For educational use only. MedTime is not medical advice. Consult a licensed clinician or pharmacist before making medication decisions.

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Diabetes
SubQ

Insulin Glargine

Long-acting insulin

Also sold as Lantus, Basaglar

Onset of effect
1 hr – 2 hr
Felt/clinical effect
Tmax (peak blood level)
Peakless
Steady level, no peak
Duration of effect
20 hr – 1 day
Per single dose

Effect timeline

Approximate single-dose timeline. Onset shows when effects are felt; Tmax shows when blood levels peak.

6 hr12 hr18 hr
Onset of effectWears offPeakless — steady level over duration

Notes

Essentially peakless basal insulin — provides a steady background level over 24 hours.

What this is

Insulin Glargine is a long-acting insulin given by the subq route. It's typically used in the diabetes category.

What the numbers mean

After one subq dose you'd typically start noticing the effect in 1 hr – 2 hr. The drug stays at a steady level with no real peak, and a single dose usually keeps working for around 20 hr – 1 day.

Practical tips

Long-acting — take at roughly the same time each day for steady levels.

Important

Don't combine with other products in the same drug class without checking with a pharmacist. Stop and seek medical advice if you have an unexpected reaction, severe side effect, or symptoms that don't improve.

All timings are approximate population ranges for a typical adult dose. Individual response varies with age, genetics, formulation, food, and other medications.

Typical dosing

Source: OpenFDA drug label · adult dosing unless noted

Doses vary by age, weight, kidney/liver function, and indication. Don't change your dose without talking to your prescriber.

Verify on the exact label used:DailyMed search·OpenFDA record

Side effects & warnings

Source: OpenFDA drug label

Verify on the exact label used:DailyMed search·OpenFDA record

Educational information only — not medical advice. Times vary by person, dose, and formulation. Always consult a doctor or pharmacist for personal guidance.