Intravenous insulin acts much earlier, it is the one that puts you mixed with serum when debuts to quickly lower glycemia. Now, any intravenous injection has to be put on a toilet, normally the nursing.
The insulins we use have their peak at 2 hours. What you should do is reach 400mg/dl (sometimes it is difficult) with a healthy diet, sport and managing you the proper insulin.Over time one is known and knows if a dose should be put before eating or two, one before and one at the end.With the sensors you can anticipate when you see the rise trend arrows.
@Antonio3334 As you ask @Fer to explain it we would have to know more about you.
What type of diabetes do you have, what treatment do you have, if you have any other pathology, weight ...
Of course, if you don't know why you get to 400, because as you have been telling you or it is very normal to reach that figure (in 20 years of diabetes I only had it when I debuted) nor is it normal to put 40 units to lower that.
Of course, I explain @Antonio3334, (and forgive if my previous comment has sounded edge).
If you are talking about fast insulins (eg novorapid), with those amounts you can give you a diabetic coma, so it is important to know, the units they are insulin?
On the other hand, I recommend reading the issues of correction and calculation of HC.
marine said: @Antonio3334 As you ask @fer to explain it we would have to know more about you.
What type of diabetes do you have, what treatment do you have, if you have any other pathology, weight ...
Of course, if you don't know why you get to 400, because as you have been commenting on or it is very normal/Blockquote>
Well let's see.Getting to 400 is the easiest in the world.Bend the pump's catheter, stop the sleeping pump, be "poisoned" by precooked foods whose label says that one has a HC that are not even those or it comes out that a glycemic index is huge.Disease.Nervous scare or breakdown.Everyone knows that hyperglycemia is the easiest in the world for DB1.
Treatment that I have insulin.Weight already close to 100 for nerve cords and confinements.I don't know, I think your statements as if I were one in debut.My debut was with 700 mg/dl and neither entered in a coma in case you want to know.They left me XXXXX and gave me vitamins after several questions to ask what happened to 2 doctors, I had to diagnose a friend with a relative with DB.It does not seem like DB's life is pink.I'm glad you don't have 400 I don't want anyone.
Thanks for the notes.I do not intend to say that my life is generalizable.Controlling with less dose is clear this.It all depends on how much "pain" aguantes for hyperglycemia.My claims because of this, is that lowering the levels is the fastest form, so the reason for the post.
Another way for example is to use several subcutaneous punctures so as not to "flood" with 1 dose, use different areas of the body etc, that has not served me.
marine said: @Antonio3334 As you ask @Fer to explain it we would have to know more about you.
What type of diabetes do you have, what treatment do you have, if you have any other pathology, weight ...
Of course, if you don't know why you get to 400, because as you have been commenting on or it is very normal/Blockquote>
Well let's see.Getting to 400 is the easiest in the world.Bend the pump's catheter, stop the sleeping pump, be "poisoned" by precooked foods whose label says that one has a HC that are not even those or it comes out that a glycemic index is huge.Disease.Nervous scare or breakdown.Everyone knows that hyperglycemia is the easiest in the world for DB1.
Treatment that I have insulin.Weight already close to 100 for nerve cords and confinements.I don't know, I think your statements as if I were one in debut.My debut was with 700 mg/dl and neither entered in a coma in case you want to know.They left me XXXXX and gave me vitamins after several questions to ask what happened to 2 doctors, I had to diagnose a friend with a relative with DB.It does not seem like DB's life is pink.I'm glad you don't have 400 I don't want anyone.
Sometimes you try to help, and get the totally contrary feedback.
Your post was about injection techniques and that part is resolved.
I still think that you can avoid reaching 400mg/dl and that something you have badly calculated. I have tried not to put insulin and at the most I reached 280mg/dl, the basal does something. Have you consulted it with an endocrine?But one really, not a friend's acquaintance.