Ian & Oz
Member Since 2014
Hello,
I reduced Oz's dose from 2.75 to 2.5 on the 26th of March, the 2.75 dose was very aggressively pushing him into low numbers. I had to constantly monitor him to keep him out of the 40's. He reached 48 on the 26th, which earned him a reduction. Strange thing is, he started on a new bottle of Lantus on the 2nd of march & he didn't start to really take off & head downward until 24 days later. Just prior to Oz's levels really dropping into the green, his schedule had been thrown off by 2 hours & I had to work back to his usual time of 9:30 AM & PM. When I got him back on time, the next day is when he dropped into the green. I'm hoping someone may have some experience with this particular situation or have some ideas as to why this happened. I'm not sure what to do now if 2.75 is too strong & 2.5 isn't strong enough. I've read on here somewhere awhile back, that there are some that use calipers or other measuring devices to get "in between" doses, which sounds a bit complicated.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Ian
I reduced Oz's dose from 2.75 to 2.5 on the 26th of March, the 2.75 dose was very aggressively pushing him into low numbers. I had to constantly monitor him to keep him out of the 40's. He reached 48 on the 26th, which earned him a reduction. Strange thing is, he started on a new bottle of Lantus on the 2nd of march & he didn't start to really take off & head downward until 24 days later. Just prior to Oz's levels really dropping into the green, his schedule had been thrown off by 2 hours & I had to work back to his usual time of 9:30 AM & PM. When I got him back on time, the next day is when he dropped into the green. I'm hoping someone may have some experience with this particular situation or have some ideas as to why this happened. I'm not sure what to do now if 2.75 is too strong & 2.5 isn't strong enough. I've read on here somewhere awhile back, that there are some that use calipers or other measuring devices to get "in between" doses, which sounds a bit complicated.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Ian