200 during the day, and go all the way down to like an 80, which is less than half of what her sensitivity is, you know what, like nine or 10 o'clock when I know she's gonna be asleep, and then ratchet it back up. So you know, 115 131 6180 and then when she wakes up, it's I usually have around 200 or so. So and I found that to be helpful and to help Luke kind of semi automate and for some people automate those nighttime rises, but it's really not a bazel change as much as we're programmed to think, Oh, that's a rise, I need to get more bazel if you use increase bazel there instead of sensitivity, you may find that negative iob and falling kind of at three or four or 5am instead of just making a loop more aggressive because that sensitivity is really only comes into play when you're out of range. Do you that's kind of the cool part about sensitivity is if you're in your range at you know nine o'clock at night, and she's asleep, and great loop doesn't do anything. So if I made the ISF too strong, it's not a big deal. She's in range. But as soon as she's out of range and loop kicks in, you know, puts the pedal to the metal a little bit more. It could be an x faster.

Scott Benner 49:05
Yeah, it could it could be but oftentimes it's not there in those first hours. So it's, it's, as you mentioned, like how much insulin has taken knock you over. So it's but I think it varies throughout the night more than the day. But that's kind of how I approach sensitivity. It's interesting that just because your child is younger and growing, you're having the exact opposite experience night today than we are. Get like Yeah, a little bit. Yeah, when Arden's asleep, she just doesn't need. She needs less sensitivity, not by a lot, by the way, like listen to what you're doing, you're going from like, you know, in the hundreds to double digits and you're bounced around, we're really only moving between, like, you know, 59 and 65. Like it's not it's a pretty

Kenny Fox 49:48
tight tolerance. But how many basal rates Do you have during the day?

Scott Benner 49:51
Just one,

Kenny Fox 49:52
just one. Okay. Yeah, yeah, one during the day one at night. Yeah, I've seen that. If someone's not really going through a growth period I've seen unit with me too. So I wore a sensor for a few weeks. And I sort of like helped prove this theory out by, you know, all for the case of science, having a lot of ice cream before I went to bed, and I could see my blood sugar rise and sort of stay up and kind of in waves like kind of matching my sleep cycles, kind of stay up a little bit longer and take longer to come back down then if I didn't eat something right before I went to sleep, so I was able to sort of mimic the same process as my daughter, but unless eXtreme Scale one because I'm not type one and two. I'm not growing like you said the volume of growth hormone in my body is probably much less than someone who's actually growing. So the sensitivity will be different.

Scott Benner 50:39
We're growing just not in the same way.

Kenny Fox 50:40
So yeah, exactly. When you're having ice cream at you know, eating like a whole bunch of ice cream at 10 o'clock at night. That's Yeah, we're definitely growing that stuff not to be questioned, I guess

Scott Benner 50:49
I am pretty certain that I'll be wearing a Dexcom Pro in a little while.

Kenny Fox 50:55
So that I well, then you should for science, eat something really yummy before bed and see how that happens. I will be

Scott Benner 51:00
Yeah, I'm gonna be wearing the same thing. Like I just I was talking to Rick Doubleday the other day. And I said to him, when we got done, I was like, I'd love to wear a sensor for a while if I could, you know, to really understand, you know, better what I'm looking at. And

Kenny Fox 51:14
so I think Neil is fun is did this and you should eat something similar to what Arden does when she eats it. And you'll see the absorption time play out in both of you. Yeah, it'll look a little different. But you'll see the food stop at kind of the same time.

Scott Benner 51:28
That's exactly the stuff I'm excited to look at.

Kenny Fox 51:31
It's amazing. Yeah, we ate uh, you know, again, for science ate a breakfast sandwich from McDonald's. And it lasted a long time on those chicken ones. And, yeah, you could see kind of the initial carbs. And you can kind of see the sustained fat and protein in both of us. And actually, in one of those cases where we tried it, her blood sugar ended up way better than mine, on average, so. But it's fun. I do think

Scott Benner 51:53
there's many times where I'm doing a better job for art, and then my body's doing for me. Yeah, so interesting enough for art. And by the way, is her sensor went to 75. And then the next adjustment was only to 79. But it did just Bolus 1.15 units a little while ago, then the 79 jumped to 94, diagonal up

Kenny Fox 52:18
high. So you're above suspend, and it's like, Hey, I know you need more for the carb ratio. So it gave it to you. And it popped

Scott Benner 52:23
on like, so I'm gonna see if I can raise her with a text. If I can, I'm not gonna bother. But if she answers this text,

Kenny Fox 52:31
I mean, just take the recommended bullet, because all you're gonna ask her to do

Scott Benner 52:34
it, ask her if there's any insulin that's being recommended right now.

Kenny Fox 52:37
And you can actually you can try it hover over the loot pill with your mouse. And you can see at the very end of that little hover box that pops up, it'll tell you if there's a recommended bolus.

