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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: Jenny Smith CDE

#224 Diabetes Pro Tip: Mastering a CGM

Scott Benner

Scott and Jenny Smith, CDE share insights on type 1 diabetes care.….

I am thrilled to welcome Jenny Smith, CDE back to the show. Jenny will be joining us for an extended series of conversations that focus solely on the management ideas that we discuss on the podcast.

Jennifer holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Human Nutrition and Biology from the University of Wisconsin. She is a Registered (and Licensed) Dietitian, Certified Diabetes Educator, and Certified Trainer on most makes/models of insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring systems. You can reach Jenny at jennifer@integrateddiabetes.com.

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 everyone and welcome to Episode 224 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's episode is the seventh installment of my diabetes pro tip series with the CDE Jenny Smith. Jenny has been living with Type One Diabetes since she was a child. So she has first hand knowledge of the day to day events that affect life with type one. Jennifer holds a bachelor's degree in human nutrition and biology from the University of Wisconsin. She is a registered and licensed dietitian, a certified diabetes educator and a certified trainer on most makes and models of insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring systems. Besides helping me here on the podcast, sometimes Jenny works for integrated diabetes services. And if you like the way Jenny thinks about diabetes, and you'd like to hire her yourself, you can do that. Go to integrated diabetes comm there's also a link in the show notes where you can email Jenny directly. As always, this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by Omni pod Dexcom and dancing for diabetes. There are links in your show notes and at Juicebox podcast.com for all the sponsors. But if you'd like to go directly to them, you can go to my omnipod.com forward slash juicebox dexcom.com forward slash juicebox or dancing the number for diabetes.com.

Please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise and to always consult a physician before making any changes to your medical plan or becoming bold with insulin.

This is the seventh installment in my series called diabetes pro tips. And if you have not heard episodes, one through six, please stop this one. Now go back and start at the beginning. These pro tip episodes are designed to work in Congress with each other, you should listen to them in order. However, if you're all caught up, sit back and relax and get ready to listen to Jenny Smith and I talk all about continuous glucose monitors. And as you've become accustomed the pro tip series come out in blocks of three. Right now there are two other installments available. eight and nine. They're called bumping nudge and the perfect bolus.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 2:24
What's on our agenda today

Scott Benner 2:26
we are going to talk about continuous glucose monitors.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 2:30
It's a big topic

Scott Benner 2:31
it is right.

So I tell a story that I think is going to fit here in this episode. We were in my daughter's endocrinologist visit a long, long time ago, probably a decade ago. And the nurse practitioner asked me Are you going to get one of these CGM Xers. And that's how new the whole idea was. And I said, I don't know what you're talking about, you know. And so she begins to tell me a story about this 17 year old kid in the practice, who loves m&ms but can't seem to eat them without a spike. So he gets the dexcom, which I think back then would have been the seven plus maybe 10 years ago is that the first one with a

Jennifer Smith, CDE 3:14
seven seven. I know that in 2006 is when I got my first CGM and the seven was on the market, along with whatever came with Medtronic and then Abbott's navigator had come out. And that's actually the first PBM that I had, and I loved it. It was unbelievably accurate.

Scott Benner 3:33
Yeah, I remember that one too.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 3:34
Yeah. So it probably was a seven when you are.

Scott Benner 3:37
There it is. So she's telling us about this thing called Dexcom. I don't know what it is. I don't know what she's talking about the the letter CGM mean nothing to me. Right? Chinese, right. I just I was like, it could have been any language except English. I didn't know what she was talking about. But then she tells me this story. And she says that the boy gets the glucose monitor. And he goes home to the grocery store and buys this little single serving packs of m&ms. But he grabs seven of them. And the first day he goes home and he eats the m&ms as he always would. He puts in his insulin as he always would. And he watches his blood sugar go up. And it kind of stays up after that. So the next day, he thought, oh, okay, I must need more insulin. So it gives himself more insulin in his blood sugar goes up less. So the third day he thought he had it fixed. He's like, this is it. I just need more but give himself more. He barely goes up at all, but then he crashes low later. So the kids like Okay, so the next day a little sooner, a little less, a little more. he messes around back and forth, back and forth with us. And then she looks at me, I'll never forget the look on her face. Because she was astonished, right? And she goes, I saw his graph. He put his insulin in, ate the candy and his blood sugar never moved. And she's telling me a story about that. And all I can think in my mind was well if that's possible with that, then that's possible with anything. Like that's what I left with that feeling of like there's information coming back to me They can do that. That's amazing. Because I used to be one of those people. We'd go into the, I don't really show them the pump anymore. But we used to go in and they download your data. They look at, you know, your boluses and all this stuff and where your blood sugar's were and she'd say to me, Hey, you tested she, you know, RNA at lunch at noon, you test at 1230. She's like, why would you do that? And I said, Well, don't you want to know what's happening? Like, I want to know what's happening. So it was a number of years later that she she said back to me, she was I realized, now prior to you having a glucose monitor, she's like you were doing it yourself. Like you were trying to act as a glucose monitor. You were figuring out what was happening, which made sense to me back then,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 5:39
my finger sticks prior to CGM, and on average, were about 14 a day,

Scott Benner 5:45
I'd have to say that's where we were to,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 5:46
because I literally similar as you, I wanted to know where things were not only before, but especially after because it's a learning piece. Yeah, just like the m&m, it's how did this work or not work? And what do I need to do to make sure that it works the next time because I like this right? Or like to do this kind of exercise or whatever it is.

Scott Benner 6:07
I was so amazed. Just doing that just you know, it Fried my mind back then like to test and go, but but she went to 300. And then 45 minutes later, she was 340. But then she fell and like all that stuff. It was it was interesting information. It was valuable, but it wasn't enough. Right. Right. Like it was it wasn't enough to make sense, at least for me, I couldn't make sense of it still. Could

Jennifer Smith, CDE 6:28
you literally when you do finger six, then you have to do the connection of the dots yourself. Yeah. And I couldn't do nothing in between.

Scott Benner 6:35
I couldn't make that leap. I just couldn't figure out what like, like, what you're like those gaps. Like I couldn't figure out what it was. And it's not Jurassic Park, I couldn't just use frog DNA to fill in the gaps. Right? Because you see the gap. You see what happens? And they're they're, you know, they're making babies by themselves. And it's just it's not good. But you don't want to fill the data in with something unknown is what I'm getting at. So I did as best I could. I heard her story. Oh, my goodness, I ran to get a CGM. You know, we got the Dexcom right away. I can still remember sitting in that we have the endos office, right. And the nurse practitioner put it on for the first time and Arden didn't like it. And I remember breaking my heart. Like I remember thinking like, oh, god Did that hurt. You know, and and now, you know, with the G six Arden Arden honestly says like, I can't even I don't feel it at all right? Yeah, it just it's but back then, you know, there she was, gosh, I don't know, four or five years old, right? So I tell you every week go to dancing for diabetes calm and you really should support them and check them out on Facebook and Instagram and everything. And a lot of you do, which I appreciate. But I just wanted to do more for them. So in May, I'm actually going down to speak at one of their events, but we were trying to figure out a way that I could help them, you know, fundraise. Here's what we decided dancy for diabetes and I have teamed up to give away to not only the people attending the conference, but to you the listeners to the Juicebox Podcast, an opportunity to speak with me. So if you would like a chance to chat with me one on one I'll be conducting 245 minute phone calls or Skype, you know FaceTime, whatever you got, as well as one big one hour call. That includes a 30 minute follow up. So there's three calls in there to 45 minute calls. One one hour call that includes a 30 minute follow up. That's three opportunities to ask me anything you want. Talk about whatever's on your mind. So while I'm at the dancing for diabetes event on May 18, I'm actually going to choose the winners at random before I leave the conference. To have your name included in this opportunity go to dancing for diabetes.com and click on the donate today button between now and may 17. There's a suggested donation of $10. But I don't think dancing for diabetes is going to get upset if you donate more. And all you have to do is be sure to mention juicebox in the notes of your donation. Those of you who do not have internet access, although I don't know how you would get this podcast without it. Or if you have an inability to make a donation you can mail your name to dancing for diabetes go to their website for their contact information. I hope to see everyone at the conference in Orlando but if you can't make it this really is a wonderful way to pick my brain. We can talk about the Avengers movie or Brexit, whatever you want. Even you know diabetes. There she was four or five years old, this little dress and she's so like sitting up on the table and trying to be tough and everything and oh, and it wasn't good. But we stuck with it because of what I was getting back from it. I just found it to be amazing. And now today, today I think that if you're listening to this podcast and is of any value to you, I have to give half the credit to the Dexcom and the other half of it on the pod like I I took those two tools and figured out how to use them on with them

Jennifer Smith, CDE 9:59
but you also I'd have to give myself a big part of that credit because you took tools. It's like any kind of tool, you could have a hammer as one of the simplest tools that there is. And if you don't put it to use, it's a great tool, but it doesn't do anything else for you. Except that they're,

Scott Benner 10:17
you're very kind. I was avoiding saying something nice about myself. But let's do that for a second. But let's, let's translate it out to the people listening. My goal with this podcast is just to be your MLM story, right? Like, I want you, I want to hand you off tools that you then take home and learn how to be professional with right, I'm not, I'm not gonna stand with you forever, Jenny can't come to your house, right? But we're gonna, we're gonna throw this.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 10:41
Anytime

Scott Benner 10:42
that somebody said to me once, can you come live with me? I started thinking there might be a number or I'd say yes to that. But I don't know what it is exactly. How much would it cost for me to abandon my family? Guys, I'm leaving. But but but seriously, I genuinely mean that, like you, you're going to get these tools. You learn how to use them in situations. And before you know it, they work in more and more, what you would have called complex or difficult situations is exactly the same thing. When people come to me and say, Sure, this is great. But how does this work during hormonal time, or during a growth period during illness or during You know, when your daughter's playing softball, I always say the same thing exactly the same way.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 11:21
This tool makes me more comfortable, of course, right? Especially when I mean, we talked already about insulin. And it's actually I mean, this tool shows you not only effective food, but more. So how to be more comfortable with insulin use.

Scott Benner 11:38
Yeah. So not unlike the first time I thought about an insulin pump. And while everyone else was yelling, oh, you won't have to inject so much. I was thinking, Oh, I could manipulate the basal insulin. Like that seemed like the exciting part to me. And we've CGM and you probably have heard people say this before if you have considered a glucose monitor. But the most exciting thing about a CGM isn't the number that it shows you. I'm sitting here now Arden's blood sugar 75. She got insulin for lunch, I'm going to find out when 47 minutes ago, she was 9547 minutes ago when we put the insulin in. She's 75 now. So that's comforting to see that she 75. But what you don't hear me talking about when I tell you that is that there was a moment when she was 89 diagonal down and she was drifting down. But she wasn't falling that fast. I could see how quickly she was falling. That's the information from the CGM. That's just mind blowing. Sure, she's going down. But she's going down at a speed I'm comfortable with based on the food that I know is going in, because that battle is about to start really happening that's really going to kick in and the second. I love that she's drifting down at that moment, because you know, when lunch hits her, I like like, you know, we've talked about before, like the insulin to have momentum. Right? If you think it's about the number you're misunderstanding the CGM. If you think about the m&m story, you have to know it's about timing and amount. It's about speed and direction. Right? Like, which way is my blood sugar moving? And how fast is it going? When you know that it's everything? It's the difference between treating a 75 blood sugar and leaving it alone. So I can see right now Arden's blood sugar is steady, which means I want you because the trendline is horizontal, and her arrow is probably horizontal. And that arrow is still telling you something, right? Like even being horizontal, it's telling you we're steady and Dexcom gives you the breakdown. What that means steady could still mean plus or minus a point every five minutes. But great. You don't I mean,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 13:56
but it's happening so. So slowly at that horizontal arrow, they usually say that it's less than a point a minute. Right? And so and that's where to bring in that that angle there. Oh, that you saw with the 80 something blood sugar. I mean, had it been angled up or angled down. It's still the same rate of change, right? It's about one to two points per minute. Yeah,

Scott Benner 14:17
yeah, it's it right. And so when people talk about, Scott, I don't know I don't understand how you don't count carbs. So here's a here's a way I don't count carbs. Sure. I go historical. I look at a plate and I say I think this is 10 units, right? But Arden had pancakes this weekend. Big homemade not measured pancakes. And I have a feeling that pancakes are going to be 12 units. ish. So I double her bazel rate for an hour and a half. 15 minutes before she gets the pancakes. Her blood sugar is already 78 then she's coming out of bed 10 minutes ish before the food starts. I do the 12 unit Bolus but I take one unit that I've added from the bazel. Right, so now it's an 11 unit bolus, I extended out 80% right away 20% over an hour. Now I'm creating kind of like that blanket of insulin like we talked about. Now, if I get it wrong, I adjust. The most times I expect by getting it wrong means I won't even be aggressive enough. And I'll have to come back and bump it down again. When I see a diagonal up arrow, 30 minutes after pancakes, I say to myself, ooh, I messed this up. Maybe I shouldn't have extended the bolus, or maybe I should have put more up front. But anyway, I'm going to bump that arrow back down again, in this situation last weekend. I was so aggressive that I had to bail on the Temp Basal rate. And so about 45 minutes after Arden ate, she was 70, which was fantastic. But I was like, I still have insulin going. I don't need any more clearly. So we cancelled the Temp Basal. Right. And she rode low for ever. I mean, it was great. 85 like right in there.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 16:01
Right. healthy. That's not low. That's right. healthy. She wrote health lower

Scott Benner 16:06
than you. Yeah, of course. I definitely misspoke. They're lower than you would expect after pancakes. Yep. But but at a great blood sugar. Because I was able to use what the CGM was telling me and what the CGM was telling me Was she was starting to drift lower from like 90 and I and I read that drift as these pancakes are through her now to enough of a degree that we shouldn't be going down anymore. Right. All right. So I bail on the Temp Basal. I don't shut her Basal off, I just go back to the regular base. All right. So we're going along like that for hours. I mean, hours and hours. Now there's nothing. There's nothing now I know the insulins gone from the pancakes. Now I know the pancakes are definitely out of our body. And at some point, that arrow kind of diagonals down a little bit. And we were getting ready to go out to the mall, her and her friend. So I said to her, Hey, take your vitamins, the little gummy vitamins, they must have like six carbs and she pops her vitamins in, we get in the car, the arrow kind of bangs back up a little bit again, right in that 75 area. So we get to the mall. And I'm like, Okay, I'm gonna ride this out to see what happens. Like, I'm not panicking here. But we were there for about 20 minutes or so. And I wasn't sure if like the excitement of the shopping was gonna make her go up or not. And it didn't she was walking around. And my wife and I left her alone. Went did something else and I text her at some point. Hey, I think you should shut your Basal off for a half an hour. And she did. And we stayed right at like, at the whole time she was shopping without the CGM. There's just in my opinion, I don't know how to make any of that happen. Like maybe there's a way. But if there is a way you're listening to the wrong podcast, because I can't quite figure it out. Right, right. So right. I think those CGM are absolutely stunning. I want to know how you talk about using a glucose monitor with with your patients.

