Insulin

Administration of insulin

Devices for insulin delivery

Insulin syringes

  • Plastic fixed-needle syringes with small dead space are preferable to glass syringes
  • Syringes are available in a variety of sizes in different countries and should enable accurate dose delivery, but it is desirable for small dose, 1 unit per mark syringes (e.g. 0.3 ml) to be available for small children
  • Plastic fixed-needle syringes are designed for single use (but many children and adolescents successfully re-use them without a significant increase in risk of infection). Re-use should be discouraged if there is concern about hygiene

  • Insulin syringes must have a measuring scale consistent with the insulin concentration (e.g. U 100 syringes)
  • Syringes must never be shared with another person because of the risk of acquiring blood-borne infection (e.g. hepatitis, HIV)
  • It is advisable that all children and adolescents with diabetes should know how to administer insulin by syringe because other injection devices may malfunction

Disposal of syringes

  • Appropriate disposal procedures are mandatory

  • Specifically designed and labeled ‘sharps containers’ may be available from pharmacies and diabetes centers
  • Special needle clippers (e.g. Safeclip®) may be available to remove the needle and make it unusable
  • Without a sharps container, syringes with the needles removed may be stored and discarded in opaque plastic containers or tins for garbage collection

Subcutaneous indwelling catheters

  • Such catheters (e.g. Insuflon®) inserted using topical local anesthetic cream may be useful to overcome problems with painful injections
  • These catheters are used in some centers for introduction of multiple injection therapy

Pen injector devices

  • Pen injector devices containing insulin in prefilled cartridges have been designed to make injections easier and more flexible. They eliminate the need for drawing up from an insulin vial, the dose is dialled up on a digital scale and they may be particularly useful for insulin administration away from home, at school or on holiday
  • Special pen injection needles of small size are available and may cause less discomfort on injection
  • Pen injectors of various sizes and types are available from the pharmaceutical companies. Availability is a problem in some countries and although pen injectors may improve convenience and flexibility they are a more expensive method of administering insulin
  • Pen injector devices are useful in children on multiple injection regimens or fixed mixtures of insulin but are less acceptable when free mixing of insulins is used

Automatic injection devices

  • Automatic injection devices are useful for children who have a fear of needles. Usually a loaded syringe is placed within the device, locked into place and inserted automatically into the skin by a spring-loaded system
  • The benefits of these devices are that the needle is hidden from view and inserted rapidly through the skin
  • Automatic injection devices for specific insulin pen injectors are now available

Jet injectors

  • High pressure jet injection of insulin into the skin has been designed to avoid the use of needle injection
  • Jet injectors may have a role in cases of needle phobia
  • Problems with jet injectors have included a variable depth of penetration, bruising, variable absorption of insulin, and cost

Subcutaneous insulin infusion pumps

  • The use of external pumps is increasing and is proving successful even in young infants for stabilizing difficult diabetes
  • Insulin pump treatment may be hazardous when education and adherence to therapy is inadequate because of the smaller depot of SC insulin and the risk of ketoacidosis
  • Only short-acting or rapid-acting insulin analogs are used in the pumps

The use of pumps should be restricted to centers with special experience and expertise. Twenty-four-hour access to the center should be provided
 
Insulin regimens

 
 
Consensus Guidelines 2000
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IDF Type 1 Guidelines
IDF Type 2 Guidelines