kathryn123
Newbie
- Messages
- 1
- Dislikes
- Blood tests
surely you have an nhs exemption certificate......if not you should have one as all diabetic meds are exempt.martinbuchan said:Also, it seems many peple have to have a 20-30% increased dose of levemir compared to lantus. You may be on too little, as well as having to work out timing of dosing and ratio of dosing. I changed from 66 unit per day of lantus to 22/44 levemir. Control was worse until I started on 100 units once pe day of levemir. Now down to 82 units levemir once a day - seems better (last weeks HbA1C 5.8%).
The morning dose of twice daily levemir was designed to counteract the natural late morning insulin resistance causing mild hyperglycaemia. Something I did not find in my own case.
Also, my diabetologist says there is more evidence now with levemir, that increasing the dose will also prolong the insulin effect (does that seem logical?) and not just produce a larger effect.
I might go back to lantus as a pen would last for an extra day a therefore be a bit cheaper. I saw a new lantus pen recently that goes up to 80 units with one plunge. Usueful for a large user such as myself. The old pen only went upto 40 units.
Marty, didnt mean to cause offence in my last message, just stating a fact. I think people should be made aware that these products are NOT insulin and I don't think people should be misled. It's even less helpful when companies like Novo Nordisk call their Analogue Insulins by the term "Modern Insulins".martinbuchan said:I will continue to call analoque insulins by the term insulin.
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