I want to know how you talk about using a glucose monitor with with your patients.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 18:08
One of the big things I usually say when people are really either considering one or they've been using one for a long time, but they've may not really be using it to their benefit. Let's say they're looking like you kind of alluded to just the number, right? What's the number? What's the number? They're not learning from it, because there certainly is some optimization when you start using a continuous monitor. But of any form of technology. I might have said this before. I mean, if I were to have to choose between a pump or a CGM, I would say please let me keep my CGM. Right, right. Because even then, if I had to go back to multiple daily injections, I can micromanage that as long as I know the direction of where things are headed. I can you know, and with a pump, then it just brings in more precision. So using a CGM, along with a pump is a another huge beneficial tool, you know, to management. So I guess as far as that it's really helping people to learn what is what's the benefit of that trend that they're seeing? And I think, in the end, many people I find, tend to overreact to the trend too. And you know, oh, my goodness, I you know, things are going up or going down. Well, you do have to make you have to make some considerations within that trend then too, because Have you just eaten? Is there a load of insulin here? Have you just exercised all of those variables that could be there? there a reason for some of that Trent? that trend just like the guy with the m&ms, right. He knew something was going on with his m&ms. He didn't want to be high, but he's like, awesome. I'm going to use this and fiddle with it and figure it out. So you know, CGM can give you that figuring piece that you don't have with finger sticks alone. I mean, you know, again, doing a million finger sticks before I actually had a seat. GM per day, I was still missing all of the pieces in between I missed I was missing. When did it start to rise? Or when did it start to fall? Yeah, I know that I'm like 40 points higher now than I was after I ate my meal. But why and where did the rise actually start? Right. So those are some of the biggest pieces. And I think getting people over the over the overreaction to the trending is something, it's hard for many people to be able to try to say, okay, things are rising. You ate Now, let's do some self experimentation. Let's see. You know, is this happening today, around 80% of your most common foods, which most people have about 20 to 25 foods that are pretty common for them to eat over and over. Use your CGM to your advantage that's 85% of your management then is figuring out and that's the reason that you have outside of not, let's say carb counting in the real sense of doing it. You have a sense just based on the meal because you've done it so much. You can see. This should probably be about 12 units, or that's more about five units. I mean, Ginger actually does the same thing. She doesn't really carb count. Truly she's like this green apple that I eat every morning with peanut butter takes two units. Yeah, you know. And using a CGM, then I think that's the biggest thing for management is the figuring that it allows

Scott Benner 21:38
Yeah, so I think that you hear a lot of people in the beginning talk about like that anxiety right? There was a huge concern in the beginning of CGM, a lot of old school people in the in the diabetes space for like, this is gonna make people crazy. They're just going to stare at that thing all the time. And that probably did happen to some people. But again, it's it's like I say all the time, like if you're looking at what's happening to your blood sugar and think of it as a mistake. That's your mistake, right? It should be like let me experience this. Let me see what this is. Let me see what happens when I put the phone in here versus in there. And that quickly died down I you quickly heard even some of the more ardent I don't know what to call them. But naysayers calm down after a while, you know, saw the value in it. I thought the most important thing was to explain to people that it's not just an alarm for when you're allowed. And I use that phrase in anytime I speak somewhere on this podcast. I say, look, if you're looking at your CGM as a don't die alarm, you're making a huge mistake. It is it is the it is the very least of what it does. And so I mean, it's cool that it tells you Oh my god, oh my god, your blood sugar is getting really low really fast. That's amazing. Don't get me wrong. It's gonna it's gonna

Jennifer Smith, CDE 22:48
turn one of those alarms off that it's always there, no matter how much you hate that, that noise. It's,

Scott Benner 22:53
it's there. The FDA tells them look under 55 we're gonna bang and we're gonna bang an alarm in people's ears. There's nothing they can do about it. And fair, fair, right? But if that's what you're looking at it as it's incredibly short sighted when people say to me all the time like Arden's tolerances are. Her low alarm is set at 70. And on my phone, her high alarm is 120 on her phone, it's 130. So I like to have a if she's raising up, I like to be able to think about it for a couple of minutes before I involve her in the conversation. I don't want her beeping at 120, right. But people say oh, it must be all the time. It must be beeping constantly. And I'm like, no, it never beeps. And that's actually how I don't worry, I'll get back to my thought about moving down the high Dexcom alarm after these messages from the pod and Dexcom. Let's start first with on the pod. The tubeless insulin pump that Arden has been using since she was four years old over a decade now. Choosing Omni pod all of those years ago was and remains to this day one of the best diabetes decisions that my family has ever made. And I'd like to tell you why. With Omni pod, you do not have to disconnect for activity. With a tube pump, you'll have to take your pump off to play soccer or to go swimming to take a shower, you know, and if you're an adult, you're having adult time. You might want to take it off for that too, but not on the pot on the pot is always with you. And why is that important? Because you're always getting your basal insulin. It's a completely under appreciated idea. But when you take your pump off for a half an hour, an hour, two hours to go play a sport, you're not getting insulin. And sure while you're running around, it might seem like oh, this is fine. But eventually you're going to experience a high blood sugar from that. Getting a constant flow of background insulin is incredibly important. And only on the pod allows you to wear their device throughout your life without having to take it off for any of the you know, activities that you enjoy so much. Want you to go to Miami pod.com Ford slash juicebox. Or to the links in your show notes or at Juicebox podcast.com. You can do that today. And absolutely for free. And with zero obligation on the pod, we'll send you out a pod experience, get a free demo of the pod that you can actually hold field touch, keep it in your hand, see what it is, and then wear it, you get the test drive it before you buy, it's a non working pot, don't worry, it doesn't have insulin in it or you know, a candle or anything like that. But it's an exact replica of what you'll be wearing. So you can feel the weight and the size and decide for yourself, if you'd like to try it, my omnipod.com forward slash juicebox. Now on to Dexcom. The Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor is without a doubt, the Cadillac of continuous glucose monitors. Everything you hear me talk about on this podcast is predicated on the data and information that comes back from ardens Dexcom g sex, we don't need a big long ad for this dexcom.com forward slash juice box get started right now. You need to see what direction your blood sugar is going and how fast it's getting there. And you want to be able to see your loved ones remotely with an Android or iPhone. Come on dexcom.com forward slash juicebox get going today. If you've been hesitant, please trust me when I tell you there's absolutely no reason to not move forward with Dexcom. There are links for all of the advertisers at Juicebox Podcast comm or in the show notes of the podcast app that you're listening to right now. I implore you don't wait another second. Go to Bolus with Omni pod. Get the information you need from Dexcom and support dancing for diabetes.

It must be beeping constantly. And I'm like no, it never beeps. And that's actually how the kind of this way that we talked about doing this here. This being fluid. It makes diabetes a very much a very much a smaller part of your day because you're not thinking about it. Because when it does be, you know, oh, it's trying to leave this tight range. I'll just bump it back down again. Right when you put that threshold up at 400, because you're like, I don't want to hear this thing beep. Well, that means that by the time you think to look at it two hours later in your blood sugar's 280 right now. Yeah, and now you've all this mistimed insulin. Now you're putting in a bunch of insulin to bring it down your insulin resistance so it doesn't work as well. Suddenly, you're going to be a little later. Later, you'll feed the low, you won't have the bolus you get on the roller coaster. I'd rather know now I talked about it in a million different ways I open bills. I don't think I can pay you on day one, because I want to know what they are right? I want to know when her blood sugar's trying to go over 120. And if you do that, there's a great episode way back in the podcast with a scientist from Dexcom. There was a study done, the lower you lower your high alarm on your CGM, the lower your agency goes because you react sooner with less insulin stopping arise and staving off a future low because you're only using a tiny bit events and we've talked about it before you're going to listen through these things. Again, they're going to make total sense to you. I want to address when people say well, I don't want to wear a bunch of stuff. You know some it's some adults just don't want to wear things. That's fine, but I hear a lot of parents. I don't want to look at her. I don't want to look at him and see him attached to something I don't he's not a robot. He's not like that kind of stuff. Arden hated that CGM. The first day she put it on right. And I wouldn't think she thinks twice about it anymore. Not even a little bit. She rolled out that she rolled out the door this morning for school in a pair of leggings. You can see her CGM on her hip and she doesn't care she's wearing a top that doesn't go all the way down to her to her belt or her on the potty sticking out like in that gap of space on her belly. She doesn't think twice about it. You can make those things normal and and they will be you know at some point so I don't know for me CGM is about reacting. And and instead of,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 29:23
you know, appropriately reacting rather than, rather than being you're being proactive really. If you have a CGM, you can be proactive, rather than having to always be reactive at the like you said, Have you CGM set at 400. And you're finally seeing it at 280. Because you're not feeling the greatest. You could have been proactive well above or well ahead of that right.

Scott Benner 29:46
And that proactiveness By the way, takes less time and less involvement than it does to be to 80 and fighting with it for hours. That it seems. It seems counterintuitive because people say to me all the time, you must be so intense. volved all the time and I'm like, man, I don't think about diabetes for more than about 10 minutes a day. You know, like on the really bad days, 20 minutes, but but I'm not mired down in it. Like, there's no hand wringing in my house all day long, like staring at big numbers wondering when they're gonna come down? Are they gonna make lows? We just don't have that. I mean, don't get everyone should. I'm generalizing to make my point. It happens sometimes, right? But, but as a day to day idea, it is not something that occurs here. And I if you've heard me speak somewhere, in my slide presentation, there's a picture of Muhammad Ali standing over top of someone he's just knocked out. And I always start that part by going Has anyone ever been in a fistfight? And inevitably, it's always a little kid who's like, I have, like a golf. And I was like, well, you shouldn't hit people. But but but you know, I tell people all the time, like you, you want to act, like, like we talked about, you want to react, but really, you want to be able to act B first, right? You want to make a decision first, because besides stopping an arrow, there's the concept of cause and effect. Correct, right. And there's this idea that, you know, people always run around yelling, well, that's just diabetes every time something happens, they don't understand that was just diabetes. And I always say that when you're saying, well, that's just diabetes, what you really mean is, I don't know how to use insulin correctly. Right? Right. Right. And so your blood sugar doesn't go up to 400. Because the diabetes very tapped you on the head? Like, there's a reason I don't know what it is. Maybe you might not know what it is. But there's a reason. So at the very least, if you act first, then with some some confidence, you can say that what happened next was a result of your action. Right? least you're not always covering your face in defense, like, like a boxer who just can't, can't get upon it anymore, right? diabetes is not pummeling you in the face. You you maybe you hit it too hard. Maybe you end up with a 65. You didn't mean to, but at least you know, wow, I put that insulin in here and I got the 65. Next time, I'll use less. Next time, I'll do my Pre-Bolus, five minutes shorter, whatever it ends up being I don't know. Right? Right. But I'm a big fan of acting first, and then taking that feedback and making a better decision next time with it.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 32:13
Absolutely. And that's why I think it's it's, it's when you're especially if you're new to CGM, or starting out, sort of over with the CGM, or you haven't used it consistently on a day to day basis, because you have felt more frustrated about it, I think, if you get it down to some basics of use to begin with, and like you said, kind of tighten up those targets. Even if it's just a short time period, you can designate and say, okay, for the next seven days, I'm going to have my targets that the high alert for 130 in the low alert set for maybe 70, or even 80. If you're hypo, you know, hyper unaware, or you just really worried or whatever about the lower end, because tightening it up helps but also then fitting in more of your more more of your regular habits. In that testing time period, your typical foods, the things that you like to eat for breakfast, or lunch or for dinner, or for snacks. Because if you're committing to using something by applying it to your body, and you know being a robot

Scott Benner 33:21
in for a pound.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 33:22
That's right, exactly. If you're committing to using it, then get everything that you should be getting out of using it.

