Hmm. I had a high lantus dose before and it caused me to hypo middle of night so I think it does decrease bg.
Also, keep it steady means it must also increase bg as well, I don't think it does that.
Sorry, I probably didn't put it very well.
Throughout the day and night out livers trickle out their glucose store whether or not we are eating. The job of the background/basal insulin is to balance out the trickle of glucose from the liver. So to get your basal dose right for you you need to figure out how much basal insulin is required to keep you steady - if a higher dose was giving you hypos that is too much, of course too much basal will decrease blood sugar, if blood sugar is decreasing on a fasting basal test (see previously provided links) that is an indication the basal dose is too low. Of course basal insulin won't increase your blood sugar, it keeps you steady by balancing the against the glucose coming out from the liver, if blood sugar is rising on a fasting basal test that suggests basal is too low.
So on a basal bolus regime the basal is designed to keep you relatively flat in the absence of food, bolus, exercise. The bolus is designed to deal with food.
You are asking for an equivalent basal to bring you down my how much a bolus dose brings you down. You are not getting an answer because this is not how most people would use a basal insulin, because this is not what it is designed to do.
It sounds like you are trying to avoid bolusing for snacks by increasing your basal? Maybe because you are quite sensitive to your bolus doses and only need v small doses so you are finding it difficult to bolus for snacks?
Because this would be using a basal insulin in a way that it is not designed for this sounds like quite an advanced diabetic management technique. Before trying the advanced techniques, it is probably worth ensuring you understand the logic of the traditional basal/bolus regime. Then you will be much better placed to make changes to adapt it to suit you. Your questions suggest you migh not be familiar with the basics, the links previously provided and the book "think like a pancreas" give excellent starting points. Who knows, you might even find an answer in applying the basics
