insulin Deoendent GD

1four1cooking

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 27, 2010
Messages
124
Reaction score
0
I was on NPH at might time but after seeing my Doc today, he switched it to Lantus. I was just wondering if there are any other insulin dependent lantus users, and what they thought of it?
 
Hi there, I don't know what NPH is, but I'm on Lantus. Haven't had any problems with it so far (I'm on 8 units once a day in the evening). x
 
Hi there, I don't know what NPH is, but I'm on Lantus. Haven't had any problems with it so far (I'm on 8 units once a day in the evening). x

Thanks thats good to know. I have been on it for two nights at 120 units at night. It has worked really well.
 
Wow 120 units sounds a lot! Mind you, you are in the USA so perhaps your "units" are different to ours.
 
Wow 120 units sounds a lot! Mind you, you are in the USA so perhaps your "units" are different to ours.

I don't know about that but yeah it is a lot. Apparently I am really insulin dependent. The doctor said I was his second highest in the office. At least I am not the highest right.
 
120 units sounds like a bit much ! I am also insulin dependent, I take NovaLog fast acting on the sliding scale, usually 10 units every time I eat and Lantus every night before bed at 15 units.....

Good luck to you
 
I just got switched from Novolin R during the day to Novalog (which is faster acting) (5-15 units per meal). It's made a huge improvement in preventing hypos for me. I'm still on Novolin N at night (11 units) and now I'm very curious as to what the difference is between this and the Lantus. Can anyone tell me?
 
I just got switched from Novolin R during the day to Novalog (which is faster acting) (5-15 units per meal). It's made a huge improvement in preventing hypos for me. I'm still on Novolin N at night (11 units) and now I'm very curious as to what the difference is between this and the Lantus. Can anyone tell me?

Never used the Novolin N, but I can say that I LOVE my NovaLog with meals and the Lantus at night....I have an appointment on Monday though to get started with a pump...I can't wait to stop sticking myself so much !:thumbup:
 
Hi there, I don't know what NPH is, but I'm on Lantus. Haven't had any problems with it so far (I'm on 8 units once a day in the evening). x

Thanks thats good to know. I have been on it for two nights at 120 units at night. It has worked really well.


What the heck size syringe do they have you using for that many units ??? I just looked at my lantus pens and they don't go up that high and my syringes for my NovaLog only go to 50 UNITS and that would be for VERY serious cases... Maybe my version of units and yours are different, but still please tell me what size needle you are using cause that has to hurt...:cry:
 
I wish I could get a pump...
My doc told me that it was possible that I could go over 50 and that they would switch me to a larger syringe. However, I can't imagine shooting 120 units. I agree that they could be different measurements. I just keep dreaming about the day when I no longer have to use the insulin (well, I dream about that, eating cheesecake again, and having flat abs).
 
I have a feeling it is 12 units you are taking at night - even a U-100 syringe only gets to 100 units and you cannot be taking a whole syringe. For a GD 12 uints would be a lot.

I am type 1 diabetic and take 27 units of Protophane at night (it works the same as Lantus and I was switched from Lantus to Protophane when I got pregnant) and another 12-13 units of Novorapid (very like NovoLog) at each meal.

There are a number of different insulins - night insulin is always long acting and lasts from between 12 to 24 hours - Lantus I know is supposed to last 24 hours and keep a stable curve so that you are getting some insulin all the time instead of a huge peak in insulin when you take it and then decreasing over time. In general the newer insulins are supposed to get better more stable sugar levels. You would have to look up the curves for the insulin you are on on the internet - for a night insulin you want something with an almost straight line curve, for a meal time insulin you want something that rises suddenly (usually about an hour after you take it) and then drops rapidly to nothing by the next meal. You can get good usgar readings on any of the insulin (even the older ones) if you know how they work and eat accordingly so it does not really matter which one you are on - I have been on about 6-8 different types of insulins since I became diabetic and they have all worked.
 
I have a feeling it is 12 units you are taking at night - even a U-100 syringe only gets to 100 units and you cannot be taking a whole syringe. For a GD 12 uints would be a lot.

I am type 1 diabetic and take 27 units of Protophane at night (it works the same as Lantus and I was switched from Lantus to Protophane when I got pregnant) and another 12-13 units of Novorapid (very like NovoLog) at each meal.

There are a number of different insulins - night insulin is always long acting and lasts from between 12 to 24 hours - Lantus I know is supposed to last 24 hours and keep a stable curve so that you are getting some insulin all the time instead of a huge peak in insulin when you take it and then decreasing over time. In general the newer insulins are supposed to get better more stable sugar levels. You would have to look up the curves for the insulin you are on on the internet - for a night insulin you want something with an almost straight line curve, for a meal time insulin you want something that rises suddenly (usually about an hour after you take it) and then drops rapidly to nothing by the next meal. You can get good usgar readings on any of the insulin (even the older ones) if you know how they work and eat accordingly so it does not really matter which one you are on - I have been on about 6-8 different types of insulins since I became diabetic and they have all worked.


Have you considered the pump ??? I am going to start on a pump next week, I had one with my last pregnancy and it was a life/finger/arm/thigh saver... Even though I'm not preggers yet I hope to be soon and the Internal Meds Doctor here thought that it would be best to just put me back on the pump now instead of waiting cause I am shooting so many times a day right now..:nope:
I started with Gestational Diabetes 8 years ago, and after the pregnancy it layed dormit for awhile then one day I got REALLY REALLY sick and when I was laying in the hospital they informed me " Do you know you have diabetes ?" I was like "WHAT!!" and they told me that most times that it does come back after pregnancy and sticks with you for life...Now I fight the war on Type 2 every day !!!!:nope:
 
I would love a pump (I think) but I live in a third world country and while they are available here, getting a medical aid to agree to pay for one is impossible. So I must live with daily injections and its not the best for control - especially when pregnant!
 
i was switched from lantus to insulatard as soon they found out i was pregnant
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Members online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
1,650,432
Messages
27,150,675
Members
255,847
Latest member
vmcpeek2
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "c48fb0faa520c8dfff8c4deab485d3d2"