Scott Benner 52:48
Well, so the little loop thing I have right now says, See, I don't even understand this, the loop has put your

Kenny Fox 52:56
mouse over that box and you should see another box pop up.

Scott Benner 52:59
I only have it on my phone,

Kenny Fox 53:00
I do with my Okay, then tap this tap on the loop pill and you shouldn't need so you can refresh that page if it doesn't pop up right away. But p tap on the thing that has the loop put the number in the squiggly line, you shouldn't get a little hover box to pop up.

I don't know I said you need somebody to refresh it.

Scott Benner 53:18
It's my fingers too fat.

Kenny Fox 53:20
That can happen to a lot of pills. They're crammed together. little boxes just says loop device loop. You should see something like on the hover it'll tell you how long ago the Temp Basal that it's currently running insulin on board carbs on board. Predicted minimum and maximum.

Scott Benner 53:36
Let me go over to my iPad. Let me see if I can make that work. Yeah. Yes.

Kenny Fox 53:51
So bring it up on your computer and you can look at it and it's easier

Scott Benner 53:54
to figure out how to do that. I got I don't Yeah, I don't even remember how to bring it up on my

Kenny Fox 53:58
computer. I'm remember her sight. Are you kidding me?

Scott Benner 54:01
Wait, isn't it at the play here it is.

Kenny Fox 54:03
Roku app.com

Scott Benner 54:14
typing, which is always the best thing to do on a podcast. Yeah, people love it. And really, they're huge fans. Oh, here she is. She said what? Okay, so I'm going to ask her is the loop recommending any 1.8 do it. There you go. There we go.

Kenny Fox 54:48
Now it takes all of it instead of auto Bolus would just give 40% of that right. And then again,

Scott Benner 54:53
which it would likely do again the next time the CGM turned over correct. Yep. So Yeah, there you go. So when, listen, I you know, we're not going to be recording when this is all said and done. I'll remember what happened. I'll tuck in at the end. But look at what happened like Arden's a Urban's blood sugar has been right around at all morning five or six hours that she has been awake. She went to lunch, or she went to the gym, her blood sugar went to 60 she just ate a bagel grapes, puzzles, a chocolate chip cookie, popcorn. And a What did I say? tangerine? Something like

Unknown Speaker 55:32
that. Clementine. Yeah, time. Right.

Scott Benner 55:34
And she ate that stuff. It's 1255. Right now here. And that conversation began. Back here.

Unknown Speaker 55:46
Noon.

Scott Benner 55:48
Yeah, two minutes after 12. So it's, it's, it's, it's almost an hour later. And we have gracefully gone from 60 to 95. And even if she makes it to 150, which I don't think she's going to normally she wouldn't be coming out of a low, we would have Pre-Bolus sooner, and this wouldn't be happening like this even. But this is astonishing for the situation. You know, but if you don't understand how this thing works, none of that's gonna matter. Like it? Yeah, for sure. It's damn near impossible. And so, but I also think that for those of you who aren't considering any kind of closed loop system, whether it be loop or tandem or horizon, when on the PI puts it out, or you know, whatever else. Understanding what Kenny and I are talking about here today will help you make better informed decisions even without a an algorithm, I think, because just watching and you heard Kenny allude to it earlier, just staring for a little bit and watching what happens is such a teaching thing. And when I watch Lupe, take bazel away, give bazel back make a small bump with now with the the automatic bolus or before the automatic bolus when it would kind of ratchet up the bazel. It was fascinating to watch loop take bazel from like 2.5 and make it seven but only for like eight minutes and then bring it back again. And like I was like, Oh my gosh, this is really I'm learning a lot from watching that, you know,

Kenny Fox 57:11
yeah. And like I said, we had slightly better numbers in terms of standard deviation and a one C and time and range. When we were on shots, because of the same principles that once I figured out how to apply it to loop. Yeah, it'll just make your life easier. Being able to track insulin on board is really kind of magical in terms of figuring out your basal rate and just knowing when, when the drop stops, you just got to know and how much to correct for and, and all that it's just it's really empowering or most people are just kind of, again, being dynamic about how you talk about in with juicebox. But like at the same time, if you kind of know when it's going to stop, you can be aggressive and be more aggressive because you know how much insulin is working? And if you overdid it, you know how much to correct for a lot more precision in that approach.

Scott Benner 57:56
I think that loop is going to represent, you know, I shouldn't even say look, I think that algorithms in general, but for everybody, but for us specifically, I think it's going to represent a mid fives a one C. Just base I think so what I've seen and what I know.