Scott Benner 33:28
And there's a there's a way to start, in my opinion, I'm interested in what you think. But I think that when you first have a CGM on it, you're accustomed to wearing it. Finally, you know what this information means. The first thing you do is you get your bazel, right. Like, like, to me it's bazel. First, make sure your bazel is right. And I tell people all the time, if you haven't had insulin or food for three or so hours, and your blood sugar is not 85, your bazel is not right. And so and so if you're 180 or 200, shoot lower, I don't like don't shoot for 85 right away, shoot for lower and keep kind of just cranking it down and cranking it down. After you've got your bazel. In a situation where you're staying pretty stable most of the time without getting low. That's then you can start thinking about Pre-Bolus. And then and then the CGM can really help you with that too. If I'm 120 and I haven't had food or insulin for hours, when I put in some insulin here, how soon before I start seeing a diagonal arrow is it 10 minutes 1520. Some people say a half an hour, everybody's numbers different. So once your bazel is right, and you can trust the cause and effect that I've Bolus now and it took 15 minutes, let's say for my blood sugar to start going down. Within reason trust that that's probably your Pre-Bolus 15 minutes right when your blood sugar is in range. Now keep in mind if your blood sugar's higher, you'll be more insulin resistant that Pre-Bolus time won't be the same but but for the for the sake of the conversation. Now you have your bazel right now you know your Pre-Bolus time. Now you can start using insulin and being a little more aggressive with it. I've put about Pre-Bolus in I'm 90 diagonal down, I've started to eat my blood sugar shot up. Now here's where the CGM becomes incredibly helpful. So you've you've got your insulin and you've eaten but you're going up. Are you going up? Like a short sharp incline right or is it what I call the prices? right you know the prices might the the what which which is it the minor the the climber the gates like Yoda, he really getting it right. And he's got the pic in his hand he's going back. And it's it's this very gentle gray that goes on forever and you watch it the whole time. God he's gonna stop he's gonna stop he's gonna stop Oh, he'll definitely stop is nobody's gonna fall off the edge. It's not gonna happen through the whole thing and it just keeps going. That's that CGM line that it tricks you. Because you keep thinking it's not on a crazy incline. I'm not shooting up. I'm just climbing. It's going to stop in a minute. But no, it's not. So not most of the time. Most of the time I find a gentle grade up means not You almost got the amount, right. And you're pretty happy with it. Right? Right. And your Pre-Bolus might have been not quite long enough, right? The sharp up is a complete. I just thought the curse but it's a complete cluster, you're like you have not you didn't have nearly enough Pre-Bolus and you did not use nearly enough food. So there is nothing about your Bolus that even gave resistance to that carb impact at all.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 36:30
Right, you can even more often with that arrow up more often at the Pre-Bolus. Especially if you are using a ratio for your carbs and counting your carbs and whatnot. Most often, if you have a pretty significant quick, straight up or double up arrow, within 30 minutes, 45 minutes of a meal, there's a deficit there and or the deficit is more because you did not Pre-Bolus there wasn't times like that tug of war between the insulin that you said, you know, in a podcast before, there was not enough time to let insulin get the upper hand,

Scott Benner 37:06
right. And I'll tell you that that exact situation, that scenario you're describing, that taught me how to overhaul us. So what the first time I put in insulin and her blood sugar started to shoot up, I just made the leap, I was like I missed big time. And I didn't just put in like another half unit, like I crush it, I was like I'm gonna stop these hours. If I have to feed them later, I will. But I'm not going to let this blood sugar go up like this. And so I realized a meal that I thought was going to take five units with no Pre-Bolus needed eight units. And so that taught me in the future, when I don't have time to Pre-Bolus I'll just give eight units for the five unit meal because I can create that action of insulin and overpower this even without a Pre-Bolus. If I use too much, it's a little more. I call it like that's definitely more of a pro level tip kind of a situation. I'm like you're you're more of a diabetes ninja. Once you're doing stuff like that i i hold that up with the same ideas after you've had a 30 too low. And you start coming back up again. And you Bolus like when you're 50 diagonal up like you're a ninja at that point. You're just

Jennifer Smith, CDE 38:11
like, yeah, I need a lot more because I know I eat 60 grams of carbon I really only needed like 50 and

Scott Benner 38:19
start knowing how much insulin the bolus to overcome, not Pre-Bolus Singh again, you've been at this a while but I learned that from the Dexcom. Like I never would have liked so you know, when you see those arrows flying up? Not it's not what was me time, right. It's what is happening. Like what what could I do next time over blessing is an incredible tool

Jennifer Smith, CDE 38:42
so and over bolusing in the way that you're doing it is very I think we talked about this before probably is it's actually what john Walsh from pumping insulin, he calls it a super bolus, right, right. And he does it in a little bit more of a calculated way. He says, you know, you take the Bolus, as suggested by your pump for the food that you're going to eat or the calculated, let's say you said okay, she needs five units for this all the time. Well, today, there's no time to Pre-Bolus usually, you would have done a 20 minute Pre-Bolus for that five units. Okay, he says, You're then going to take the insulin and bazel that's running behind that meal for two hours. And you're going to actually add it on to that five units or whatever your pump is suggesting. So maybe if your bazel is running at a unit an hour, that's two units of extra insulin, you're gonna pop that on top of the suggested bolus, but then behind the scenes, and you probably do this a lot too with that heavier bullets up front, you're like, I'm probably going to need to watch and do a Temp Basal decrease for a little bit after because I know that this is too much in the end results, right? We don't want to cause a low he says to start by just taking the Basal down to zero for about two hours. Yeah. And then evaluating I've got people use it and say, you know, I tried it. The Superbowl is part of it works but I don't need to turn my bazel completely off led to a 50% bazel instead of 100%. Yes.

Scott Benner 40:00
And that's where the Dexcom again comes in incredibly handy. You need it when you need it. You don't when you don't, right. And then I consider that idea trading Basal for Bolus, like there. There are times where I think, Oh, ardens you know, Basal rates 1.4 an hour, I just bought a unit and a half. Listen, there's going to be a moment, right? There's a moment for everybody. There's gonna be a moment where you see the arrow up, put in the insulin, five seconds later, the arrow flattens out, and you go, Oh, my God, I didn't need that insulin, right? Oh, that's when I'll trade the bazel for the balls. Now

Jennifer Smith, CDE 40:31
you can only say cut it out to be the law. Yeah, but do you know that? Do you know that if you don't have a CGM? You don't know. You don't know when that transition was happening? Right? If you had none, and you were very aggressive about just finger sticking, you're like, Oh, my gosh, you know, 20 minutes ago, it was here. And now it's like 50 points higher. I have to slam this with more influence. Yeah, awesome. But if you're not willing to do finger sticks, then like every 20 minutes after that, to see where things are go. You never know when that horizontal is coming, or when a downtrend is coming, either. Yep,

Scott Benner 41:03
I am wrong now texting art. And while you and I are talking, so what I say it is now been an hour and 12 minutes since she got her bolus for her food. I got a little I didn't panic. But because you and I were talking and I could see what was happening. I shut off or at the very tail end of our Expendables and her Temp Basal. Yep. And now she's 105 diagonal up. I'm bolusing that, because I'm putting in the insulin that I bailed on from the extended bolus and the base, I should have trusted myself, right. And so instead, I'm putting it back again, when I will stop this diagonal up arrow around 115 120, she'll float there for a while, we'll come back down. I expect you to be at five by like an hour and 45 minutes from now.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 41:50
And the interesting thing about that, too, is what you're saying in in terms of her management. And I know her agency has been like in the 5% for, you know, for a long time. But the bigger beyond that, and we had a whole we had a whole we did a whole long podcast about a Wednesday and kind of what that all means right? But I think bringing in to the fact here CGM translates into that CGM, because what we're really hoping for is more gentle rolling hills within our target, rather than these major rises and falls of a roller coaster. And if you start to analyze your data in CGM, you can actually start then to be able to say, Okay, I need to tighten things up here. I've got an awesome looking at one See, but I have a huge what's called standard deviation, which speaks to the variability between highs and lows, right? You may have this awesome looking at one C, but if you're going up and down and you look like a big Jagan, you know, roller coaster or mountain range, that's not helpful, your standard D deviation value should actually be low, which means the variance between the highs and lows are also more gentle, rolling, rolling, rolling,

Scott Benner 43:03
right. And the way I found to say that to people is that if you were 350, and then 60, and then 350, and 60, all you're doing is tricking the a one c test. And he comes back and tells you Hey, you have an average a one C of seven, which you do when you average 60 and 50. Again, but you also have a, you're also not living in a healthy way, in any specific way. So don't let that number for you. Right. And Jenny's right there is an episode called all about a one see that she and I did probably more than a year or so ago. Yeah. And I'll link it in the show notes so you can find it, but I have Arden's last five days. And her hurt, let's see, her average blood sugar over the last five days has been 114 she's been in range 56% of the time, which probably seems low, except that her ranges from 70 to 100 that's another thing you need to be careful of when you look at these reports. If you have your high set at 300 and your low set at 60. And you tell me I'm in range 100% of the time Well,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:06
sure sure you are Yeah,

Scott Benner 44:07
I mean, good

Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:08
standard deviation within that time and range,

Scott Benner 44:11
right what what is that and standard deviation is just a simple mathematical idea that I didn't understand in school and still don't understand now but it's a basic right it's a it's an average is it an average of maybe it's a mean I don't know see I didn't pay attention to math. You know it's funny you were talking about Walsh earlier talking about like all these ideas about like over bowl his Super Bowl is and I call it over bolusing and when I think about it all I think about is more like the word more just pops into my head more insult and he's over there like with his college degree being like what you want to do is for two hours and this is I'm like more

Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:49
right but you've also figured it out. You're more is not a dangerous more random more now. It's not a random you've figured it out in your you know, this is your diabetes. may vary, you figured it out in in art and diabetes, but you know how much more to give. It's not like you're slamming in five more units you're like, she needs based on experience about a unit more, or she needs based on experience to units more based on what went in what has transpired up to this point.

Scott Benner 45:18
So people who listen to the podcast know that if this wasn't a special episode called diabetes, pro tip, continuous glucose monitor, I would just call it Roger Moore. Because you have no idea how many times I hear from people they're like, could you just make the title something about what's in it? I'm like, No, I can't. That's not fun at all. I want to talk for a second about what happens when you're brand new, shiny decks Come on. And it tells you your blood sugar's 90, but then you test with your meter and your meter says your blood sugar's 140. niggle I don't know which one of these things to believe. So I think it's important to note that CGM is measuring interstitial fluid around your meter is measuring your blood. Thank you for bringing that up. Yeah, both of them have an FDA requirement of only being within 20% of range. So if if a meter says your blood sugar is 100, it could very easily be 80, or 120, or somewhere between 80 and 120. As people living with type one diabetes in the 2000s ease, you're gonna have to accept this is pretty much the best we have right now. And not to make yourself mental. So imagine that your CGM tells you you're 100. But it's off by 20%. High. So you're really 120. And your meter says you're 140. But it's really off by 20%. Low. So you're really 120. They both agree the numbers you're seeing don't agree. You cannot spend a ton of time being upset about that. You have to pick something and believe in it. And I know that's crazy. But I tell people all the time, there's somebody online, there's like look at my meter says this, and my Dexcom says this, and I'm like you're holding a brand new Dexcom g7 your hand and a meter that was made 12 years ago. And you're telling me I believe the meter and I always ask them the same thing. Why did you decide to believe the meter over the CGM? Is it because you had it longer? Because it's testing blood? And that seems like something that's more accurate to you like what is the random thought your brain has had that's made you decide that one of these is more accurate than the other one? Which do you I test sometimes when I don't,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 47:26
but I'm not. So really I mean, blood glucose is the first line of glucose change it is interstitial glucose follows blood glucose. And so with those random, you know, differences most often I would say people on G five and G six, for the most part have pretty good accuracy finger stick to actual CGM, we're, I think a lot of discrepancy can honestly come in is from a finger stick value of let's say it's telling you 140. Right, and you're looking at your CGM, and it's 100. Well, as we kind of started out saying, it's not about the number on the CGM, it's about the trend. And like you do very often you're saying, Okay, now there's a trend going up, you know, you just bolused what you misgiving before because you started to see a trend up. Well, her fingerstick might actually be reflecting a higher glucose than what the CGM is showing right now, because again, glucose changes first in your bloodstream. And so CGM is going to lag especially in those time periods of more significant glucose change such as after food, or after or during exercise, that that can be a varying time. So finger stick 140, your CGM is trending up, or you've got an angled arrow heading up and it's telling you your one or two and you're like, hmm, so what do I do about this? The CGM just hasn't met yet the glucose value in the bloodstream, it will catch up right? It will, it's just that it hasn't gotten there yet. Because really, if you think about the way that glucose sort of moves in a simplified form, it moves out of the bloodstream sort of has to move through insert interstitial fluid before it gets to the cells to get absorbed, essentially, I mean, that's simplified, but and so your, your, your interstitial fluid is also always for the most part gonna lag, especially in special times, like food and movement.

Scott Benner 49:26
And I'll tell you to and to circle back around with the idea of the quality of your meter. Arden's had an omni pod forever, like since she was four, so she's gonna be 15 soon. Point is, that thing's been around a long time. It's got an old freestyle meter in it. They've always been kind of wonky. And now we're using the Contour. Next One, it's the little tiny meter that's going to start calling

Jennifer Smith, CDE 49:53
accurate on the market. Yep.

Scott Benner 49:54
So when Omni pod decided to switch over to dash which should you know, you might be listening to this and that Might be a thing already, but it's about to happen. They're going to offer you a free Contour Next One meter to come with it. So I've been using it for a few months to get my head around it. It's spectacular. Like what a great accurate meter. It's absolutely insane. Like I just compared to what was in that PDM. It was nuts how much better it was?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 50:19
Well, and this brings up for the people to who might still be using a G five, or a CGM. That requires calibration. What you calibrate with? Yeah, really mix accuracy on the CGM hold better, right,

Scott Benner 50:34
right. And if you're calibrating with a band meter, so you have a G five that still asks for calibration, and the G five says it's 90, but you've tested with a 10 year old meter, it's like it's not it's 150. What if you really are 90 and now you're telling the two five, everything you think is wrong? You're 150. But the algorithms like that's not right, we're nine. And did you confuse it? And then it it blows

Jennifer Smith, CDE 50:54
up? Again? Three, three question marks for three hours.

