The primary indication of insulin is in type I diabetes mellitus and gestational diabetes.
If Antidiabetic medications fail, insulin therapy may be necessary – usually in addition to oral medication therapy – to maintain normal or near normal glucose levels.
Types of insulin |
Examples (Brand names) |
Onset in (hr) |
Peak (hr) |
Duration (hr) |
Rapid acting insulin |
Aspart, Glulisine, Lispro |
0.2 - 0.5 |
0.5 - 2 |
3 - 4 |
Short acting insulin |
Regular |
0.5 - 1 |
2 - 3 |
6 - 8 |
Short acing insulin |
Velosulin |
0.5 - 1 |
2 - 3 |
2 - 3 |
Intermediate acting |
NPH |
1.5 |
4 - 10 |
16 - 24 |
Intermediate acting |
Lente |
1.5 – 3 |
7 – 15 |
16 - 24 |
Long acting |
Ultralente |
3 - 4 |
9 – 15 |
22 -24 |
Long acting |
Levimer |
1 - 2 |
6 – 8 |
Up to 24 |
Long acting |
Lantus |
1 - 2 |
No peak |
20 – 24 P |
Premixed |
Humulin 70/30 |
0.5 |
2 - 4 |
14 – 24 |
Premixed |
Humulin 50/50 |
0.5 |
2 - 5 |
18 - 24 |
Premixed |
Humalog 75/25 |
0.2 |
0.5 – 2.5 |
16 – 24 |
Bed time NPH or Glargine insulin with anti diabetic medications, start 10- 15 units and titrate the fasting glucose to 120 mg/dl.
For twice day insulin start 0.5 U/kg with 2/3 in morning and 2/3 as NPH, to give insulin 20-30 min before meals.
For 2 or more injections daily, add Metformin or glitazone, if total insulin dosage exceeds >1-2 U/kg
Test |
Blood glucose (FBS, PPBS) |
HbAIc |
|
DM with insulin treatment |
Depends on blood glucose level |
Every 3 months |
yearly |
DM without insulin treatment |
Every 3 months |
Every 3-6 months |
yearly |