Beardsley has had some good reading. if it is high I stick to one unit of insulin .If low then 1/2 a unit.Lets go back 7 days. June 29 14.2 and 10.7 June 30 21.0 and 22.9 July 01 6.3 and 18.9 July 02 17.0 and 12.5 July 03 9.5 and 19.5 July 4 12.9 and 16.3 July 05 18.7 and 6.9 Today July 06 6.6 He is eating lots of food ,but not gaining weight. Thanks Jeff B
With this numbers he's still not really regulated, and he will probably keep on having a lot of hunger until he gets regulated because the high levels of glucose in his blood are not allowing his cells to get the nutrients they need, this will also make him gaining weight a lot more difficult, but once his levels start to be consistently lower his appetite will probably go back to normal and he will slowly regain some weight.
Is hard to know what's going on without knowing the dose you were giving each time, it will really help a lot if you could fill the spreadsheet and share it with us.
I'm guessing the numbers you are giving us are the preshoot tests, are you taking those having withdrawn food two hours before the test (both AM and PM)? Also guessing since you only have these tests that you are following the
SLGS (start low go slow ) protocol, with that one you will need to schedule a curve after a week ( that is testing every 2 hours for a 12 hour period or every 3 hours for an 18 hour period you only withdraw food for the preshoot tests the rest are done with your normal feeding meds, etc schedule ) to help see what's going on mid cycle.
With Lantus you need to keep the same dose AM PM as much as possible (unless he drops under 90 at any point during the day then you reduce de dose in 0.25 units) is very important to try and be consistent for the depot to work properly, and is dosed based on the lowest number he gets during the day (nadir), not on the AM, PM preshoots that's why is important to do a curve to see if he needs a dose adjustment