Scott Benner 50:59
And then you go this something wrong with the CGM? Actually, no, it was you, you know, you put the wrong information. And so none of this technology is obviously perfect. But again, I always like to say you're not boiling your urine to find out what your blood sugar is. So you're doing right, yeah, right, you're doing great. I all I can say for sure, as we as we kind of come up on the end here. And I might ask you to kind of sum up in a second. But what I can tell you is that, as I've said before, ardens a once has been between five, two and six to four or five solid years. And it's going to be a lot to do with the tools that you hear us talking about here on the podcast and how I've learned to implement them. But how I learned to implement them was the information coming back to me from Arden's glucose monitor. So if you have an opportunity to get one, and I know they're not covered by everybody's insurance, and they can be expensive, but if you can get one, you absolutely In my opinion, should the absolute will just change your life. So

Jennifer Smith, CDE 51:52
yeah, I 100% agree. Yeah.

Scott Benner 51:55
Did we forget anything? Because at this point, people who listen, probably aren't surprised. But I don't pre plan these with Jeremy, I should put on her headphones. She goes, what are we talking about? I'm like CGM. And she goes great. And then we just started talking. But again, I like the way these conversations flow. So did I forget anything? That is like wildly wrong?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 52:16
I don't think so. I, I do think that if, I mean, this is just from an education standpoint, your own education with your CGM. If you really need some pointers, I mean, it's helpful to look or ask more of your care team. You know, if you do need some pointers, some some endos. And CDs are really awesome. Some don't know much more than just telling you how to slap it on. But look beyond I mean, because there is there's a wealth of of benefit to knowing. And some of it is self experiment, experimentation. In fact, I think a lot of it self experimentation. But if you need some help with looking at things, I think searching out somebody can be helpful.

Scott Benner 53:00
Yes, somebody who can look at the graph and just make sense of it in a second. Yeah, we've talked about before I can at this point, I can look at someone's three hour graph and go, is this where you're putting the insulin? And they're like, how did you know I'm like, yeah, cuz it should have been here. And it wasn't enough. And this would have stopped that and like, it's pretty easy to see after you can see it, right. It's like those, you know what it's like? It's like those posters that you look at it. You're like, there's somebody tells you it's a tree and it's a sailboat, you stare long enough, it turns into a tree. I think that's what happens after you look at it long enough. I know people can get scared of the idea of data. I don't like the word because I think it I think it scares people off. Like, you need to understand the data. Well, that sounds scary to me. Right? Right. There's a little line on your thing, okay, that line tries to go in a direction you look and see where you put the lights on. And you see how harshly the line tried to go in that direction, you make a better decision next time.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 53:53
You know, I think that actually brings in one point that we may have missed is that especially dex comm does allow you to use event markers. So if you are really wanting more, you know optimization, and you're the only one who can really look at your your lines and your info. Using the event markers. I know in G six at the at the bottom of your at least your screen on your on your phone app, you just choose events. You can log things like food or exercise or illness or even alcohol and like your your cycle or monthly and all that kind of stuff. It'll put little marks on your actual trend graph. And that way you can make more sense of the if you're again, the one that's really trying to look back for what what happened, why did it happen? You

Scott Benner 54:41
don't have to remember that I ate lunch at 1130 you can just say food and the amount of carbs and then make a note about what the food was. Right? And that helps you when you look back. See again, that's well more way better thought out than I can ever be. But that makes a lot of sense. That's why you're here. You're the you're the smart part of this conversation. part of the conversation.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 55:03
Were both important for me then.

Scott Benner 55:06
I'm pretty sure that's true. Okay, I think you have to go in a couple of minutes, right? I'm gonna let you go now and say goodbye. Don't forget, you can hire Jenny Smith to help you with your type one diabetes at integrated diabetes.com. There's a link in your show notes that will allow you to generate an email right to Jenny. It's magic. Thank you Dexcom on the pod and dancing for diabetes for sponsoring the Juicebox Podcast. I cannot tell you how much your support means. Don't forget that when this episode went up to other diabetes pro tip episodes went up along with it. You're looking for bumping nudge and the perfect Bolus. There will be more episodes with Jenny coming up next month. And the programming note. Next week. I'll be talking with Katie. You might not know who Katie is Katie is one of the people who is key right there in the middle of the DIY looping world. Katie and I are going to talk about the new looping option with Omni pod. Which by the way, I think I'm gonna try


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#219 Diabetes Pro Tip: Insulin Pumping

Scott Benner

Scott and Jenny Smith, CDE share insights on type 1 diabetes care.….

I am thrilled to welcome Jenny Smith, CDE back to the show. Jenny will be joining us for an extended series of conversations that focus solely on the management ideas that we discuss on the podcast.

Jennifer holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Human Nutrition and Biology from the University of Wisconsin. She is a Registered (and Licensed) Dietitian, Certified Diabetes Educator, and Certified Trainer on most makes/models of insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring systems. You can reach Jenny at jennifer@integrateddiabetes.com.

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, everyone, and welcome to the sixth installment of my diabetes pro tip series with CDE Jenny Smith. Today, Jenny and I will be talking about insulin pumping. But if you're not using a pump still listen, lots of good information. As a matter of fact, listen in order, you want to start at the beginning and work your way through this series is designed to tell a story. This series is a narrative about how I manage my daughter's type one diabetes. The ideas you're hearing in these episodes, coupled with my favorite technology, is how we've kept my daughter's a one c between five two and six two with absolutely no diet restrictions for over five years. And while we're talking about that, this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by Omni pod Dexcom dancing for diabetes, and real good foods. To get a free no obligation pod experience kit from Omni pod go to my omnipod.com forward slash juice box. Want to check out the Dexcom g six dexcom.com forward slash juice box. Go to real good foods that calm and when you place your order, use the offer code juice box and save 20% on your entire order. And never forget to go to dancing for diabetes.com just to see good people doing good things for people living with type one that's dancing the number four diabetes.com

Welcome back to the diabetes pro tip series with CDE Jenny Smith, I'm glad you're here. In this episode, Jenny and I talk all about insulin pumping and the ideas that surround the practice. Please don't forget that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise. And always consult a physician before becoming bold with insulin or making any changes to your medical plan. And double Don't forget that if you're interested in hiring Jenny privately, you can do that at integrated diabetes comm You can find links for Jenny at Juicebox podcast.com, or in the show notes of your podcast app.

We are back talking about insulin pumps today. Awesome. And the idea of pumping in general not any specific pump, although we might go over the ones that are available at the moment. So we discussed in the MDI episode that it's tough to get an insulin pump right away, you'd have to be have great insurance, you'd have to be able to get over the What do we want to call them roadblocks that some endo offices put up to you getting? Right getting an insulin pump. But but congratulations, if you've gotten that far, and you're thinking about getting an insulin pump. Why do you think? Well, do you think Let me ask you, do you think pumping has advantages over MDI? And if so, what are they?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 2:55
Yeah, I mean, a broad a broad statement. Yes, there are advantages. I think there are pros and cons to everything. But there are a lot of pros. I think one of the biggest ones is precision in dosing. I mean, you know, from the standpoint of injections, we can dose accurately, I quote accurately, to the half a unit with an injection, right? I mean, I've even got a couple of friends who still do MDI don't like pumping and, and they've sort of figured out how to get that quarter unit in an injection. But is that accurate? No, it's not like the pumps accuracy, you know, pumps can pumpkin, pumpkin get down to the point 05 or the point 025 of a unit. That's, that's precise. That's minuscule, you know, and for the broad spectrum of people that need insulin in different doses, the very, very little to the adult who is very, very sensitive for whatever reason, that can be important. So,

Scott Benner 4:07
okay, and I agree, I think that when, especially when they're younger, I've used mo I've had moments with Arden where it's a point one or a point to Bolus that can really move somebody and the, you know, the obviously, the lower your body weight, the more that kind of precision makes incredible differences. I guess the con to that can be if you are so small, it's possible that it might be difficult to set your basal rates up because if your basal needs are that little in the beginning, you can do that. I've seen people do all kinds of crazy stuff like set a basal rate on for one hour off for the neck, back and forth. And that's that there's a way to get through that. I think if you have a smaller child and you want to pump, there's a way to accomplish it. There is

Jennifer Smith, CDE 4:55
absolutely so precision definitely and then you know i The icebergs that kind of pop up in your day. And you know, you I know your strategy and a lot of people strategy is kind of the navigation of blood sugar, right? And utilizing the smart tools on an insulin pump smart being things like the extended bolus and the temporary bazel feature. You cannot do that with an injection. You just can't. And that is that's another huge pro to a pump.

Scott Benner 5:29
Yeah, I, I can't say I agree anymore. I'm in full agreement. I didn't understand it all about pumping. When Arden was injecting, right? There were just a lot of words I didn't understand people would talk about bolusing and all that. What's that carb ratio? I have no idea. I know a little bit for me, Jackie. But it was so much more specific talking about pumping. I had its own language. And I've mentioned before that as we were in Arden's pump class at at her children's hospital. And I recognized that insulin was going to be used, like fast acting insulin was going to be used as basal insulin. Yep. And that I could turn it off and turn it back on and increase it and decrease it. I'm telling you angels,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 6:11
like a light bulb light bulbs are going off,

Scott Benner 6:13
like everything happened. I was like, okay, immediately. Yes, please. I genuinely think that before you have a pump, and for a lot of people after you have it, people just believe the pump is a way to avoid injecting. And I want to I want to, as we do the overview about in some pumping today, I want to show them that it's just so much more than that. So it is

Jennifer Smith, CDE 6:36
absolutely and I think another piece to definitely clear up. Even for anybody who might be listening to these that doesn't necessarily interact or is a caregiver for somebody that with diabetes, but they've come across it because they just want information. A pump is not the magic, do it all. You don't plug it in, and it takes care of everything that is is not the case. And for those who might be dying, newly diagnosed in our hearing Oh pump is like the magic thing. It does all these ones. It does what you tell it to do. And it does it based on the parameters you set within the pump. There's it's it's personal input is what makes the pump as beneficial as it can be. So you can then see that if you don't know what you're doing.

It could be not that's the best thing.

Scott Benner 7:31
Sometimes you hear people say I've had this pump for a month. And I'm thinking of going back because I think they had doing what I need. Yeah. And I think they had that expectation like look, I bought the pump I put it on Why did my UNC not go down? How come my spikes aren't going away? Why is my body and in some cases, people's blood sugars get worse in the in the in the beginning because they don't get their bazel setup correctly, right. Or, or I think for some people, your insulin needs change, sometimes greater or lesser, when you go from injecting the pumping

Jennifer Smith, CDE 8:03
because of the precision, especially of that bazel, sometimes with the imprecision of an injected basal insulin, and the fact that it isn't based on your physiologic need and the change through the course of the day, that basal insulin could be off via injection at a time when you need less insulin. And so things look like they're happening around a bolus when it really isn't the bolus is problem. It's the bazel. So getting that bazel set is huge. It's like the foundation of a house and the opposite as well to not instead of the boluses problem. You can't You can't give the Bolus credit. Sometimes Sometimes you have a lower stable blood sugar that you think you made this great Bolus off Oh,

Scott Benner 8:48
but but your 11 year or your lantis, you have too much of it, or it's just it's working stronger at that point or something like that. So when you switch to a pump, and you go to these more precise basal rates, using a fast acting insulin in the background, then if you don't have that correct at that number, you don't you no longer have that sort of like I don't know what to call it like when you inject basal insulin, it's just sort of a Is it a catch all? Is it a is it it's a blanket of insulin that you made?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 9:18
Yeah, that's a good way to think about it. It's kind of a blanket of insulin, but it's not a blanket that's always warm and cozy at the right places through the course of the day. I mean, I can my example is before I started pumping, I was using Lantus was my basal insulin, and I took it in the evening. If I did not have a snack, when I went to bed after taking it, I could have bet a million dollars that I didn't have that I would have a low blood sugar between two and 3am. And that's because

Scott Benner 9:49
your new basal insulin starts coming online and it works.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 9:52
And it worked the way that it did. I needed less insulin at that time, but lantis didn't know that Atlantis was like, Hey, you put me in here. I'm gonna get a tour of this, I'm going to do my thing that I was supposed to be doing right. So I needed at that dose for the rest of the day. But I didn't need that dose for that action time of the morning.

Scott Benner 10:11
So that's our first kind of lesson here with pumping, when you get an insulin pump, your basal rates need to be dialed in. And there's two things about that. The first thing is, and this, of course, is not true for everybody. But I do meet a lot of people whose doctors under welcome them with basal insulin, when they put them on a pump I because they don't want to cause a low, they don't necessarily tell you that going out of the office or you don't expect it. And so you get hot, you get home, you're high all the time. And it doesn't ever occur to people that it's bazel. So I get on a pump, get the bazel. Right, I think the next thing is

Jennifer Smith, CDE 10:48
one one comment about that as adjustment factor. And you mentioned it before insulin use may change going on a pump, we usually find give or take, we usually find that when you start on a pump, your bazel injected insulin dose in the pump will need to be about 10, sometimes 20% less than what you were injecting in your basal dose. So let's say your basal insulin is giving you 20 units a day via Lantus or levemir, to you know, to jail or whatever it might be 10% less than that is two units less. So we would actually dose your bazel in the pump on 18 units across that 24 hours versus 20 units. Because it's it seems to be that the body responds better to that one type of insulin or rapid and coming in at one precise point in the body all the time. Rather than being injected like all over

Scott Benner 11:49
really be either then you can you can get your pump set up with baselines and find yourself high all the time and realize your basis not enough or, or too low or where you have to come in. So that is why doctors start that way. Because I guess more over the likelihood is you'll need less. But for the people who that's not true for it's the situation I described. Right? So what we're really saying is, you're not going to know until you know, but but figure it out, get it in there and figure it out. I also want to know what you think about multiple bazel rates in the beginning, because in my mind, I think you set one up, and then you start adjusting off of that one.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 12:26
Right? Agreed? Absolutely. Even when I started pumping, you know, as an adult once there were finally pumps, like Omni pod. And that wasn't about tubing. I wanted that pod. But when I started doing that, you know, I actually did I started on one solid basal rate. And I was already an educator. So I knew about pumps, I just, you know. But yeah, you have to test you have to evaluate and see what does that one solid diesel? Where do I need it to be less? Where do I need it to be more for how long?

