Judy and Boomer
Member Since 2014
We will need to purchase more insulin for Boomer in about a month. Considering a switch to Levemir. Can I hear the pros and cons of Lantus vs Lev please?
Thanks Wendy!I liked Levemir better, because Neko was flatter and more predictable on it. She also got to higher doses, and Lantus can sting at higher doses. She purred through her Lev shots, sometimes walked away from the Lantus shots. The downside to Lev is the later onset and nadir. I often went to bed before Neko's onset so had to learn different ways to figure out if it was an active cycle. The upside was that her nadir was often when I got up for rowing in the wee hours. There is also a learning curve which was frustrating for a few weeks.
THIS.Stacy reminded me of one more positive for Lev. If Neko was picky, I still had hours to onset and plenty of time to get food into her.
Thanks Stacy, and thank you for the link!I second everything Wendy noted. I find it much more predictable and Asia does seem flatter with Lev. Asia's onset was so soon on Lantus, I didn't have any time to deal with low preshots, it was panic mode each and every time because she would always drop right away, and a drop from a 60 or 70 doesn't leave any wiggle room.
The late nadir is annoying (coming from using Lantus), but it's an acceptable trade off for smoother cycles and no stinging. You have a 2am alarm to help you monitor a Lev cycle.The learning curve is pretty short, especially since you have a lot of experience with a Lantus, but it is a minor disruption and takes a little getting used to. The science as to how the depot is formed and released with Lev is very clever technology and makes more sense to me to mimic how the body would do it.
There's a great thread on think tank about switching from Lantus to Lev:
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/attention-lantus-to-levemir-users.122941/
All that being said, why are you considering switching? What don't you like about Lantus or what seems appealing about Lev? The majority of things I read were overwhelmingly positive in favor of Lev, however, I don't believe that insulin is one size fits all for cats, only because it very much isn't in humans. I'm sure there are some cats that would do better on Lantus than Levemir (I don't have any examples, but I firmly believe it must be true). If you don't have any qualms with Lantus and Boomer seems to like it, I would err on the side of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".But that's just my opinion. We are very happy with Lev, but I wouldn't have switched just to try it out if all were well with Lantus.
Thanks Jill!THIS.
Having plenty of time to get food into Alex prior to onset was such a bonus when she was sick. It helped to minimize skipped shots... important to a ketone prone cat like Alex.
We loved Levemir!






And we went from 24 units of lantus to now 5.5 of levemir.It has been night and day, switching To lev. She purrs more, talks more, preen more. Gets on my lap, purrs more. It's been a God send. Thank you levemir!!
WOW!And we went from 24 units of lantus to now 5.5 of levemir.
This is what I like about it too. Rusty is not food-motivated and I like having those extra hours before onset.Stacy reminded me of one more positive for Lev. If Neko was picky, I still had hours to onset and plenty of time to get food into her. And she could still get a late cycle snack without stopping her duration.
Here is an old thread, but a good one, on folks who switched: http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/lantus-vs-levemir.192665/
Sorry about that, I messed up. Stacy did post the link I was referring to.That link doesn't work for me. It brings me back to this thread.
I like Levemir better than lantus because it got Osha off the trampoline and diving team. She is much flatter and way more predictable. She is a sea of blue and greens on levemir vs the rainbow she was on lantus.