I am type 1 and I have been using insulin for 33 years. Three years ago when Nova withdrew Actrapid (disgraceful behaviour, in my opinion) I was moved from Actrapid/Insulatard to Humalin S/Levemir. The first choice of the consultant was to move me to Humalog/Lantus but I had previously been on Humalog and lost my hypo warnings and gained 15Kg before I moved back to Actrapid so I didn't want to go through that again. Lantus was out because the pen could not deliver a big enough dose. So that meant Humalin S/Levemir (Humalin S, I was told, was equivalent to Actrapid as a non-analogue human insulin, and levemir, I was told was equivalent to Lantus). I am 100Kg (and 188cm, so I am not small). Although that is not the weight I would like to be, as I've said, that extra 15Kg appeared when I was using Humalog. My doses are high, and in total I am taking 140 units a day, (my doctor gave me a rule of thumb of 1 unit per Kg as an acceptable amount, so I have exceeded that). My Levemir dose is around 70 units, in one injection before bed.
Very occasionally I get a problem of very high blood sugars. I have just been through such an episode. I have to stress that this is not a case of Christmas overeating. Definitely NOT.
So it started with a very high morning blood sugar - 20 mmol/ml or so. The first reaction is "did I take my insulin last night?" the second is "did I overeat?". Although I could confirm that the latter was not true, I could not deny the former (how can you remember if you forgot?). Anyway, I brought down my blood sugar to something nearer normal (10 or so) by large doses of Humalin. The next morning, my blood sugar was up again. So that's no Christmas fare for Richard this year! Over a week I have been trying to get my blood sugar under control - is it the Levemir or the Humalin? Is it the Levemir pen, or the Humalin pen? Too many combinations and it takes too long to see the results of the changes I've made.
Last night I used a cartridge from a new box of Levemir (coincidentally, one from a recent prescription from a different pharmacy than I had used before). This morning my blood sugar was almost normal and it is now time for lunch and my blood sugar has retuned back to a figure that is normal for me.
The difference? A cartridge from a new box. What a relief to feel normal again. What a relief to know that the next blood test will be in single figures again! But this is not the ffirst time that this has happened, so there is apprehension that it will happen again.
So, am I the only person to have experienced something like this? Since the only change is using a cartridge from a different batch (I am very careful about this, there was no other change), it was clearly the fault of the Levemir. How can I tell that my insulin has been properly stored by the pharmacist/wholesaler/manufaturer? Indeed, even though the cartridge says U100 how do I know that it is not U40 mispackaged?
Richard
Very occasionally I get a problem of very high blood sugars. I have just been through such an episode. I have to stress that this is not a case of Christmas overeating. Definitely NOT.
So it started with a very high morning blood sugar - 20 mmol/ml or so. The first reaction is "did I take my insulin last night?" the second is "did I overeat?". Although I could confirm that the latter was not true, I could not deny the former (how can you remember if you forgot?). Anyway, I brought down my blood sugar to something nearer normal (10 or so) by large doses of Humalin. The next morning, my blood sugar was up again. So that's no Christmas fare for Richard this year! Over a week I have been trying to get my blood sugar under control - is it the Levemir or the Humalin? Is it the Levemir pen, or the Humalin pen? Too many combinations and it takes too long to see the results of the changes I've made.
Last night I used a cartridge from a new box of Levemir (coincidentally, one from a recent prescription from a different pharmacy than I had used before). This morning my blood sugar was almost normal and it is now time for lunch and my blood sugar has retuned back to a figure that is normal for me.
The difference? A cartridge from a new box. What a relief to feel normal again. What a relief to know that the next blood test will be in single figures again! But this is not the ffirst time that this has happened, so there is apprehension that it will happen again.
So, am I the only person to have experienced something like this? Since the only change is using a cartridge from a different batch (I am very careful about this, there was no other change), it was clearly the fault of the Levemir. How can I tell that my insulin has been properly stored by the pharmacist/wholesaler/manufaturer? Indeed, even though the cartridge says U100 how do I know that it is not U40 mispackaged?
Richard