Calculate Insulin Dose
Professional Calculator for Mealtime Bolus & Correction Doses
Total Estimated Bolus
Dose Composition Visualization
Carb Sensitivity Analysis
How changing your carb intake affects the required dose (keeping BG current).
| Carbohydrate Intake | Food Bolus | Total Dose (incl. correction) |
|---|
What is to Calculate Insulin Dose?
To calculate insulin dose specifically for mealtime (bolus) injections involves determining the precise amount of rapid-acting insulin required to cover the carbohydrates in a meal and correct any existing high blood sugar. This process is fundamental for individuals with Type 1 diabetes and many with Type 2 diabetes who are on intensive insulin therapy.
This calculation moves beyond fixed-dose regimens. It uses dynamic variables specific to the individual’s metabolic needs, allowing for greater dietary flexibility and tighter glycemic control. Miscalculation can lead to hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) or hyperglycemia (high blood sugar), making accuracy and understanding the underlying math critical.
Insulin Bolus Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The standard formula used to calculate insulin dose for meals consists of two distinct components: the Food Bolus and the Correction Bolus.
The calculation follows these steps:
- Calculate Food Bolus: Divide the grams of carbohydrates by the Insulin-to-Carb Ratio (ICR).
- Calculate Correction Bolus: Subtract Target Blood Glucose from Current Blood Glucose to find the “gap”. Divide this gap by the Insulin Sensitivity Factor (ISF).
- Sum: Add the two results together.
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current BG | Measured blood glucose level | mg/dL | 70 – 400+ |
| Target BG | Ideal blood glucose level | mg/dL | 100 – 120 |
| ICR | Insulin-to-Carbohydrate Ratio | 1 unit : g | 1:4 to 1:20 |
| ISF | Insulin Sensitivity Factor | mg/dL per unit | 20 to 100 |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: High Blood Sugar with Lunch
Scenario: Jane is about to eat a sandwich (45g carbs). Her current blood sugar is high at 200 mg/dL. Her target is 100 mg/dL.
- ICR: 1 unit per 15g
- ISF: 1 unit drops 50 mg/dL
Calculation:
- Food Bolus: 45 / 15 = 3.0 units
- Correction: (200 – 100) / 50 = 100 / 50 = 2.0 units
- Total Dose: 3.0 + 2.0 = 5.0 units
Example 2: Just a Snack (Normal Blood Sugar)
Scenario: Mark wants an apple (20g carbs). His blood sugar is perfect at 110 mg/dL (Target 110 mg/dL).
- ICR: 1 unit per 10g
- ISF: 1 unit drops 40 mg/dL
Calculation:
- Food Bolus: 20 / 10 = 2.0 units
- Correction: (110 – 110) / 40 = 0 units
- Total Dose: 2.0 units
How to Use This Insulin Dose Calculator
Follow these steps to ensure you calculate insulin dose correctly using the tool above:
- Enter Current BG: Test your blood sugar with a glucometer or CGM and enter the value in mg/dL.
- Set Target BG: Input your goal level (default is often 100 mg/dL).
- Input Carbohydrates: accurately count the carbs in your meal. Read nutrition labels or use a carb-counting app.
- Define Ratios: Enter your personal ICR and ISF. These are usually provided by your doctor.
- Review Results: The tool will display the breakdown. If the correction is negative (because your BG is low), it will subtract insulin from your food bolus to prevent hypoglycemia.
Key Factors That Affect Insulin Results
Even when you calculate insulin dose perfectly mathematically, biology varies. Consider these factors:
- Active Insulin (IOB): If you took a bolus 2 hours ago, some insulin is still active. Stacking doses can lead to lows.
- Exercise: Physical activity increases insulin sensitivity. You may need to reduce your calculated dose by 20-50% if exercising post-meal.
- Stress & Illness: Cortisol and illness often cause insulin resistance, requiring a higher dose than the formula suggests.
- Fat & Protein: High-fat meals (like pizza) delay digestion. A standard calculation might cause an early low followed by a late high.
- Injection Site: Absorption varies between the abdomen (fastest) and the thigh (slower).
- Alcohol: Alcohol can stop the liver from releasing glucose, increasing the risk of delayed hypoglycemia.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
If your blood sugar is significantly below target, the correction dose becomes negative. This subtracts from your food bolus. If the total dose is less than zero, do not take insulin; you likely need to consume rapid-acting carbs to treat hypoglycemia.
The “Rule of 500” is a common starting point: 500 divided by your Total Daily Dose (TDD) of insulin. However, this must be verified with your doctor through testing.
No, this calculator determines the raw gross bolus. If you have active insulin from a previous injection (within 3-4 hours), you should manually subtract that from the correction portion.
No. This tool helps calculate insulin dose for rapid-acting bolus insulin (e.g., Humalog, Novolog) taken at mealtimes, not background basal insulin.
This calculator is configured for mg/dL (standard in US/Japan). To convert mmol/L to mg/dL, multiply your mmol/L value by 18.
Also known as ISF, it represents how many mg/dL one unit of insulin will lower your blood glucose. It is derived using the Rule of 1800 or Rule of 1500.
Most insulin pens allow dosing in half or whole units. Round to the nearest increment your delivery device supports.
Children often have very high insulin sensitivity. Always double-check calculations with a caregiver and follow the specific ratios provided by a pediatrician.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Advanced Carbohydrate Counting Guide – Learn how to estimate food weight and carb content accurately.
- Basal Rate Testing Protocol – Determine if your background insulin is set correctly.
- Managing High Blood Glucose – Strategies for safe correction without stacking insulin.
- Hypoglycemia Rescue Plans – What to eat when your calculation results in a negative requirement.
- Insulin Pump Settings Explained – How to transfer these manual calculations to your pump profile.
- A1C to eAG Converter – Understand how your daily averages impact your long-term health metrics.