Scott Benner 13:02
Yep. And we're going to talk about the adjustments in our own little piece of this. So okay, so let's move on now to to the idea of bolusing. So I want everyone to understand that the doctor, your doctor is going your pump trainer, whoever you talk to is going to do their best based off of what they know about you to set up an insulin to carb ratio in the pump. But it is incredibly important to know that that is a number that is not completely made up. But it is a guess on some level. And so if you're putting insulin in for a bolus, and you just you say to yourself, man, I counted these carbs 100% correctly. And it's telling me three units. But I used to eat this food on injections, and I had to inject four units or two units or it was different in some way. I just think it's incredibly important to remember that your doctor just did the best they could putting that in there. And this becomes where sort of the next step of how people get confused starting pumping. Because things don't go the way they expect. And they never diagnose the idea that it's the it's the insulin and I mean, this series is obviously it's all about timing and amount, right, you're using the right amount at the right time. Their minds. I think Siri just heard me say something. Sorry. Sorry. It wasn't. It says, Hey, Siri, I have it's obviously it's all about timing. Shut up Siri. Sorry. My point is, is that you're our brains somehow focus on the idea of the pump specifically and not and we forget about the insulin. So I got on a pump and something didn't go the way I wanted. There's something wrong with the pump, that the leap you make. It's the it's it's very likely the insulin, so you can't jump over the obvious answers to get to the other ones. Then Then We run into the problem that people don't want to make insulin adjustments in their pumps in the beginning. So for all of you listening who are about to start pumping or a noodle pumping, and you're seeing something in your heart, you know, isn't right. I would implore you not to sit around for three months waiting for your next endo appointment. Right? Okay. So if you're not, if your blood sugar's high, you probably have not enough insulin, it's possible that you know, you haven't timed it, right? But there's safe ways to make small adjustments to your insulin on your own. Right. And absolutely. And so, would you talk to me about how you would How would you if someone called you and said, Hey, I don't know what to do. And you you looked at their graph and said, I think your basal insulin needs to be turned up or turned down? What percentage do you tell them to to move at? Like a kid in a candy shop, I just spent an hour using the Omni pod dash PDM. You may be listening to this now thinking it's not out yet, but but it will be very soon. And if it's already out, well, then, you know, welcome to time travel. While I was in that room, I got to use the new dash touchscreen, all color Bluetooth really fantastic. I also got to see the display and view apps that on the pod will be unveiling, Sophia, the caregiver of someone using it on the pod when they bolus you'll be able to see it on your app. You'll also be able to receive alerts on your app as a caregiver. And I know you're excited about that, there has never been a better time to use the tubeless insulin pump that Arden has been using for 11 years. The Omni pod. The best part, of course, is that Omni pod will offer you a free pod experience kit, they're going to send you a free demo of the pod. There's no obligation, it doesn't cost you anything, it comes right to your house, and you get to wear the pod to see if you like it. You don't have to just trust the guy on the podcast, you can see for yourself. So if you're switching to a pump or switching from a pump, in my opinion, there is no better choice than the Omni pod. You want to find out if I'm telling the truth. Go to my Omni pod.com Ford slash juice box and get yourself a pod experience get there's absolutely no obligation. It's 100% free. And if you can't remember that link, it's also available at Juicebox podcast.com. Or right there in the show notes of your podcast player. My Omni pod comm forward slash juicebox insulin pumping is absolutely terrific. And insulin pumping tubeless Lee with Omni pod is whatever terrific times a million is what percentage do you tell them to to move at

Jennifer Smith, CDE 17:44
it depends on what the overall picture looks like, you know, if there are small, if there are small, less aggressive looking changes to their blood sugars, but it's in a bazel only time period. And you can tell that obviously something is wrong, we recommend making adjustments if there's more than a 25 to 30 point shift up or down from a set blood sugar. So let's say if you're testing the overnight, you go to bed at this rock solid, you know one or two blood sugar, but by you know and that's 9pm. But by 1am, your blood sugar's at 201. That shouldn't happen on basal insulin, that's there's something incorrect there. So you know, with a shift like that, we would bump bazel probably by like a point one in that time period to offset the incoming flux of incoming need for extra insulin. Usually, if it's a smaller incremental change to blood sugar, you know, you're going from a blood sugar of 102 to 152, you probably don't need that much of a change. And so maybe more of like the point 05 in a rate, smaller increments to the point zero to five, which most of the pumps on the market can do. Not all of them, but some of them. So that may be something that you play with, especially if you feel like you're pretty sensitive to small changes in dosing, then you may want to start smaller and make an adjustment up or down. Right.

Scott Benner 19:14
And so again, it's a good place to point out that the numbers not important because we can't tell from one person to another. And I'll give you an amazing anecdote about that I was with a group of people this past weekend, there was a college age kid there who in my best guess was 610 and must have weighed 230 pounds. And his bazel rate was lower than my daughter's who is five, six and weighs 125 pounds. My daughter is also growing and you know gets a period and things like that. So you can't, you can't reach out into the public into back to your doctor and say Just tell me how much to turn it off. You know, like you have to pick an increment. That's not that's not crazy. It's not dangerous. Obviously. You're not Going to take 8.5 bazel and make it a one, you know, try point six. You know, like if you're if you're a little high trade point six, and then if you do it for a few hours and nothing's going on. I mean, try point seven like and you know, you might get to a point where you Oh, now I'm a little too low. And then again, I'll dial it back point six, five and, and make that decision on your own like, think it

Jennifer Smith, CDE 20:25
and certainly communicate with your provider. If you want some assistance thing, hey, you know, even calling your endo office, most often you get connected with a nurse, the nurse is then going to relay your message to the endo, you might get a call back, hopefully 24 hours, maybe 48, or, you know, whatever it might be, but at least you're acknowledging, hey, I'm seeing this issue. I'm making my adjustments because I'm the one living with diabetes 24 seven, I'm just telling you, so that if you've got any additional feedback,

Scott Benner 20:53
great to hear, yeah. But you can't, you definitely can't do what happens to some people, you just freeze because I want you to really consider what we've been talking about what you've been listening to going back to your doctor four times a year, and saying, hey, look at 90 days worth of my blood sugar's and adjust this and make it correct. It's just they're not guessing. But they're just doing their best and their best is limited because they're not with you. And so I know you're that it's probably happened to you before you sit and you stare at these blood sugars. And you think, well, this isn't what I was told. But just remember, you're getting this machine, and it needs to be dialed in. You just have to get it right, you got to get it running, right so that you can start enjoying the benefits which are significant. Once you get it going. And I will say that I was one of those people who got a pump for my daughter when she was four years old. Oh my god, over 10 years ago, wow. Yeah. And I slapped it on her. And then I stepped back and I looked at her blood sugar. And I looked at her. And I'm like, okay, just start going down. You know? Everybody get back this, this this, my gosh, back then this 8.9 a one see it's gonna be magically lower. Well, it did go down a little bit. but not a lot. I only went down a little bit because I guess I was able to bumper insulin a little more. That's where we started, right? Well, I guess a little more because back then if you missed on a bolus, doing it again met injecting again. And no one never wanted to do that. So you just waited and hoped and cross your fingers, right. But now I could give a little more in a little more. But in honesty, just adding an insulin pump without understanding it did not bring Arden's a one seat down that,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 22:36
that. I think it's kind of like, I mean, the adjustment is kind of like getting wheels aligned on a car, right? I mean, if you have, if you want to ride this straight line, you have to do these incremental adjustments so that you're not consistently like veering off there.

Scott Benner 22:54
Gotta rotate your tires, again, to get your your ball bearings all straightened down everything that was just the extent of my knowledge of cars, as we've heard, but you want you know, their engine, I joke a little bit I understand. So people who really understand cars, there's toe and camber, there's these these tiny adjustments that get made to your front wheels that keep your car moving straight. And it's the same situation. Those again, just like bumping and nudging blood sugars, these are tiny adjustments to get you where you want to be. And the difference between being 190 all day long. And 90 all day long, could just be point one, a half a unit of a change, depending on your size and your weight, your needs. The tiniest amount. And just imagine that, you know, we talked about all the time if you if you don't have enough basal insulin going when you Bolus, a lot of your Bolus is just replacing the Basal you don't

Jennifer Smith, CDE 23:48
have. And so that when the Bolus isn't there,

Scott Benner 23:51
you're wondering, Well, why I didn't even eat at this point today. And what's happening here, right? Why is this happening now? And so so you need to get these things straightened out. Now, I guess moving on to the idea of bolusing Yeah, before when you had your shots, you were counting your carbs, doing your thing, stick it in your pan or your needle and pushing it in there and just hoping you know, hoping for the best right? You are now opening yourself up to an entire world of Pre-Bolus saying and and doing it with

Unknown Speaker 24:22
different and what Pre-Bolus

Scott Benner 24:25
boluses all the things you're pumped, you know, well, first of all Pre-Bolus things not a setting. It's just the idea of putting in your insulin and giving it a headstart over the food that you're about to eat right. But an extended bolus. So we're talking right now it's 11am. And 40 minutes ago, Arden texted me and said lunch is soonish. I want you to really hear that. She didn't say she didn't say in 10 minutes. He didn't say 20 minutes from now she said soonish and I know based off of how this year is going at school, we're going to Pre-Bolus here And I thought about what was in her meal. There's not anything incredibly like simple sugary, that's gonna spike her right away. And she was 106 when we did this. So she'd been a little resistant towards the end of her period this week. We did a Temp Basal increase a 40% for an hour and a half. And so that takes Arden's bazel rate from 1.4 to whatever 40% more of that is for an hour and a half. And then I did a 11 and a half unit Bolus. We did 20% of it up front and the balance over an hour. So 20, whatever 20% of 11 and a half in 11 and a half units is goes in when she pushes the button. The balance of that goes in incrementally over the next 60 minutes coming online and getting active along the way. And now it's 40 minutes later and Arden's blood sugar is stable and 90. And she probably started eating 20 minutes ago or so. Mm hmm. I'm expecting the food to begin to impact her right now. Yeah, right. And so we got we got momentum on our side for the insulin, we've got our going down. You know, we've got that tug of war set up we've we've given you know, we were letting the insulin cheat. And we're going well, now, I'll tell you right now, if 20 minutes from now she starts curling back up. I might you know, if there's any temp, if there's any extended bolus left, I might cancel it and put it all in at once a extended bolus is over, I'm going to go through I might have missed a little bit. There's all kinds of different adjustments you can make to change the timing and the amount of the insulin. I want you though to talk about first about extended boluses. And I want you to talk about the way I know I can't, which is technically and smartly. Yeah.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 26:52
I think you give very good description, I think the biggest thing to understand to begin with when with an extended bolus is that all pumps can do them. They all term them or call them something a little bit different. And it really just kind of boils down to how you're telling the pump to give this this dose for a meal. Whether you want it all up front, meaning like you'd give an injection, you get this whole normal amount of insulin deposited under the skin all at one time. That's normal. And extended allows your pump to drip drip, drip drip, almost like your bazel is dripping all day. But in a time period you've defined whether it's 30 minutes, an hour, three hours, you told the pump, I want to deliver 11 units over the course of some now and some in an hour time period. That's what we kind of refer to as a dual wave bolus to dual being you get some normal up front, meaning a bump right now like an injection. And then the rest of the the meal like you said 2080, right 20% now is the normal 80% over an hour. So your pump is now saying Okay, I'm going to drip drip drip drip drip this 80% in and by the end of an hour, that whole extra 80% will have been dripped in. But it's action time then is pushed out because you didn't deliver it all right now that last pulse of insulin at end of our one still has now an active insulin time for whatever you have set in your pump, three hours, four hours, five hours out from that last active pulse. So I think that's the important thing to know about extended boluses some people first start to think of them as Okay, well, I'm going to get some insulin, but then three hours from now it's going to give me the rest of my insulin. That's not how extended work. They always give some and extend some drip drip. Or you might want to say for this meal, I'm eating a big ol plate of broccoli and a chicken breast. There's carb in that broccoli that you do have to count and cover. Is that broccoli gonna hit you like white rice. No way. It certainly isn't. So a meal like that. You may say okay with these really low glycemic carbs. I'm going to extend the full bowl is something we call a square bolus. You take that meal that's suggested as a bolus, and you drip drip drip the whole amount of it out over your designated time period. And there are different reasons for all of those. Yes,

Scott Benner 29:33
and you got to figure them out. And you can I was with a person eating low carb this past weekend. And we sat down at a restaurant. She had a meal that you would expect had almost no carbs in it but a ton of protein. She said she ate she sat and ate it. We got in the car drove away it's now 20 minutes or more past when the food was and she grabbed her PDM from around the clock. give herself insulin, because she does know she needs insulin for that protein. And but she didn't need it. If she would have bolus and sat down or Pre-Bolus sat down, she would have gotten incredibly low. Yeah. And she, it was amazing to see somebody figure that out. I was, I'm going to add what I learned about that, to me, like how the protein needs more later.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:19
Absolutely. It takes into the immune takes into the fact that we know these things from a set of rules. But I mean, the classic your diabetes may vary. Your diabetes bolusing strategy will vary. Well, it really yeah. Not Not me, it will vary. I mean, I my breakfast every morning, I've got a friend who eats the same exact breakfast after talking to me, she was like, Wow, that sounds awesome. I like it. I want to give it a try. Blah, blah, blah. And so now she loves it. Her bowl of strategy for it is similar, but not 100% of what I do. It's different because physiologically, she's different. Yeah.

