QUOTE(elye @ Jun 26 2007, 02:07 PM)

A couple of weeks ago I posted with my questions about jetlag. We are travelling to Europe in a month, and I've never done a six-hour time change before. I got some great advice on how to best get onto the new time, i.e., plenty of water, sleeping on the flight, staying out in daylight etc. Now I have a question for any other type one diabetics out there who have made this kind of time change. I am taking two shots a day and have very precise times for meals and daily workouts (my sleep time stays fairly rigid, as well). This has allowed me to maintain tight blood sugar control for many years. Now, I am flummoxed as to how I can make this two-week change work. Should I keep the times of my shots the same? This would mean injecting at 1 pm instead of 7 am, as I do here, and then at 10 pm instead of 4 pm. But then I will be sleeping right after I inject, and my meals will be at totally different times relative to my shots. Help!
Oooh boy...that IS a big time change. 2 questions: Have you looked into a an insulin pump? Many companies will offer you a "trial" pump for a short period of time. You would need to get set up with that ASAP in you are leaving in a month, since it takes some time to set your basal rates. I have a pump and love it. You can eat whenever you want, and sleep in as well. You make your own schedule. The pump works well for this kind of setting. Prior to the pump, I was on multiple daily injections 5x per day.
Another question I have is: are you still on the old insulin and not Lantus? It sounds like you are are on Regular and NPH. The new analogues allow for much more flexibility in your lifestyle, as well as a reduced risk of low blood sugar. Lantus does not have a peak, so you don't need to eat until you are ready or need snacks. Then, you simply take a meal time injection of fast-acting insulin when you want to eat.
Of course if you are using the old insulin, and they work for you and you want to stick with it, of course you should. I personally had terrible control with the old insulin as I am so insulin sensitive. I had numerous seizures due to the unpredictability of NPH and Regular.
If you are not on Lantus and Humalong/Novolog, I suggest switching over just for the trip. NPH is just horrible to work with in this case! I do *NOT* suggest taking a peaking insulin like NPH before bed, and that will not work well anyway if you are not using analogues for your meals. Regular has just about as much flexibility as NPH...which is none! ;p You also obviously cannot eat dinner at 10 pm...just not practical if you want to enjoy your trip.
That said, there is a way to "switch" over your insulin dosing, I believe by either gradually increasing or decreasing the hour at which you take your initial shot until you eventually are near the "new" time. However, that requires way to much disruption, and you will need to be on your "new" schedule for a bit while still still at home.
If you don't like the idea of the pump or Lantus, here is the "easy" option. On the day that you leave, take your insulin as normal in the am. At supper, DO NOT take your 2nd long-acting insulin, just your fast-acting. Continue to use your fast-acting insulin *only* to correct any high blood sugars and to cover any meals (I assume you know how to carb count and match your insulin dose to your food). Once the long-acting (NPH) is out of your system (I think after 18 hours? You will need to check), you can start the next am with your regular routine again. In the meantime, you will need to test lots and adjust with your short-acting insulin only. You might need to give a few units to sustain you overnight until you make the switch that next day.
Enjoy your trip!
P.S. Have you talked to your endo yet?