View Full Version : Lantus in the morning
ashlyn
04-23-2006, 09:08 PM
Hi all!
Is there anyone here who has had to switch from injecting Lantus at bedtime to the morning? If so why? My doc suggested I try switching to the a.m. to see if that will help with my low bs readings and morning hypos. I am looking at using the NPH again but only to test it out to see if Lantus could be causing my awful memory problems and such.....grrrrrrrr. I would like to say it is consistent low bs causing it but since I seem to have mental confusion, memory problems, etc...while my bs are more on the higher side I will say it may not be the low bs causing all this ****. I just got my A1C result and it's 6. Thanks everyone!
condensr
04-24-2006, 12:12 AM
Yes! I did this, and it worked wonders.
I used to have a lot of 2am-5am hypos, but was always high before dinner.. I changed the lantus to the morning, and it solved both of these for me.
Its odd that it did, as now that I'm pumping, I find my sensitivites opposite this, but hey, it did work to help the nighttime hypos as the Lantus didn't quite last 24 hours in me.
vrocco1
04-24-2006, 03:37 AM
I've always taken mine in the morning (I don't know why). I do have a few moderately high fasting BGLs (~140), but I've learned to control that also.
jeggeman31
04-24-2006, 06:03 AM
You could always try splitting your dose. When I used Lantus I took half in the P.M. before bed and the other half in the A.M. after I woke up.
poodlebone
04-25-2006, 07:22 PM
I started out taking Lantus at night and then had to split the dose into two injections, one at night and one in the morning. I was always waking up very low and by dinner I would be always be high. Splitting the dose into two equal shots about 12 hours apart helped.
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Liz
Cyborg
04-25-2006, 08:04 PM
I switched while on MDI, for exactly that same reason. And it made a world of difference.
ashlyn
04-25-2006, 08:59 PM
Thank you for all the replys! Well I took half of my Lantus dose last night and the other half this morning and in the am I begin the full normal dose. I can't believe it but I actually feel more like myself today. I woke up feeling better since beginning the Lantus. I dont' know if it's because there was less in my system or because I wasn't having low's all night long. I am only guessing but think that it's possibly because I didn't have much Lantus in me since in the past I have woke up with elevated levels and still felt lethargic and extremely tired. I am testing this out. If I don't feel like I've improved over the next week or so on the morning dose I may ask to be taken off of the Lantus to see if it's actually the Lantus itself doing it. I don't want to stop the Lantus. But splitting the doses seems like it would be just like in the past when I had to take 2-3 doses of the NPH per day. Unless Lantus, in itself, is supposed to be better at controlling the blood sugar levels than NPH?
Shotokan
04-25-2006, 10:05 PM
The advantage of Lantus over NPH is that Lantus stays working at a relatively constant rate (for around 20-24 hours), whereas the action of NPH builds to a peak and then fades. The action of NPH is a little harder to predict than Lantus.
Cyborg
04-26-2006, 03:55 AM
The advantage of Lantus over NPH is that Lantus stays working at a relatively constant rate (for around 20-24 hours), whereas the action of NPH builds to a peak and then fades. The action of NPH is a little harder to predict than Lantus.
I think most people are finding Lantus is only providing about 18 hours of coverage.
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