Scott Benner 31:01
And and so if you've ever heard me speak live somewhere, there'll be a moment where someone in the audience asks the, you know, the question, how much how long, you know, and I go, I don't know, figure it out.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 31:13
Starting places, there are some starting sure things. It's like kind of like, you know, the How much do you adjust the bays? A lot? Oh, point point. Oh, 5.1. It's a starting place, right? Sure. Give it a try. If it doesn't work, Okay, next time you adjust different, right,

Scott Benner 31:30
and I'm more aggressive, like when I adjust basal rates, I adjust them like 30% of the time, because I'd rather cause a low and then back down from the low to find a level spot than to

Jennifer Smith, CDE 31:40
go high for several days

Scott Benner 31:43
in the high, right. Because also because I feel like you're getting a more accurate depiction of what's happening. If you're using more insulin, when you're using less insulin, then there could be resistance going on. And maybe

Jennifer Smith, CDE 31:54
you know me and the feel to them that you have to correct and so you never really get a true picture of what does the basal adjustment really just do because now I'm high and I want to correct and I'm not going to leave it high. So I don't understand what the bazel I know, I just know it's not enough,

Scott Benner 32:08
you'll get a look into my parenting style that way too. Whenever my children asked me something, I respond immediately with no. And then we work backwards from now. And so I sort of do the same thing on the inside, I slam the insulin, and then I work backwards from there to find a level spot. I wanted to say about insulin action time, it's another idea of settings near pump, right? So there's an amount of time that they you know, insulin should work in your body, like how long from when you put it into when it stops working. And you'll see people say all different kinds of numbers, you know, for hours, you know, it's different for me here and there. Same insulin, you know, they're using one kind of insulin. Some personal say, Well, my action time is four hours, my x times three hours. Arden uses a pager and her insulin action time and her pump is set at two hours. And so I have found that when you Bolus art and that Bolus stops having any effect on her in by two hours. Wow. Most of the time. Some of the time now. I don't know how to tell you the difference, but most of the time it's Yes. Last night it was now last night I couldn't get Arden's blood sugar to budge off of one ad. It didn't matter what I did. She had incredibly Carbo rific afternoon. Like I said, she still has her period. And you know she's going along. Now there's a moment where I'm like pushing and pushing and pushing and I'm finally that guy. This is enough like this insulin is going to start working eventually. And it did later at night after a hot shower. Her blood sugar started coming down and we had to catch it. It was hours and hours later. That doesn't make Arden's insulin action time six hours, right, right. That's a specific situation. Most times insulin I put in now doesn't cause her to get low Two hours later. Now keep in mind, insulin on board is calculated by the insulin action time set up in your pocket. Am I right about that? Correct. Can you explain that for us, please?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 34:07
Yes. So insulin on board specifically uses your active insulin time that you have set in your pump. So for Arden, two hours if she were to get a bolus now for you know, at at 11:07am. Two hours from now, at 1:07pm. The pump would no longer identify active insulin on board from this Bolus, which means that if she chose to Bolus at 115 it's only going to factor in blood sugar and the carbs she tells it she's eating to give a bolus suggestion. However, within active insulin time, let's see, you know, an hour from now somebody's birthday comes up and they bring a big old big old tree to school and she's like, Hey, Dad, I'm totally

Scott Benner 34:58
I'm gonna need another 30 carbs over On top of what we just bought for an hour, right,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 35:02
exactly, but that was an hour ago. So your pump still assumes, hey, there's still insulin on board from this bolus that she gave an hour ago, there's this much active insulin left. Important thing about iob is that you have to feed the pump information in order for it to consider iob information being blood sugar, and carbs. If carbs are a piece in the picture here, right? Because if you do not feed the pump, a blood sugar, it doesn't know the effect of the insulin onboard that's still left. And to calculate the next bolus correctly, it sees the insulin on board, but it may not be able to adjust because it doesn't have a pinpoint of glucose value to now say, okay, she was an hour ago at 82. Now she's at 179. That insulin on board that's left is coming into the picture, but the pump also sees a higher blood sugar. So it's gonna say, okay, she's high. She wants to eat this much more. This is how I'm going to calculate the bolus despite there being active insulin left but

Scott Benner 36:16
in a situation where like, for instance, now Arden's blood sugar's 111. Okay. And I'm seeing a curve up on her CGM. But her pump right now if you test it right now say she didn't have a CGM she tested right now for that, you know, surprise treat an hour later. And, and it says, Oh, your blood sugar's 111. You have all this insulin on board from the meal, go ahead and eat that you don't need insulin for this you don't need, you don't need as much insulin for that. That would be stalking. Okay, and that's a word that doctors are going to throw at you. And they're going to mean for it to scare you. And, and maybe maybe it should, in the beginning, I'm not 100% sure, but what they're going to tell you is you can't stack insulin, because eventually it's going to, it's going to catch up to you. And it's going to make you low. I say to that, yes. If you don't need the insulin, if you do need the insulin, it's not stalking, it's rolling, knowing the difference is the is the trick, I guess. To go back to, I'm going to layman's terms a little bit more about insulin on board and action time if I can. So if you decide that your insulin action time is three hours, and by you, I mean, the doctor sits down says this is what it is for most of my kids this age, so I'm going to set it for three hours for you. But your insulin action time is actually less or more, then your pump is going to make decisions based off of that number. It doesn't make it right, I want to be clear at the pump doesn't have a magic sensor that's in you somewhere that knows that it's telling you the right thing it's making, it's making a static decision from a static number. That's not necessarily correct, it's probably a good guess. It probably won't hurt, you know, it's gonna err you on the side of caution a lot. It's going to keep you from being you know, from getting well.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 38:07
And I think that's a good it's a it's a very good point to bring up. Because what we've actually found, especially in the community of people who are doing the Do It Yourself looping types of pumps, which is a whole nother broad topic, but I bring it up in this mainly because what we've found is that the action time of rapid acting insulin is actually beyond what most people have it set in that their insulin pump. And the reason that we have it set for less time in an insulin pump, is because we inherently do not want to run high blood sugars. And so if we give the pump and active insulin time of three hours, when really that bolus is probably lasting about four hours for us. What it means is that at three hours and one minute after this bolus was delivered, if your blood sugar is still high, your pump now no longer sees any active insulin and it can bolus you more aggressively for the blood sugar that you now want to drive down. Right. Whereas if you had it set for four hours, at three hours in one minute, you were like I'm high I want a bolus to get this blood sugar down. Your pumps gonna be like, let's be a little conservative here because you still have this like quarter of that last bolus still working.

Scott Benner 39:31
We are now six episodes deep into the diabetes pro tip series. We're halfway through talking about insulin pumping. And next month, the episode about how to use a CGM like a ninja is going to come out. It's time guys. Let me be bold and say I think if you don't have a dexcom at this point, if you want one, you have to take the leap. You have to go to dexcom.com forward slash juice box and get started right now. But if you need to be reminded again, why I'm happy to do that for you. Good Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor is not only going to show you what your blood sugar is, it's not only going to keep you from having to check with a meter, it is going to show you the direction and speed that your blood sugar is moving. how fast you falling? How fast are you rising at what pace? is this happening? Should I put more insulin and should I not? The data from the Dexcom g six is going to help you make that decision. All of the things you're hearing in the Juicebox Podcast. And even more specifically in this diabetes pro tip series. If you'd like to put those things into practice, if you'd like to grab diabetes by the you know what, and just bring it snack and say I've had enough of this, I want to eat Chinese food, I want to have a pizza, I don't want my agency to be 12. Because of that, I don't want to spike the 400 I just want to eat. I think you can do that with the Dexcom. Now my results are mine and yours may vary. But I got a good feeling dexcom.com forward slash juice box or links in your show notes or Juicebox podcast.com. I mean, even if you don't want the Chinese food, wouldn't you just like to sleep overnight with some comfort.

If you have an omni pod, your pump is going to be completely self contained, it will adhere to your body, the insulin will be in there and all the smarts and everything and you'll use a wireless controller to tell it hey, I want you to change my bazel or put in a bullish or something like that. All other pumps have tubing and an infusion set, right. So you'll have an infusion set that'll put your cannulation tubing will run to the pump, and that pump will have its insulin in it, you'll need to keep that with you. It'll be clipped somewhere,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 41:50
right. And that's a good point to make to about the difference on the pod. The PDM does not have to be on your person for the pod to continue delivering. That's a big question that a lot of people have, well, I don't want to carry around this extra thing all the time. You don't have to once the pod has been told what to do. It does it

Scott Benner 42:09
as soon as it beeps and it recognizes the signal you're done. Actually you can walk away from if your insulin starts in like say you're putting into reverence delivering, right? As soon as it starts to walk away. You could you could run to, you could run across the state and your pdmp in your house and the insulin will keep delivering Yeah. It's also important to talk about there about pumping in general is that to bathe or swim on a tube pump, you're going to have to disconnect to more than that for most right. So even in you know more aggressive like sports, for instance, like you there's a lot of people who disconnect to go play soccer or you know, football or something like that. With Omni pod, you'll always be wearing it. I think to me, that's a huge point that made me want to do it. Because you always hear people say like, Oh, I went to the beach and I got high, I get high at the beach. And I always think back to someone who was on the show. I think it was a just a few episodes ago, where he said if you put a pencil in your back pocket, and then rob a bank, pencils don't cause bank robbery. And, and so the batch doesn't make your blood sugar high, taking your insulin pump off major blood sugar high. Right, right, like that kind of an idea. So just understand that there's different ways to manage with different pumps, I'm not telling you which pump they get.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 43:30
And that's a lifestyle look, right. And that's the biggest thing when I work with people. They're always like, what what do you think is the best? There isn't a best, there's the best for me, there's the best for you, you need to take a look at you know the pros and the cons of all of the pumps. What are the what's the pump that has the most Pros for your life, to navigate your lifestyle your needs, you know, an athlete, I've got a lot of athletes who really prefer Omni pod. Because of the tubeless piece I've worked with a lot of triathletes, who really they need I mean from going from a swim into a bike into a run, they need something that's a seamless management, then they're not having to clip in and pop in and reload and you know everything. So there? I think it takes a lot of examination of your lifestyle. Yeah,

Scott Benner 44:17
no, absolutely. There's no, I would I would jokingly say that, you know, I'm sure you think that I think you should get an omni pod. And probably if you ask me my personal opinion, I would say yes, right, not just because they advertise on the show, but because artists use one for 11 years. And it has been nothing but absolutely fantastic for us. But I completely agree with Jenna, you should decide what works best for you. You really have to do that. Not everyone's going to see the same pros and cons as everyone else.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:47
And all of the pumps despite delivery and mechanism of driving insulin. They all do have some features that are different and may apply better to your lifestyle than another They're brand. Absolutely.

Scott Benner 45:01
So. So again, figure it out for yourself, do your due diligence. I think the greatest thing about the Omni pod might be is that they offer a demo, they'll send you one to your house and let you try it like that, where it the other companies are at a loss, they can't really do that, because

Jennifer Smith, CDE 45:16
of the problems is set up very big and extensive.

Let me just send you Oh, and I'll send it back. Yeah,

Scott Benner 45:22
please, please give it back. And a couple of other ideas. And he's it right, so what I was getting to whether you're using it on the pod, or you're using another one, there's going to be some adhesive of some sort, you know, a simple preparation, like we talked about back in the MDI episode, I think I don't over prep, skin, right? clean skin.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 45:44
Right, without lotion or anything on it, you're good to put it on. You could see.

Scott Benner 45:51
You know, if you have soreness with a pump, right, it shouldn't hurt. No, right. So it should not. So be careful. Like, if you start if you have soreness that you know, I mean, after it first goes on, obviously, you know, it's not fun to have a hole poked in you. And that's going to be done by any one of these pumps. But an hour later, whatever it is, if it's hurts, or it's hard to bend your arm, sometimes the candle can hit a nerve,

Unknown Speaker 46:14
or a muscle muscle like looking up again. All of

Scott Benner 46:18
these companies will if you call them up and say, Look, I had to put it in an infusion set, and it hurts so bad. I took it out. Can you send me another one? Generally speaking, they're their customer service is good, they will?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 46:30
Correct. And that's really important because it can affect absorption at the site. If you've got a site that isn't it that's hurt, or, you know, maybe getting infected or for some reason there's irritation under the site. If that site is bothering you, there, that's not good. Remove it, pop in a new one do something.

Scott Benner 46:47
Yeah, don't sit in pain. Yeah. And that I think that's important. tubing is something I don't completely understand I how much tubing Do I need is it just as much to get me to where I want to store my pump?

