Type-1 Diabetes Mangement Flashcards
What is insulin?
A hormone secreted from pancreatic β-cells to help regulate blood glucose
How is insulin released in the body? Does commercially available insulin go through the same process?
In the body, proinsulin is cleaved to release Insulin + C-peptide
Commercially available products only contain insulin
How do people with diabetes take insulin?
Those requiring insulin take it via:
Syringes
Pen needles
Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII)
What lab test can be used to determine natural insulin?
Serum C-peptide
Where was insulin originally derived from? Is it still available?
insulin was originally derived from the pancreases of cows and pigs
Pork insulin (Hypurin®; differs from human insulin by 1 AA) is still available; although it is uncommonly used
What is Humulin? What is its structure? What is it’s benefit?
Humulin; the first human insulin created using rDNA technology
Human insulin produced via rDNA technology has an amino acid sequence identical to human insulin
With rDNA technology, the concerns of purity, hypersensitivity, and lipodystrophy are much less common (rare!) vs. animal sources
Describe the structure of insulin?
Consists of 51 amino acids in 2 chains (A and B) linked by 2 disulfide bonds
Describe normal pancreatic function in regards to insulin throughout the day?
Basal: Beta cells secrete small amounts of insulin
throughout the day.
Bolus: At mealtime, insulin is rapidly released in response to food.
Insulin secretion follows food
Other names for bolus insulin
- Mealtime Insulin
- Prandial Insulin
What are the two types of bolus insulin? Colour?
1) Rapid-acting insulin analogues (clear)
2) Short-acting insulin analogues (clear)
What are the names of the rapid acting insulin analogues?
- Insulin Aspart (Novorapid)
- Insulin Glulisine - Apidra
- Insulin Lispro - Humalog
- Faster acting insulin Aspart (fiasp)
Ruin A Nat* Girl A* Love Has Amazing Fates
What are the names of the short acting insulins?
- Insulin regular (Humulin R, Novolin Toronto)
- Insulin Regular U-500 (entuzity)
Insulin Aspart Onset, Peak and Duration
Onset: 9-20 min
Peak: 1-1.5 h
Duration: 3-5 h
Insulin Glulisine Onset, Peak and Duration
Onset: 10-15 min
Peak: 1-1.5 h
Duration: 3.5-5 h
Insulin Lispro Onset, Peak and Duration
Onset: 10-15 min
Peak: 1-2 h
Duration: 3-4.75 h
Faster-acting insulin Aspart (Fiasp) Onset, Peak and Duration
Onset: 4 min
Peak: 0.5-1.5h
Duration: 3-5h
Insulin Regular (Humulin, Toronto) Onset, Peak, and Duration
Onset: 30 min
Peak: 2-3h
Duration: 6.5h
Insulin Regular U-500 Onset, Peak, and Duration
Onset: 15 min
Peak: 4-8h
Duration: 17-24h
When are short acting insulins administered? Colour?
Administered (30-45min) prior to meals to cover mealtime glucose excursions
Are clear solutions (SQ vial or cartridge)
When short acting insulins are used through IV, what is being treated?
- DKA
How is insulin regular U-500 different than other short acting insulins?
- A more concentrated version for those with extreme insulin resistance
- Entirely different PK profile
How are rapid acting analagoues different in structure to short acting analogues? Release?
Have modifications made to the structure of Humulin insulin
These modifications allow them to have more rapid absorption vs. short-acting insulins and more closely mimic endogenous insulin release
When are rapid acting analogues administered? Colour?
Administered with (or just prior to) meals (0-15min) to cover mealtime excursions
Are clear solutions
What are the advantages of rapid acting insulin analogues?
More rapid absorption:
Faster onset
Quicker peak
Shorter duration of action
When can the different insulins be taken before a meal?
Short-acting: 30-45 minutes before a meal
RAIAs: 0-15 minutes before a meal, or within 15 minutes of eating
Fiasp: up to 2 min before or 20 minutes after starting meal
Note: although can take after a meal, still preferable before a meal
Which type of insulin has better post prandial glucose control?
Rapid acting insulin analogues have better post-prandial glucose control than short acting insulins
- Decreased risk of hypoglycemia
Is Fiasp better at PPG control?
Fiasp: better PPG in T1 studies; not T2
- Similar risk of hypo
What are the disadvantages of RAIA’s compared to short acting insulin?
On the other hand, RAIA’s Cost more $ & have similar effectiveness
Insulin Lispro U-200 KWIKPEN Pt Counselling ?
Humalog (insulin lispro) 200 units/mL solution for injection should ONLY be injected using the KwikPen in which it is supplied
Using any other type of device, like a syringe or infusion pump may result in an overdose causing severe low blood sugar.
Pt Counselling Humalog Kwik Pen 100 U vs. 200 U Dosage?
When switching between one concentration of Humalog KwikPen and the other, it is important to understand that the dose-counter window (Dose Knob) on each of the two insulin KwikPen (100 units/mL and 200 units/mL) indicates the number of units of insulin to be injected.
As a result the same number of units of insulin would be chosen for both devices. The Kwikpen automatically delivers the correct volume of insulin so conversion of dose between devices is not needed.”
What is Insulin regular u-500?
A very concentrated form of insulin (500U/ml)
Who is insulin regular u-500 used for? Why?
For those who require >200U/d (total daily dose)
More comfortable for those who require this much –> less volume injected
How many times is insulin u-500 given in a day?
- 2-3 times a day
Insulin regular U-500 administration before a meal
Short-acting: therefore administer 30min before a meal
Can dial up in 5U increments
When using a kwikpen, a dose conversion is…… A1C impact? Warning for Regular U-500?
Switching from basal-bolus or pre-mixed insulin can be done on a unit-to-unit basis – no dose conversion is required when using this KwikPen
However, if A1C is ≤8%, decrease the total daily dose of insulin regular u-500 by 20%
Regular U-500 - Extreme caution is required to avoid inadvertent overdose
What are the two types of basal insulins? COLOUR?
a) Intermediate acting (cloudy)
b) Long acting insulin (clear)
What are the intermediate acting insulins?
- Insulin neutral protamine Hagedorn (NPH) (Humulin N, Novolin NPH)
- CLOUDY
Intermediate acting insulin (NPH) Onset, Peak and Duration
Onset: 1-3h
Peak: 5-8h
Duration: Up to 18h
What are the long acting insulins?
- Insulin Detemir U-100 - Levemir
- Insulin Glargine U-100 - Lantus
- Insulin Glargine U-300 - Toujeo
-Insulin Degludec U-100, U-200- Tresiba
Insulin Detemir U-100 Onset, Peak, Duration
Onset: 90 min
Peak: N/A Peakless
Duration: 16-24h
Insulin Glargine U-100 Onset, Peak, Duration
Onset: 90 min
Peak: N/A Peakless
Duration: 24h
Insulin Glargine U-300 Toujeo Onset, Peak, Duration
Onset: 90 min
Peak: N/A Peakless
Duration: >30h
Insulin Degludec U-100, U-200 Onset, Peak, Duration
Onset: 90 min
Peak: N/A Peakless
Duration: 42 hours
Intermediate Acting Insulins Dosing
Administered once or twice daily to provide a ‘background’ amount of insulin –> depends on person
Physical Appearance of Intermediate Acting Insulins
Appear cloudy (they are a suspension): must hand-roll and invert (10x) before use to re-suspend
What structure are long-acting insulin analogues? How does this occur?
Modifications have been made to AA sequence of human insulin, which results in an extended and more flat absorption