Kenny Fox 58:13
Yeah, as I tell people like if they're in the sevens now like if you can just get the settings right and moderately Pre-Bolus then, and don't learn not to overcorrect, you'll get sixes pretty easily it shouldn't be that that complicated. And that's what I'm seeing with some of these people, once we figure out especially like, people that have their kids and they get really stressed at school and just need a lot more insulin these overrides work super well for that. And then, and then they ended up having, you know, like I Oh, there's one person I'm working with now that was in kind of a seven range and is now looking trending toward kind of a 6.2. You know, and and they just have even before that before their stats changed just by making some of the changes I talked about. They just have more, it's more predictable. And now it's not as crazy, you know, at least when they're high kind of know why it happened. So. So that's pretty great.

Scott Benner 58:59
It's amazing. Last thing I want to bother you about is overrides. And I don't know that I think about them correctly. So let me just tell you how I think about them. And you correct me if I'm wrong? Sure. I, I know I don't understand exactly what they do. But when I said an override for art and whether it's a decrease like you know, instead of it 100% of, you know settings, I go to 80% of settings or 50%. That's a decrease in insulin power. Or vice versa. If you go to 120 It's a 20% increase, like that kind of thing. Is it just an across the board increase? Is it literally like the correction range stays the same? The suspend threshold stays the same. But this is an increase of bazel rate. insulin sensitivity is the heart rate show carbery show is that in

Kenny Fox 59:49
Yeah, yeah. And the kind of the tricky thing about using them is that once you turn one on any like entries like carbon trees in that time have that Change applied to them. So if you used too strong of one, and entered carbs or a low one, some people get a little too extreme and they go, Oh, they're falling. So I turn an override on, which is not the time each and an override on but they'll do like a 20% or something really small and then enter like lunch. Well, then it thinks that lunch needs 20% of the insulin, your carb ratio, like 80%, less than what you'd need. And so there's no way to really go back and fix that. So you, you'd have to basically know that that happened and add 80% more carbs to that carb entry to get something equivalent. That's a tricky part. But yeah, an override changes everything, which is good and bad. I think there's a lot of cases where you only want to change one or two things, but because bazel and insulin on board, that bazel calculation is so important. I try to tell people that the override is should only be used in cases when bazel actually changed. Otherwise, you end up throwing off the math if you use like if you're stuck high and you're frustrated, and you use a 200% override 100% more than normal, you're doubling everything. Later on, you're probably gonna end up loops gonna think you're gonna land and you're not because you actually have more insulin in your body than you told it because all of a sudden, you told that your basal rate doubled. Yeah. And so yeah, you end up with a problem where lube would have landed you if the math had been right, but you won't, because you lied to it for a little while. So

Scott Benner 1:01:24
the only time the only time I really use it is sleeping it. So like I said, Arden's like 1.4 overnight cheese 2.5 during the day, that 2.5 kicks in at 7am. So usually she's drifting, I have Arden pretty consistently drifting to 70, when she wakes up in the morning for school at seven. So if I set an override at 6am, I set it about 50. So about 50% of power, this, that's enough to get in front of the drift, so she doesn't drift to 70. And so that when 7am comes, and the insulin sensitivity goes from 64 to 59. And more importantly, I think in that situation, that bazel bazel jump up, it keeps the bazel back at overnight,

Kenny Fox 1:02:06
and yeah, 50 percents about what your nighttime is compared to your daytime, right.

Scott Benner 1:02:09
And that's and that's how I do it. Now, the longer she sleeps, the less she needs. So if she's just going to sleep till nine o'clock that works, but if at nine o'clock, she's still sleeping, it maybe has to go to 40 or 30. Like you really, because at that point really consider what's happening. She has not had food, and she's not having any like body impacts on her blood sugar. Now for sometimes eight 910 a dozen hours like in a really sleeping in situation. You keep taking it away and taking away. The key is that when you wake up, it's got to go right back on. And when you Bolus, like you said before, it's not just for the carbs. It's not it's and it's not unique to Pre-Bolus still, you're not just Pre-Bolus for the carbs. You are you're also have to replace all that deficit that comes behind because basically, it's a paper tiger at that point, right? Yeah. Like any food you take in is just going to overwhelm you because there's just no insulin happening in your body. That was just enough insulin to basically keep, you know, like, like a, you know, a corpse from blood sugar going low. It's just not a living person. Right then nothing's happening inside of her in this scenario.

Kenny Fox 1:03:18
Is Arden have a drop in the morning before she wakes up? And then like a rise after she wakes up? Typically? No, not at all.

Scott Benner 1:03:25
Okay, that's good. You see that sometimes my settings take care of all of that. Okay, yeah, um, it used to be before loop. She'd wake up in the morning at seven. When her Basal went up with Bolus in the morning with Bolus, the rise.

