Exercise and Type 1 Diabetes: Managing Glucose During and After Activity
Quick answer: Aerobic exercise (running, cycling) lowers blood glucose by increasing insulin sensitivity. Anaerobic exercise (weight lifting, sprints) can raise glucose via adrenaline and cortisol. The biggest risk is delayed post-exercise hypoglycemia, which can occur 6–12 hours after activity — often overnight.
Exercise is one of the most powerful tools in managing Type 1 Diabetes — and one of the most unpredictable. A morning run can drop your glucose to 60 mg/dL in twenty minutes. A heavy weight session can spike it to 250 mg/dL in the same time. And no matter what happened during the workout, your glucose might do something completely different 8 hours later while you sleep.
This is not a reason to avoid exercise. The evidence is clear that regular physical activity dramatically improves cardiovascular health, insulin sensitivity, and quality of life in T1D. But it requires understanding the physiology — and then practicing it, repeatedly, until the management decisions become intuitive.
Aerobic vs Anaerobic Exercise: Opposite Effects
The single most important concept in exercise management for T1D is this: aerobic and anaerobic exercise have opposite effects on glucose.
| Exercise type | Examples | Glucose effect | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aerobic (moderate intensity) | Running, cycling, swimming, dancing | Drops, often significantly | Muscles use glucose as primary fuel; insulin sensitivity increases; glucose transport into muscle cells rises |
| Anaerobic (high intensity) | Sprinting, HIIT, heavy lifting, team sports | Often rises initially | Adrenaline and cortisol surge; liver releases glucose (gluconeogenesis); counterregulatory hormones temporarily override insulin |
| Mixed (intermittent) | Football, basketball, tennis, circuit training | Variable and unpredictable | Alternating aerobic and anaerobic phases create competing glucose effects |
This means a 5km run requires a very different strategy than a 30-minute HIIT session. Treating them identically — same pre-exercise glucose target, same carb intake, same insulin adjustment — is a common mistake.
The IOB Problem: Active Insulin and Exercise Don't Mix Well
The most dangerous combination in T1D exercise management is having significant Insulin on Board (IOB) at the start of a workout. IOB is the amount of bolus insulin that is still active in your body from a previous injection.
Here is why it matters: exercise dramatically increases how quickly and effectively insulin moves glucose into muscle cells. If you already have 1–2 units of bolus insulin active, and you begin a 30-minute aerobic workout, you are effectively doubling the glucose-lowering effect of that insulin. Glucose can drop from 140 mg/dL to 55 mg/dL in under 20 minutes.
The Rule of IOB and Exercise:
Always check your IOB before starting aerobic exercise. If you have more than 0.5U active, consider eating 15–20g of fast carbs before starting. Do not rely on feeling fine — glucose can drop faster than symptoms appear, especially early in exercise when adrenaline can mask hypoglycemia.
Pre-Exercise Glucose Targets
The ADA and the EASD/International Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Diabetes joint consensus statement recommend starting aerobic exercise with a glucose between 126 and 180 mg/dL. The exact range depends on the individual, but the key principle is:
- Below 90 mg/dL: Do not start exercise. Eat 15–20g of fast carbs and wait 15 minutes
- 90–126 mg/dL: Caution. Eat a small carb snack (10–15g) before aerobic exercise
- 126–180 mg/dL: Safe start for most aerobic exercise
- Above 250 mg/dL: Check for ketones. If ketones are present, do not exercise — the combination of exercise stress and ketonaemia can accelerate DKA
The Post-Exercise Hypo Window
Exercise does not just affect glucose during the workout. It sensitizes your muscles to insulin for up to 24–48 hours afterward. This is beneficial for long-term metabolic health, but it also means your insulin doses may be dramatically more effective for the rest of the day — and overnight.
Late-onset post-exercise hypoglycemia is particularly dangerous because it typically occurs during sleep. Your muscles are quietly refilling their glycogen stores by pulling glucose from the bloodstream, your liver's ability to release glucose is temporarily reduced, and your insulin sensitivity is at its peak — all while you are unconscious and unable to respond.
- Consider reducing your bedtime basal insulin by 10–20% on heavy exercise days
- Eat a complex carbohydrate snack (15–30g) before bed on exercise days
- Set a CGM alert at 80 mg/dL overnight, not 70 mg/dL — you need more warning time
- A small protein snack at bedtime can help maintain stable overnight glucose by providing slow glucose release through gluconeogenesis
A Simple Exercise Protocol to Start With
There is no single protocol that works for every person with T1D — individual responses to exercise vary enormously. But here is a starting framework based on the Riddell et al. 2017 Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology guidelines:
- 2 hours before: Do not take a full meal bolus within 2 hours of planned aerobic exercise
- 30 minutes before: Check glucose and IOB. If glucose is below 126 or IOB is above 0.5U, eat 15–20g of fast carbs
- During (exercise over 45 minutes): Eat 15–30g of carbs per hour for sustained aerobic activity
- Immediately after: Check glucose. For aerobic exercise, expect a drop of 2–4 mg/dL per minute during the workout
- Before bed: If you exercised today, eat a complex carb snack and consider a 10–15% basal reduction
Exercise in FlightGlucose
The Exercise Timing Trap (Scenario 4) is one of the three permanently free scenarios in FlightGlucose, and it is free for exactly this reason — exercise safety is a matter of life and death for people with T1D, and everyone should be able to practice it.
The scenario places you in Layla's situation: she has 1U of active IOB and decides to go for a run. The game simulates how rapidly glucose falls during aerobic exercise with active insulin on board, and then — if you survive the workout — waits to see whether you anticipate the post-exercise sensitivity window that comes hours later.
Practice exercise glucose management — play the Exercise Timing Trap scenario free
Play Scenario 4 Free →References
- Riddell MC, Gallen IW, Smart CE, et al. Exercise management in type 1 diabetes: a consensus statement. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2017;5(5):377-390. doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(17)30014-1 [Link]
- American Diabetes Association. 5. Facilitating Positive Health Behaviors and Well-being to Improve Health Outcomes: Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes—2024. Diabetes Care. 2024;47(Suppl 1):S77-S110. doi:10.2337/dc24-S005 [Link]
- Taplin CE, Cobry E, Messer L, et al. Preventing post-exercise nocturnal hypoglycemia in children with type 1 diabetes. J Pediatr. 2010;157(5):784-788. doi:10.1016/j.jpeds.2010.05.041 [Link]
- Maran A, Pavan P, Bonsembiante B, et al. Continuous glucose monitoring reveals delayed nocturnal hypoglycemia after intermittent high-intensity exercise in nontrained patients with type 1 diabetes. Diabetes Technol Ther. 2010;12(10):763-768. doi:10.1089/dia.2010.0038 [Link]