insulin Flashcards
1
Q
what insulin acts more rapidly than regular insulin but have a shorter duration of action?
A
- insulin lispro
2
Q
insulin lispro: class
A
- short duration: rapid acting insulin
3
Q
insulin lispro: MOA
A
- effects w/in 15- 30 min and last 3-6 hours
- faster than regular insulin but has a shorter duration
- administered immediately before eating
- given via subQ
4
Q
insulin: indications
A
- diabetes mellitus
- required for all pts with type 1
- many pts with type 2
- iv: diabetic keoacidosis
- diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency
5
Q
insulin: SEs
A
- hypokalemia
- swelling
- erythema
- lipohypertrophy: accumulation of subQ fat under injection site
6
Q
insulin: ADRs
A
- hypoglycemia
- need to treat immediately b/c can cause brain damage or death
- give fast acting sugar, IV glucose
- can result in coma
- diabetic ketoacidosis
- can result in coma
- requires giving insulin
- anaphylaxis
7
Q
insulin: nursing implications
A
- teach pt to prepare subQ injections
- roll vial of insulin suspension in hands
- swab cap
- eliminate air bubbles
- cleanse skin
- sites of injection:
- abdomen, upper arm, thigh
- make all injections in just one of these areas
- leave 1 in b/w sites
- abdomen, upper arm, thigh
- store unopened vials in fridge
- can keep vial in current use at room temp for 1 month
- teach pt to use glucometer
- teach pt to recognize the S/S of hypoglycemia: tachycardia, palpitations, sweating, headache, drowsiness
8
Q
regular insulin: class
A
- short duration, slow acting insulin
9
Q
regular insulin: MOA
A
- route: subQ injection/infusion, IM injection, oral inhalation
- can be injected before meals to control post prandial hyperglycemia
- effects in 30-60 min, peak in 1-5 hours, last 10 hours
10
Q
insulin isophane suspension: class
A
- intermediate duration
- NPH
11
Q
insulin isophane suspension: MOA
A
- prepared by conjugating regular insulin with protamine which dec the solubility of the insulin and delays absorption
- onset of action is delayed and duration of action extended
- DO NOT administer at meal time
- inject 2-3 times daily to control glycemic control b/w meals and during the night
12
Q
insulin glargine: class
A
- long duration insulin
13
Q
insulin glargine: MOA
A
- prolonged duration up to 24 hours
- indicated for once daily subQ dose
- give dose at same time every day
- b/c it has a low solubility at physiologic pH, it forms microprecipitates that slowly dissolve and release insulin over a long period of time
- achieves blood levels that are relatively steady
14
Q
insulin detemir: class
A
- long duration
15
Q
insulin detemir: MOA
A
- slow onset and dose dependent duration of action
- low dose: lasts 12 hours
- high dose: 20-24 hours
- used to provide basal glycemic control
- not given before meals
- absorption is delayed b/c fatty chains on the insulin adhere to each other and b/c the detemir binds strongly to albumin