In my personal experience hanging the insulin type without dealing with the cause of the problem is not likely to solve anything.
Changing the type of basal won't really change the amount you need.
Perhaps I am missing something @urbanracer but I was not inferring that one insulin could be exchanged for another at the same dosage. just that switching before ascertaining, in his situation, all the possible reasons/causes first is not usually a useful move. Particularly when there is one possible lead/cause already - stress.I can't agree with these comments. I changed from Abasaglar to Levemir last year and my basal requirement has been steadily increasing (from 12 to 20) ever since the change, and it's still not controlling my levels well. In terms of my activity levels and diet, nothing in my life has changed in way that would explain the increased dose requirements.
Whilst there would be a proportion of the diabetic population who can switch insulins without a change in dose, it makes sense to me that if the insulins are of a different makeup then they may not perform the same way for all users.
Perhaps I am missing something @urbanracer but I was not inferring that one insulin could be exchanged for another at the same dosage. just that switching before ascertaining, in his situation, all the possible reasons/causes first is not usually a useful move. Particularly when there is one possible lead/cause already - stress.
And in your case I do not know why you changed or were changed insulins or what a full investigation of the discrepancy in doses might reveal.
And maybe @eveilclive's statement should read - will not necessarily change the amount you need.
Sorry to hear you had such troubles with Lantus. And glad its cessation has saved you from such horrific symptoms.Stress may be a contributor or even the only reason for the OP's high glucose levels but what I'm saying is that the insulin type cannot be discounted as being either wholly or partly the cause of the problem.
In the summer of 2017 (and after almost 3 years on Glargine) I developed severe myalgia in both shoulders but had no idea what was causing it. Then early in 2018 I started to get systemic rashes and anaphylaxis. I cannot remember what alerted me to the fact that these are all listed side effects (in the 1 in 10,000 category) of Glargine, but I pursuaded my endo' to let me try something else and so I'm now on Levimir and all my issues have (thankfully) cleared up.
It is my perception that Glargine controlled my background glucose levels more effectively than Levemir does now but I don't think I can go back to Glargine based insulin. Some days I feel as though Levemir isn't actually having any affect on my glucose levels at all.
Sorry to hear you had such troubles with Lantus. And glad its cessation has saved you from such horrific symptoms.
Could antibodies to Lantus be cross-reacting with Levemir and affecting its efficacy??
It sounds as though you are still titrating your Levemir dosage which must be frustrating ++.
How high do you go and is a higher than 20 units, 30 units etc a bad thing if you finally obtain control?
Is going onto an insulin pump with a short-acting insulin another option?
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