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Diabetes - Adult Type II  (Expert Forum)
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Lantus Question
Answered by
Anita Ramsetty, MD - GeneralEndocrinology, Diabetes Type 1, Diabetes Type 2, Thyroid Disorders, AdrenalInsufficiency, CF-Related Diabetes
Endocrine Care Group
Questions in the Adult Type II Diabetes forum are answered by Dr. Anita Ramsetty. Topics covered include Type 2 Diabetes, blood glucose monitoring, diabetes and heart disease, diabetes and pneumonia, diabetes and pregnancy, diabetes and vision problems, diabetes and wound healing, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, and insulin.

Lantus Question

by delta5, Nov 29, 2007 11:52PM
Hello, I am a 42 yr old male and I have been taking Lantus now for a few months. Before, I was taking the usual pills, and also Byetta. I am now off the Byetta and  taking about 37 units of Lantus before bedtime right now. My question is that although i have gotten my a1c down to 6.8 from 13 originally, my fasting BS in the mornings seem to want to hang at 190 to 210 every day. I have not seen "normal" bs numbers for awhile now, but yet my a1c is perfect. My endoc. thinks that my Amaryl is causing low bs numbers at night and then runs out of steam in the mornings and he wants me to boost my Lantus up a unit at a time until i find the magic number for me. Im a little hesitant to go past 40 units because I dont know what an average normal dose of Lantus should be. So far, I am not taking any other insulin, just lantus and the normal pills, amaryl, and metformin. I was taking Avandia until the big scare. Any ideas?

by Anita Ramsetty, MD, Dec 03, 2007 03:29PM
Hi,
First congrats on getting your A1C down to 6.8, that is fantastic.  I am surprised that your AM values are quite so high with an A1C in that range. Just to be sure, review your most recent blood count as anemia can cause falsely low A1Cs. Also, your doc is right in being concerned that there may be some hidden low blood sugars during the night so be sure to look into that because they can be quite dangerous.

Regarding the Lantus dose: there is no definite ceiling for Lantus or any insulin. You take what the body needs. So if your doc wants to titrate the Lantus upwards this is quite acceptable as indicated for continued hyperglycemia, but be on the lookout for hypoglycemia and some weight gain with higher doses of insulin.
Hope this helps,  
Take care.
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