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She may be eating the wrong things, and diet may be contributing not only to the weight gain but also to the fact that she complains of hunger after eating. What I mean is that if she is eating foods high in fat or simple sugars and that don't contain adequate complex carbs, her carbs may be digesting quickly, causing an initial dump of insulinFood and insulin release Hypoglycemia Insulin analog Insulin aspart Insulin aspart protamine-insulin aspart Insulin aspart-insulin aspart protamine Insulin c-peptide Insulin detemir Insulin glargine Insulin glulisine Insulin inhalation, rapid acting, and maybe causing brief hypoglycemia. The result could be a craving for more food. If she maybe starts eating more complex carbs and small frequent snacks to even out her food intake and her digestion and food absorption, this may help. For example, a breakfast of a yummy donut doesn't sustain a person as long as a bowl of whole grain cereal, but may have more calories and may cause the person to crave another meal quicker than the slower-digested whole grains.
Of course it is possible that she is one of the somewhat new phenomenon of type 2 children -- weight gain can mean poorer insulin absorption. So if her habits don't seem normal to her parents, the best thing to do is to have her doctor runs some tests so see what her fasting glucose is, and what her a1c is. Maybe a glucose tolerance test is also in order. Doesn't hurt to check,and if something is wrong, it is better to know before the child is sick or in ketosis.