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Insulin for Type 2's. How much?

This is a discussion on Insulin for Type 2's. How much? within the Type 2 Diabetes forums, part of the Diabetes category; this has been bugging me for a while. my GP said he would prescribe insulin for me if i want ...

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    1. #1
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      Insulin for Type 2's. How much?

      this has been bugging me for a while.

      my GP said he would prescribe insulin for me if i want him to.

      being as i have achieved a 5.9% A1c on diet, exercise and a very small dose of a sulfonylurea drug - i decided that i don't need to do this yet.

      my question is if i stay on my diet (restricted carb 30-60 grams/day) how much insulin would i take?

      for example, i woke this AM with a BGL of 95 mg/dl (5.3 mmol/l).

      would i inject a small amount of insulin at that level?

      or would i only inject before meals (i.e. let my system handle its own basal BGL).

      thanks!

      -- Joel.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    2. #2
      TomB's Avatar
      TomB is offline Member I am a: Type 2
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      Joel,
      If I'm not mistaken, an A1c at 5.9% is within the normal range for humans without diabetes. And a fasting BGL of 95mg is also under the maximum of 100 for the normal range. Perhaps you don't want to fix it if it isn't broke and just keep on doing whatever you have been. Sure looks like it's working to me.

      FYI, American Diabetes Association Home Page web site and might have more info for you. They say that normal fasting glucose should be 70-100mg.
      Tom

    3. #3
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      Quote Originally Posted by TomB View Post
      Joel,
      If I'm not mistaken, an A1c at 5.9% is within the normal range for humans without diabetes. And a fasting BGL of 95mg is also under the maximum of 100 for the normal range. Perhaps you don't want to fix it if it isn't broke and just keep on doing whatever you have been. Sure looks like it's working to me.

      FYI, American Diabetes Association Home Page web site and might have more info for you. They say that normal fasting glucose should be 70-100mg.
      Tom
      thanks Tom!

      i understand what you are saying. my question was more theoretical than anything else.

      i.e. if my numbers were slightly higher - an A1c of 6.5 and an average fasting BGL of 126 (7.0). what amounts of insuli would you inject and when?

      -- Joel.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    4. #4
      Jill-O's Avatar
      Jill-O is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 2
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      That's just impossible to answer.

      How insulin resistant are you? 30-60 grams of carbs a day might mean one amount of insulin for me, another for you and something different still for someone else.

      It's almost like saying how many gallons of gas does it take you to drive 50 miles and expecting us to have a uniform answer (when we all drive different vehicles and in different conditions).

      But, since I know you are wanting numbers, I take 6, 8, and 14 units of Humalog before breakfast, lunch and dinner. I take 30 units of Lantus at night. My numbers are very good and I eat probably 125 or so of carbs a day.



      S. Jill O'Roark -- Spotsylvania, VA (USA)

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      Lantus, Humalog, Daily Exercise


      And quit bringing up our forefathers and saying they were civil libertarians. Our founding fathers would have never tolerated any of this... For God's sake, they were blowing peoples' heads off because they put a tax on their breakfast beverage. And it wasn't even coffee.” -- Dennis Miller


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      TCOYD: Insulin Therapy for Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes This might be the good video I posted last year. Maybe not.
      Michelle Oberg "yep....stop trying to make vegetables taste like meat.....you made your choice, now live with it hippies"

      Minimed Paradigm 754 Pump, Novarapid, Ramipril A1C 5.9% (2011/4) Diagnosed Oct 19th, 1975.

    6. #6
      pdxdennisj is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 2
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      The ADA and the Amer Soc Of Endo's suggest that A1c's below 7.0 are desirable. My Endo and Lipid specialist are VERY happy with mine at it's current 6.1 and were content when I was at 6.5. I eat less than 180 carbs a day - I try to hold it to 40 per meal. There are a few docs out there who think lower readings are necessary for good health. I think that is fine for those who want to live that way but do not think the evidence shows it is necessary. Different insulins work in different ways so that is a choice entirely up to the treatment regimen your doc develops.
      I can so absolutely no reason for doing insulin now. I was on oral meds for 15 years before it was necessary to go on insulin.
      PDXDENNISJDx 1/92
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    7. #7
      Alice is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1
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      That's difficult to say since there are two types of insulin...one that is slow acting to cover your basal levels and the second one...fast-acting to cover meals.

      If your having problems more with overall basals...then probably Lantus.

      If your having good fastings and before meals but having problems with eating...then Humalog or something identical.

      It depends on your type of insulin problem...supply or resistance.