Kenny Fox 1:03:40
Like she does have that rise. Yeah, she

Scott Benner 1:03:42
has it but we don't see it any longer. It doesn't actually happen. Because we're basically constantly like I said, you know, we've been talking for a while, like I said a long time ago, because I'm thinking about now as before, not now for later. And yeah. So I'm, I'm a head of that I Pre-Bolus. spikes I Pre-Bolus rises, if you've heard me talk about, you know, like, extended bonuses. People talk about extended Bolus is one way the way I talk about them is Pre-Bolus in the food, and then Pre-Bolus thing, the spike. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, just always. It's a time travel movie, you know, what's going to happen in the future. You're just you're just always bettan you know, on the right team to win because you've got the almanac, and you know, who's gonna win? So

Kenny Fox 1:04:25
yeah, so when I use overrides, it's really like bazel changes. So what what's kind of fun with overrides if you have your basals dialed in, like I said, using the IP math, and typically people have the same bazel overnight as during the day but not always. If it's good, then what should happen with overrides and a lot of people don't experience when their settings especially bazel is not right. Is this doesn't work but if you can look overnight, and my daughter typically runs around 80 to 90 overnight, and if for some reason she's not if she's hovering around 100 or Hundred and 15 with some positive insulin on board, that means that her, her insulin needs have shifted maybe just for the day maybe because she's sick, I don't know. And I'll just run an override of about 1020 30% increase. So 120 or something like that. And then I'll run it. And, and I'll leave it on for breakfast and breakfast is sort of like the maker break like was this for reals or is just temporary. And if she doesn't go low from an increased override at breakfast, then I run that override all day long until I see her until I see that negative iob and blood sugar falling sort of situation again, where things sort of settled back at over. So I just roll over out of bed, look at nightscout see where she was at. If I get woken up with a 120 or 130 alarm overnight, and Luke can't keep her under that number, then I know her insulin needs have gone up a significant amount like she's probably sick. So she probably needs like a 130 or 140 or more to and then I just run that all day long. Again, checking it with breakfast. And and that's how we kind of get mostly normal days like I get ahead of it, I see the increase happen overnight, that shift sort of happens in that two to 4am timeframe, most of the time. And I just put an override on the compensate because her basal needs went up, but I don't think it's going to stick around for the next few weeks. And it usually lasts a day or two, sometimes a week if she's actually sick. But I always use that overnight as a measure to say how much more or less does she need. And use an override and I don't really mess with my base settings often because they usually work occasionally, if you get up to like 150% override, because she's sick. Sometimes the carb ratio has to be weakened a little bit because doesn't scale up quite perfectly. But I'd say 9090 plus percent of the time, it's just a 1020 30% override for the day, and then the day looks normal again. And then I watched the numbers overnight and wait for it to shift again. And then I cancel it and then we go back to normal settings. And it's it's really kind of magical to be able to see the patterns. Once you get some consistency. You can see those patterns coming and get ahead of them. Yeah,

Scott Benner 1:07:03
well, listen, I can't tell you how thrilled I am that you found the podcast and and reached out to me because I think that I listened, I edit these shows, obviously. And then I listened to them for sound. So I end up hearing them two or three times. But I'm gonna listen to this one dozen times, because this was a terrific conversation. I just I can't thank you enough. And can I can I ask you, right here, start thinking about how we could take a person who knows nothing about any of this? How do you explain this to them? Like that's the thing. That's next, right? Because you and I are involved. You know, and everyone listening, you know, is involved with their kids, hopefully, but everyone wants to not be and they don't want to burden their children with teaching them all of this like is, is an algorithm based insulin pump ever going to be? You know, I guess skinned in an app where you don't need to understand what's happening behind the pretty picture on the front. Like I hope so.

Kenny Fox 1:08:03
I think the hard part right now is the settings have to be like that's why I think control IQ seems to be working so well compared to like a Medtronic where it's trying to figure out your settings. But then control IQ just trust your settings. So you have to if you can get it close, then you'll get good results. Just like loop if you can get it close, you'll get safe and good results. But I think the real trick will be how can could that Medtronic idea of just figuring it out for you ever work? I'd love it. I'd love for that to be true.

Scott Benner 1:08:30
Yeah. Okay. All right. Okay, I'm gonna ask you to hold on for one second. I'm a thank you first and, and I'm gonna ask you because I'm gonna ask you a question. I'm not gonna let anybody hear the answer to I just like the screw with the episodes. So. Alright, guys, Kenny's done, but I'm not done with Kenny. I think it's pretty fair to say that Kenny will be back on the podcast at some point. Kenny could be Jenny loopy. loopy Jenny. Kenny could be loopy Jenny. Kenny Jenny. Kenny loopy Jenny Jenny loopy Kenny. Kenny Jenny late. I'll work on it let you know. huge thank you to Dexcom the Contour Next One blood glucose meter and touched by type one. Please go to touch by type one.org dexcom.com forward slash juicebox or Contour Next one.com. To find out more about the sponsors. Continued gratitude to the community that has put so much time and effort into the DIY loop. Talk to you again soon.


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