What does it mean to prepare and give an insulin injection?
Insulin for injection comes in small glass bottles
(vials) and cartridges; both are sealed with a rubber lid. One bottle or
cartridge contains many doses. To remove a dose of insulin from:
- A bottle: You will use an
insulin syringe
. You will also use the syringe to inject the insulin. - A cartridge: You will use a pen-shaped device
called an
insulin pen. The cartridge fits inside the pen and the
dose of insulin is set with a dial on the outside of the pen. The pen (with the
cartridge inside) is used to give the medication. Both disposable and reusable
insulin pens are available. Each pen operates slightly differently.
Note: If you are using an
insulin pen, talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or diabetes educator about how
to use the pen properly. Giving insulin with these pens is not covered in this
information.
To give an insulin injection, you insert the needle
(attached to the syringe) into your skin. Push the plunger to inject the
medicine into the fatty tissue just below the skin. Insulin usually is injected
into the abdomen, upper arm, or thigh.
Your doctor may have you
take two types of insulin at the same time. Because most types of insulin
prescribed to be taken at the same time can be mixed together, you most likely
will be able to give both doses in the same syringe. But you cannot mix the
long-acting insulin glargine (Lantus) in the same syringe with other types of
insulin.
Test Your Knowledge
To withdraw a single dose of insulin from a bottle, I
need to use a syringe.
- True
- False
To give an injection of insulin, the needle of the
syringe is inserted into the skin and the medication is pushed into the fatty
tissue just under the skin.
- True
- False
Continue to
Why give insulin?
Return to
Diabetes: Giving yourself an insulin shot