    8. #8
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      thanks everyone for your thoughtful and informative answers.

      i am certain that i am insulin deficient and not insulin resistant. next time i do my A1c (June) i am also getting a c-peptide/GAD test to see what my insulin production is like.

      i am 5'10" and my weight varies from 175-180lbs. since i have added anaerobic exercise (as recommended by Dr. Bernstein) to my aerobic exercise i am starting to see the definition of my stomach muscles (i should post a pic ).

      my weight is not really an issue. that is why i think i am deficient - not resistant.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    9. #9
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      Quote Originally Posted by Jill-O View Post
      That's just impossible to answer.

      How insulin resistant are you? 30-60 grams of carbs a day might mean one amount of insulin for me, another for you and something different still for someone else.

      It's almost like saying how many gallons of gas does it take you to drive 50 miles and expecting us to have a uniform answer (when we all drive different vehicles and in different conditions).

      But, since I know you are wanting numbers, I take 6, 8, and 14 units of Humalog before breakfast, lunch and dinner. I take 30 units of Lantus at night. My numbers are very good and I eat probably 125 or so of carbs a day.
      i wasn't really asking for specifics - just general theory on what type and how to work out how much and when to take it.

      your example gives me excellent input. thank you.

      i know from experimentation that 1 gram of carbs will raise my BGL about 1.8-3.6 mg/dl.

      so, if i eat 50 grams i will expect a 2 hour post prandial excursion of between 90-180 mg/dl (5-10 mmol/l).

      so - therefore i try to limit my grams of carbs per meal to 15-30 grams.

      -- Joel.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    10. #10
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      Quote Originally Posted by pdxdennisj View Post
      The ADA and the Amer Soc Of Endo's suggest that A1c's below 7.0 are desirable. My Endo and Lipid specialist are VERY happy with mine at it's current 6.1 and were content when I was at 6.5. I eat less than 180 carbs a day - I try to hold it to 40 per meal. There are a few docs out there who think lower readings are necessary for good health. I think that is fine for those who want to live that way but do not think the evidence shows it is necessary. Different insulins work in different ways so that is a choice entirely up to the treatment regimen your doc develops.
      I can so absolutely no reason for doing insulin now. I was on oral meds for 15 years before it was necessary to go on insulin.
      interesting input! doctors i have spoken to have mentioned that the oral solution could last as long as 12-15 years.

      i really cut down on the carbs because i had a keen desire to get an A1c <6%.

      i like the low carb lifestyle. i have been a lifelong salad nut and now i have an excuse to eat them all the time!!!



      -- Joel.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    11. #11
      ant hill's Avatar
      ant hill is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1
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      Quote Originally Posted by matingara View Post
      my GP said he would prescribe insulin for me if i want him to.

      being as i have achieved a 5.9% A1c on diet, exercise and a very small dose of a sulfonylurea drug - i decided that i don't need to do this yet.
      Is this a Doctor or an Endocrinologist is telling you this??

      my question is if i stay on my diet (restricted carb 30-60 grams/day) how much insulin would i take?
      None!!! I would keep the regime that you have.

      for example, i woke this AM with a BGL of 95 mg/dl (5.3 mmol/l).

      would i inject a small amount of insulin at that level?
      NO!!

      or would i only inject before meals (i.e. let my system handle its own basal BGL).
      Again no, As you have a working Pancreas (you lucky thing) why have a injectable source of insulin? As this will make control so much more difficult to manage and you will not like the lows ether. Are you on metaformin Joel?


      Peter...


    12. #12
      dacruzer's Avatar
      dacruzer is offline Junior Member I am a: Type 2
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      Those are really good numbers

    13. #13
      matingara's Avatar
      matingara is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1.5
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      Quote Originally Posted by ant hill View Post
      Is this a Doctor or an Endocrinologist is telling you this??

      Are you on metaformin Joel?
      This is a Doctor. a GP. he is pretty young - mid 30's.

      i am not on metformin. i take only Diamicron MR. This is a sulfonylurea. i only take half of the max dose.

      Thanks Peter.

      do not click here...
      ___________________________

      NUMBERS
      -----------------
      May 2010 : A1C (home) 5.5%: Feb 2010: A1C (home): 5.2% Oct 2009: A1C: 5.7%;
      Triglycerides: 53 (0.6); HDL chol: 50 (1.2); LDL chol: 19.5 (0.5); total cholesterol 87.5
      Lantus before bed - 30u; Novorapid for meals (averaging 20-30u per day); Lowish carb diet

    14. #14
      ant hill's Avatar
      ant hill is offline Senior Member I am a: Type 1
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      Heh, I wonder if the doc is nice looking. But then the idea to take insulin is not for you Joel so you can have a sundae and not have to calculate the carbs so that you need insulin to cover the snack.


      Peter...


    15. #15
      marcia87 is offline Junior Member
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      Do you eat after taking your Lantus at night? I increased my nightly dose to 20u at 9:00 pm and woke up at 5:00 this morning sweating and feeling odd. I checked my bs and it was 42. Can you wait until breakfast to eat? I'm thinking of switching to mornings for the Lantus. What do you think?

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