Hi!!
All the insulin vials or cartridges have expiry date printed on them. This date indicates the date before which the unopened vial or cartridge should be used. One the vial or cartridge is opened it should be discarded after one month,even though some insulin remains in it, as the potency of the insulin is lost over a period of time the potency of the insulin is also affected by cold and heat. Hence Insulin should not be frozen or stored in direct sunlight or heated areas.
If all the instructions are followed than Insulin does not go bad.
Hope i have answered your question...
So long as the bottle is intact, the insulin inside it will still be effective.
no, the pancreas produces insulin. It produces insulin to help the glucose go inside the cell.
It is bad to mix victoza with insulin. Victoria is an injectable prescription that helps improve the blood sugar in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
If you're Medicaid eligible and your physician has prescribed insulin, Medicaid should cover it.
Yes, you can feel sick from injecting bad insulin. This can cause it to have the opposite effect, such as causing blood sugar to spike or plummet, and can make a person physically ill.
Insulin can ferment and become bad if left at room temperature. Refrigeration helps ensure that it stays good over time.
Insulin is not bad for pregnant woman and the baby. Nevertheless it is recommended drug for diabetes during pregnancy.
yes
They could become hypoglycemic, go into insulin shock, coma, and even death.
No, insulin is not an element. To be an element, a substance must have all the same type of atom. Once it has this, it can go on the Periodic Table. So, as insulin has many different types of atom in it, it's not an element.
No. Insulin is a natural body chemical produced by your pancreas, necessary for processing the sugar in your bloodstream. Not only is insulin good for you, it's one of the safest things you can inject into your body, if needed.
He;s DEAD!!!!! Insulin is a molecule made naturally in the pancreas, in order to regulate the sugar levels in human blood. An excess of insulin disrupts this regulatiuon, and you could go hyper or hypo glycaermic.