Jennifer Smith, CDE 47:04
Correct in that depends, you know, tubing comes in many, many different lengths for the tube pumps being of which there are only two on the on the market, either tandem or Medtronic are the tube pumps that are available now, at least here in the States. So the tubing length depends on exactly where you're going to move that pump to and pop it in. If it's in a pocket, you may need short tubing 18 inches, if you're going as some some of the guys that work with, you know where the shirt stays around their lower leg to keep their shirts tucked in, well, they end up just clipping their pump down their leg, and then they can easily lift up their pant leg to Bolus during the day. So if that's the case, you probably want 40 plus inches, tubing. how tall you are, you know, if you're Shaq, you probably need like

inches but yes,

Scott Benner 47:57
and and the two pumps also you when you go to put them on, they have to be primed, which means that you have to fill all of that tubing with insulin. Before you can put it on the pod self Prime's. So you when you there's no tubing, there's no tubing, there's a tiny little candle that that obviously goes under your skin stays there. Yep. So again, there you go. There's pros and cons with all of them. You know, I hear people say that so on the pod has a failsafe, right? If it gets around too much electrostatic electricity, and it and it affects the internals of it, it will shut down and ask you to do to change it. Yep. I've had it happen in 11 years, six or seven times, you know, it's happened. And people go, Well, that doesn't happen with a tube pump. And I'll say Well, yeah, and my daughter is also never walked past the drawer in the kitchen and gotten her tubing caught on and yanked out her infusion set. Oh, that's the tube pump version of that, to me, like they all have something if you're looking for something right? If you're looking for perfection. They don't ask a machine to do anything on it. Absolutely.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 49:03
And I think you know, one even that might be going towards the the tube pump potential need would be if, for some reason, the angle of the kanuma is a concern or an issue for you. That is one I would say potential drawback of Omnipod is that there's only one canula it comes on every pod it's exactly the same canula and it goes in exactly the same angle for every single person, which may not again, your diabetes will vary because your body physiology may be very different. So you may need to choose the pump. Despite not wanting tubing, you may need to choose a pump. That's too because you need a different type of canula or what's called infusion set. You may need something to go in at an 80 degree angle versus an angled you know, you may need a steel canula versus a plastic kanila for various body reasons. So there are a lot of considerations

Scott Benner 50:00
Yeah, absolutely. But don't take, don't you keep this in mind, no matter what pump you're thinking about. I know this is gonna sound a little dirty. But it's, it ends up being true. Companies have salespeople, salespeople influence doctors, doctors get stuck prescribing things right over and over, you walk into an office and say I want it on the pot. And the guy goes, No, no, you want one of these? Trust me, you don't need to trust him. You know, you can say that you appreciate your input. But I'd really like to try the on the pot or vice versa, I don't want it on the pot, I really would like to try that. You can you can, you can speak up for yourself, please, please do that. Absolutely do that. So at the very end of this, I want to talk about about something that can't, it doesn't happen with injections that could happen with a pump, right. So as long as you inject your insulin with your injections, you remember to put in your Atlantis, you'll never marry your trustee. But whatever it is, and you you know, remember to put in your insulin for your food or your high blood sugars, you're watching the needle go in your arm, you're pushing the button, you pull it away, you know the insulins in there. With any insulin pump, the possibility could exist that your canula could get bent, that your tubing could get kinked that the pump could, I don't know, the batteries could die like like, you know, on the pod doesn't have batteries. And there's the but the other ones, there's mechanical, you leave the house and totally forget that your reservoir only had five units. And for the rest of the day, you actually needed 20 units. And now you have no influence area and you're in trouble. Right? Right. So these are things that could happen when you try I we have a radius in my mind, if I'm more than 30 minutes away from my house for any extended period of time. I bring insulin and another pump with us. The other day, we drove an hour and a half to something stayed there all day had all this extra diabetes supplies with us didn't need one of them. You know, most of the time you don't need it. But when it happens, it happens. Now, in 11 years, I'm happy to tell this story in 11 years, we've had one insulin delivery problem with Omni pod. And it wasn't the pump. It was us. We changed the pump by sight. And it you know, it was at a pool. Right? So we put it on and I she got back in the water. And I think the adhesive didn't have time to adhere and it loosened up a little bit and it pulled her canyelles out. Oh yeah, of course of a day right along July day of swimming. We got home her blood sugar was still fine now. Was it still fine because the candle was still in it hadn't worked its way out yet because she was so active during the day. She didn't need as much as I don't know. But what I can tell you is, is that overnight Arden's blood sugar started to skyrocket. And I kept bolusing. And it took me a while to figure out that my boluses weren't doing anything. That's not going to happen to you injecting. Right? So is it is it I actually saw a person say the other day, I'm scared to get a pump because of that. And I think if that's why you're scared, I think you're worrying about things you don't need to worry about. But you do need to be aware of them. Correct, right? Your tube tube kinks, something happens. You're not getting insulin delivery, you're also don't have any slow acting insulin. And so when you lose your pump, you lose your slow and your fast acting you can go from everything's right on to DK a. Pretty fast, quick.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 53:30
Exactly, absolutely. And that's, it's a really good piece, you know, to discuss because it's one of the primary things when I work with starting somebody on a pump that we discuss, right in the pump training, is the risk for decay or the risk for a pump malfunction. And how do you how do you navigate that without having such tremendously high blood sugars that then take forever to bring down because you're at such a deficit of insulin right? I mean, our recommendations really are with a pump, an odd high blood sugar or now with the use of a CGM blood sugars that are like you said, just all of a sudden skyrocketing, and there should be no reason for that skyrocket like you didn't go eat the whole Dairy Queen cake and just not bolus for it right. There is something wrong, you bolus from the pump. If that initial bolus doesn't start to make a dent in that glucose within the next 30 to 60 minutes, you change everything out you change the site, the tubing, the reservoir, the pod, whatever you might even change the insulin you know especially if it's been a D at the beach and your insulin hasn't been kept change the insulin out really important I

Scott Benner 54:41
bail on a pump site. As soon as as soon as I know too. I will sometimes if I if I get a stuck number, but it's not too high. Sometimes I'll inject a little bit. And if you inject instead you go oh my god, it started moving right away. Maybe I'm gonna get off this pump site like a little banner. And that's, you know, to just go over a couple of like ideas, you can't keep reusing the same site over and over again, they eventually become less effective. For reasons we talked about in other episodes, you have to understand that when you when you put in an insulin pump, you've you've needle has poked a hole in you, and left behind a piece of plastic in most cases, right? This plastic is a foreign body. You're right, it's an irritant. I remember discussing with Aaron Kowalski from the jdrf, one time that he thinks one of the most ignored technologies for people with diabetes that we don't spend enough r&d time on is cannulated materials, and how to make them less irritating to the body. Because when your body thinks it's injured, it sends white blood cells to the place it believes there's an injury. And I don't know anything technical, but in my mind's eye, in my mind's eye that draws cartoons of what I think the world looks like, and how I understand things. There's little white blood cells, sort of like the beginning of Jurassic Park, when they show that cartoon to explain that I know DNA, in my mind, I see little white blood cells coming and attaching themselves around that Canyon and making my insulin not flow correctly. I know none of that's probably technically correct. But I do know that when a when a place gets irritated like that, that insulin becomes less effective. And there are times you have to bail on a site sooner than you want to.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 56:26
It could be and it's also a good just around site change itself to be very aware that the potential for that new site to be less absorptive, from really what you're talking about, there is inflammation. Anytime you introduce something underneath the skin, you ask your body to become irritated. And inflammation is what follows. So an absorption at that site is significantly decreased. Everybody's a little bit different. Some people it's for about an hour, some people it could last as long as four, six hours, that inflammatory response. It's also a guess, for those who are using a continuous glucose monitor, you know, that two hour thinking window? Yeah, a big reason for that to our sinking window. Besides that sensor needing to get wet, you've put something to sit underneath your skin, your body's got to get used to that and you don't want glucose values coming in, from a site that's probably injured. Right? So same with a pump, you really have to pay attention. What do your site changes look like? How does your glucose level change around site change time? And is this normal? Is this a normal flux in glucose? Or is my gosh, my blood sugar's never 300 after I change the site, right there in lies the difference of change it out or figure out how to navigate the site change, so you don't have a high blood sugar. And I think it's incredibly important to know that while this may sound scary, that you'll figure it out very quickly.

Scott Benner 57:54
It's not something that's going to dog you for your entire existence. There's little is the word peccadilloes, there's small things about everything that you have to you have to figure out along the way. And the only way just like we talked about within, the only way to figure it out is to do it. Let it go the way you didn't expect, you know, suss out what happened and and fix it next time. I think

Jennifer Smith, CDE 58:16
just the fact in you know, this episode, especially talking about these little pieces. It's really, really important because these are pieces that are often not talked about from an endo education standpoint. They're not they're missed. They're things that you figured out along the way. And you've talked to other people, and you're like, Ah, I'm not the crazy, man. This is what's happening. Right? Me, me, too. I mean, I, I could have sat and asked my endo about it. But there's things that in interjecting and working with other people and my own self experience. I'm like, I'm not crazy. This is what happens. And I'm not the only one great

Scott Benner 58:57
example, that when RM is younger, and we changed her pump, she'd get high. And people say, Oh, that's a thing. That's a pod chain tide only happens with Omni pod, and blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, you have to Bolus mark with Bolus with the old pod before you change the new pod because the new pod won't work and everything. None of that was the truth. You want to know the truth. Arden was incredibly nervous to get her insulin pump change when she was little, and the adrenaline would hit her and shoot her blood sugar up. And one day, Arden stop being nervous about having your insulin pump changed. And that all stopped. There was no match. So people had had imagined this entire story around this and I started buying into it at first I was like, oh, obviously the pump doesn't work right away and and all this and by the way, it doesn't it that's not an unnecessarily incorrect statement. There like you just said new inflammation. There's an injury, you do sometimes need more insulin. upfront and I don't disagree with that. But the leap she got wasn't the pump changing. adrenaline's adrenaline. And I still, like we talked about earlier, a new pump. As soon as I put on a new pump, I double the bazel for an hour, like, right, just to get it going. But, but I started thinking down that it's again, this cause and effect, it's the pencil in your pocket, right? Like, I changed the pump in her blood sugar went up, obviously, the pumps not delivering insulin anymore. Make sense? didn't end up being correct. Right? Right. So just you'll figure it out.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:00:32
My experience was coming from a tube pump to Omnipod. So I had experience with site change from a tube standpoint on the Omnipod. And I'm glad that I had that. Because I do experience that site change inflammation. And I had experienced it on a tube pump with the canula. And so I knew it was likely going to still happen on Omni pod. So, you know, again, your experience is going to be different from somebody else's.

Scott Benner 1:00:59
It's 100%. Right? Ah, good. Oh, did we didn't miss anything? Do we do okay? I think I like what you said at the end. I appreciate it. Because I wanted this to be a real real conversation. Not some like shiny. Oh, you'll get a pump and you'll love it. And it's gonna end by the way you will love it. It's in we won't. I don't know who you are. You know, I can tell you it's been an amazing experience for us, I believe wholeheartedly that the Omni pod is one half of the reason that we are able to keep Arden's agency where it is

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:01:30
where it is. Absolutely. And I see the population of people that come off of a pump is small. But there are people who I've got a good friend who pumped for years and was like, man, she had a major issue with her pump. And she was like, No, I'm, I want to make sure I know I'm getting my influence. She's been on bolusing. She's gone through pregnancies with bolusing via MDI, it works for her. But again, that's her choice. And most people will stay on their pump. Listen, here's

Scott Benner 1:02:00
the here's the key, be happy, be healthy. That's all I care about. It doesn't matter to me what you do, just no differently than the way I talked about using insulin. I talk about pumps and glucose monitors the exact same way. I want you to know how it works. I want you to know what to do when you try it. And once you try it, if you don't want to do it, whatever, man, I don't care. You know, like I'm not telling you what to do. I'm here telling you, you shouldn't make decisions based off of bad information. When you have good information, make good decisions, do whatever you want. If you're enjoying the Juicebox Podcast, there's a couple of things you could do. In return, let's say you could leave a rating and a review on iTunes that helps the show be more searchable so more people can find it. You can support the sponsors and I'm talking about on the pod decks, calm dancing for diabetes, and real good foods. These are the people who bring you the podcast for free. Right, right support it. The last thing you can do is tell a friend, if something you've heard on this podcast has been valuable to you. help someone else to find it. podcasts are not intuitive to everybody, you may have to send them a link, you may have to show them how to put a podcast player on their phone. I'm not sure what that will entail. But I know one thing when you share the podcast, it grows. When it grows. The sponsors are happy. And when the sponsors are happy, the podcast continues. I hope you're enjoying the diabetes pro tip series. That's going to be it for March. Jenny and I are having a fantastic time making these. I have to tell you I think maybe we might even you know keep going after this series is over.

Did you think I was gone? I'm still here. At this point, you have to be asking yourself why am I not pushing stop? It's the Curiosity right? Like you think maybe something else is gonna happen. But I'm telling you right now nothing else is gonna happen. Could you hear me breathing? I was holding my breath right there.

Thank you for listening to the Juicebox Podcast. I'll see you next week.


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#218 Diabetes Pro Tip: Temp Basal

Scott Benner

Scott and Jenny Smith, CDE share insights on type 1 diabetes care.….

I am thrilled to welcome Jenny Smith, CDE back to the show. Jenny will be joining us for an extended series of conversations that focus solely on the management ideas that we discuss on the podcast.

Jennifer holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Human Nutrition and Biology from the University of Wisconsin. She is a Registered (and Licensed) Dietitian, Certified Diabetes Educator, and Certified Trainer on most makes/models of insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring systems. You can reach Jenny at jennifer@integrateddiabetes.com.

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 and welcome to the fifth installment of my series diabetes pro tip. Today, in this short but very important episode, Jenny Smith and I are going to talk all about how to manipulate your basal insulin.

Jennifer Smith has a bachelor's degree in human nutrition and biology from the University of Wisconsin. She's a registered and licensed dietitian and certified diabetes educator and a certified trainer and most makes and models of insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring systems. I first met Jenny when I had her on the podcast back in Episode 37, an episode called Jenny Smith diabetes guru had her back in Episode 105. And she and I talked all about a one C's really breaking down what they meant, what was important about them and what wasn't. One day, I just had this idea to bring Jenny back on to talk about all the concepts that we talked about here on the podcast, but real granularly just, you know, really break down ideas in a way that I thought you guys could absorb and remember and share and revisit. And that's what this series has been. Hopefully you've been enjoying it. This is the fifth installment of the diabetes pro tip series with Jenny Smith CDE. And please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast

should be considered advice, medical or otherwise. And to always consult a physician before making changes your medical plan for becoming bold with insulin, temporary basal rates, do a number of different amazing things

Jennifer Smith, CDE 1:45
laugh and laugh compared to what your doctor told you. Yes,

Scott Benner 1:49
and and so here's how I always think about it about basal rates in general, it is bizarre for us to think that we can set up a static basal rate that will always work at 2pm for the rest of this week, or this month or our lives, right. It's just an odd statement. I don't have diabetes, my blood sugar varies based on what's happening in my body or what I eat. And I bet you even though I have no medical training whatsoever that my body is more aggressive with the amount of background insulin that I get the amount of force it pushes on my blood sugar at different times.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 2:24
Because it's got natural compensation. Yes. And I think that that that piece about about measles is also really, really, really important for women. Right?

Scott Benner 2:33
Okay. Yes, because of their periods. Or, by the way now I've been told not to say, Lady time by people that maybe I should say, period. So then I went back to period to make that person happy. Then I got a beautiful note from somebody the other day, you said I think lady time is delightful. And I'm like, I can't win. But that's not the point. So so so here's a couple of ideas. We get Chinese food coming into the house, right or not so or something that's high carb that breaks down slowly in your system. Oh, my Pre-Bolus for Chinese food is this Temp Basal increase 95% for two hours, boom, I start right there. Then I get a healthy Pre-Bolus in you know, and I start the I want to decline when when Arden starts eating her food. Chinese is a good example. Because it's not it's simple sugars and complex carbs at the same time, right. So the coating on the meat might have a lot of sugar in it like the sauces will hit you quickly. But that rice could sit in your system forever and take hours and hours and hours to to break down and to go away. So I think of it as carpet bombing insulin, I want to I want to cover the entirety of the timeline that this food is going to have impact on art and with an increased basal insulin. It I would also use an increased basal insulin, when Arden's hormones are affecting her. Yeah, we just got done doing that this week, there was a day and a half or Arden ran a Temp Basal increase of 80% for two days straight. Yep, get a straight. Yep. If your basal is not right, your bonuses aren't going to work, right? Because you're just replacing bazel with your bonuses. So even again, you count your carbs 100%, right. But if your basal insulin is set at, let's say a unit, but it should be at two units, then when you make a bolus for a three unit snack, the first unit of it is only covering the bazel you don't have plus you haven't had enough bazel leading up to that. So you're probably insulin resistant and having a higher blood sugar to begin with. None of this works without base when people come to me and say, Oh my God, look at my rollercoaster. I'm 60 I'm 400 Um, but the first thing I say is okay, let's get your basals right. If your bases aren't right, the rest of it doesn't work. Right

Jennifer Smith, CDE 4:54
and temporary visas then are not going to work either because they're working off as a setting. That's not that's not right. To begin with,

Scott Benner 5:00
yep. Inevitably, while I'm talking about basis with people, they say, Well, what about my insulin to carb ratio, and I went, that's not even worth thinking about your basis, right. So now you can think about basal insulin as basal insulin used, you know, in the normal course of your day to keep your body function low when you don't have any food, and but if you really start to think about them around food, that's when they become incredibly powerful. Why. And so, there's also a time where, like I alluded to before, you can bump in nudge with bezels. Right, so not only can you create a hard bazel, that helps you with carb, heavy meals, but you can look at a blood sugar that's at, you haven't had insulin for hours, and then suddenly, it just a 75. And it sits there for a little bit. And instead of feeding that 75, you can Temp Basal back. So Temp Basal is unlike the, you know, when I think about the tug of war with with Pre-Bolus. Basal is I think of this way, I imagine if you and I put our hands out, stood up and put our hands together our palm the palm, and we pushed equal amounts on each other. That's it, you don't fall back, I don't fall back. That's a perfect bazel rate. Right now, there might be a situation where my my blood sugar starting to fall. So I need the body function to push a little more. So I, I take a little power away from the bazel, which allows me to push up. Same thing if I'm at a 90 that's going to a 95. And it's creeping up. But a bolus is definitely even a tiny bolus is going to make me later I might just do a Temp Basal increase to stop that kind of creeping. Yeah, this all occurred to me when I interviewed someone about artificial pancreas, and they told me that most of the adjustments that an artificial pancreas makes is through basal insulin. Yeah, not through boluses

Jennifer Smith, CDE 6:57
100%. If you're doing anything within the looping community to do it yourself, insulin pumps, either open APS or looper, Android APS are whatever that is. That's the gist of the algorithm. It is most of most of the incremental adjustments based on the trend in glucose are being done by positive and negative what's called temping, you get a bit of a bump up, you get a bit of a bump down, he had a bit of bump bump up, and it's all being based on your current bazel setting. Right? Right. But the incremental ups and downs are what keep you stable.

Scott Benner 7:34
This past week, I visited the army pod headquarters in Massachusetts, where they've just moved their production facility. It's about to go live. And I got to tour the floor, where you're on the pods are going to be made from now on, right here in America, right in Massachusetts. I want you to know that what I witnessed in Massachusetts on that assembly line, it didn't just renew my excitement about Omni pod, it shot me over the moon, the accomplishment of bringing a production like that into one facility, putting it under your roof that showed me a real commitment to the people living with Type One Diabetes. Right? This isn't being made overseas somewhere or you know, a bunch of different factories. It's all right there at the Omnipod headquarters, and its state of the art and it's absolutely stunning. This is a company who is behind you for the long haul. I believe that before but I believe it even more now. Here's what you want to do. Go to my omnipod.com Ford slash juice box or click on the links in your show notes or Juicebox Podcast comm when you get there request a free experience kit. That's right up pack. A pod experience kit on the pod is going to send you a pod that is an exact replica of the one you'll get when you start using the product for real, but this one's non functioning, and so it's safe to wear for you to try

Unknown Speaker 8:55
out.

Scott Benner 8:56
You'll be able to find out if you like it where you want to wear it. And you'll notice how after you've had it on for a little while you don't even remember that it's there. Miami pod.com forward slash juice boxes links show notes or Juicebox podcast.com. The Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor gives you a complete picture of your glucose showing you where it's going and how fast it's getting there. There can be nothing more important. The dexcom g six also eliminates finger sticks for calibration, diabetes treatment decisions, and diabetes management. It also has an automatic inserter. Like it just you know you stick it on and you push the button and the next thing you know you're wearing it. Now you can use the dexcom receiver to get the information from your transmitter. But for those of you who enjoy using your cell phone, it works great with iPhone and Android as well. The last little thing about Dexcom isn't so little How about the share and follow features also for Android and iPhone. Your loved ones can follow your blood sugar anywhere in the world and if you're the pain Or a caregiver of someone with Type One Diabetes, you can be watching their blood sugar as well. You want to know what Arden's blood sugar is right now. It's 82 just glanced up and saw it just like that. Now my results are mine and yours may vary, but my daughter's a one C has been between 5.2 and 6.2. for over five solid years, the decisions we make about how to give my daughter insulin and when to give it to her, come directly from the data that comes from the dexcom g six. And I don't know if you know this or not, but my daughter does not have one dietary restriction. Those numbers are accomplished through waffles, just as well as through salads, through burgers, just as well as through zucchini, it doesn't matter, anything that impacts my daughter's blood sugar, that impact is shown to me by the Dexcom g sex, and then I make good decisions. You want to make some good decisions, go to dexcom.com forward slash juice box and get started today. That's the best decision you're ever gonna make. So when I talk about bumping and nudging, which is going to come up in the future a little more, it's the idea that if you don't use too much insulin, it can't cause a wide swing. Correct, right. So bumping a 120 diagonal up back to 90 takes a smaller amount of insulin than ignoring your blood sugar till it gets the 180. Now you're putting in a bunch of insulin and becomes Miss time and you get low later. So using these little bumps, just make sense that you can accomplish that with Temp Basal. Again, remember, Temp Basal is don't start working right away. You can't save yourself have a 65 one arrow down with the Temp Basal. No, that's, that's juice time. Right, right. But, but but a 70 that's drifting low and has no impact from insulin really could be saved with it couldn't be saved. Maybe it won't be but you try and figure out for yourself, maybe that'll end up being a 90 that's drifting low that you'll eventually use Temp Basal for. But they are, they are such an important tool. And if you're not using them, you're missing out. I I'll say it here, I'll say it again, an insulin pump is not just a way to get less injections. It's also a way to be able to give yourself micro bonuses to be able to manipulate your basal insulin to be able to manipulate your boluses to spread them out. These tools are vital. So please tell me and I know you and I are short on time here. But tell me how you talk about Temp Basal with people like where do you Where do you really focus in on on education about it.

Jennifer Smith, CDE 12:33
So I we I and I usually really, really focus in on all of the scenarios that are likely to come up where temporary bazel is really an important piece of management, that that bumping and nudging that you talk about, you know, unfortunately, most people are only taught about exercise and the benefit of temporary bazel. And they're usually told, well just, you know, just set it for zero percent or turn your bazel off during that time. Well, that's 100% incorrect to begin with. But exercise is one of many reasons that you may want to change your bazel for a, you know, a duration of time, illness, a woman's menstrual cycle, or that woman's time of the month or whatever you're going to call it, that time, you're going to definitely need temporary bazel you're going to need it for sedentary days, I can go to a conference where I'm literally sitting for eight hours. And while I might be walking between conference rooms, the sitting and sedentary, I need a 25% increase in my basil. In order to not run high that whole day. I've figured that out right? I figured out what I need to do to take a five mile run versus a 12 mile run temporary bazel changes. I figured out what to do for different kinds of illness a stomach bug may require a decrease. an illness like a sinus infection or a bronchial infection may require an increase. Even even temporary bazel around food like you mentioned before with the Chinese high fat food, yes. 100% requires knowledge of using temporary bazel because I know we'll talk about extended boluses and things a little bit too but temporary bazel for high fat man that can affect you eight to 12 hours after you're done eating it and it keeps you high and you may go to bed with an awesome looking blood sugar thingy that I made. I nailed that I really got it. What do you get an alarm at two o'clock in the morning where you're 300 and you're like what happened?

Scott Benner 14:37
And those are the examples By the way, when you can't say to yourself, oh, well that's just diabetes. It's not just diabetes, that it's you didn't use the insulin right? And so every time you think diabetes is just this, this, you know, magic fairy that runs around messing with you. It's something happened like you might not know what it is in that moment. But some thing happened. And you can figure out what those somethings are and stop them. And there's a great example high fat, you might need a Temp Basal increase that goes on for hours and hours later,

Jennifer Smith, CDE 15:11
high fat 50% at least 50% increase for at least six to eight hours after the meal. Right?

Scott Benner 15:18
Right. It's just it's, I know, it's a little mind numbing to think that, but that's a lot to think about. But I want to, I think now's a great place to say this. As much as we're breaking things down and really stretching them out. So you can see the tiniest little aspects of these ideas. For people who understand them, I will speak for myself, I do not think about diabetes that frequently during the day, this stuff just kind of happens. I know that sounds crazy. But I look at a plate and I go, Okay, here's what this means. And if and if I miss I readjust. But But I don't spend a lot of time, of course aside of this podcast, but I don't we don't say the word diabetes in our house very frequently, I guess is what I'm saying. We're not always fighting and, and you know, scary lows, and oh my gosh, she's been high for three hours. Like that doesn't happen around here. Right. And you can live that life too, by understanding how insulin works. Isn't Jenny terrific. You know who else is pretty great on the pod and Dexcom. Go to my omnipod.com forward slash juice box to get your pod experience kit today. That's right, a free no obligation demo of the Omni pod is yours to have by going to my omnipod.com forward slash juice box. You want to make these great adjustments, you're probably going to need a CGM. I recommend the G six by Dexcom. Go to dexcom.com forward slash juice box to find out more. These links are also available in the show notes of your podcast player, or at Juicebox podcast.com. I put three episodes out this week, this one Pre-Bolus thing. And the next one insulin pumping. Don't forget, get all three. This diabetes pro tip series was designed to be listened to in order. So if you're finding this one, go back, work your way through them. They build a narrative around type one diabetes. Coming up next month, using your glucose monitor, bumping and nudging and more. You can hire Jenny at integrated diabetes.com. Instead of me talking to her you could be talking to her. You could get Jenny on the phone or by Skype through FaceTime. She talks to her clients in many different ways. Bring up the things that you're struggling with and Jenny will help you go to integrated diabetes.com. To find out more about that. If you're interested in seeing me speak live and you're in the Orlando area, I'm going to be at the touched by type one event put on by dancing for diabetes. Just go to dancing for diabetes.com go to the Events tab click on touch by type one. When you do you can register to attend. This event happens on May 18 2019. It runs from 8am to 5pm. And there are a lot of great speakers not just me. If it's after May 18. Please still go to dancing for diabetes.com. They're a sponsor of the show. They do amazing work with people living with type one diabetes, and I would love for you to find out more about them. They're also on Facebook and Instagram.


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