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I think that you are referring to the insulin syringe,not the needle. The standard insulin syringe holds one cc, divided into 100ths, which is equal to one UNIT of insulin. It is imperative that you are using a U100 insulin solution with a U100 syringe. If you don't, the incorrect dosage could be catastrophic. There are some smaller insulin syringes that only hold 0.5 cc (making them half the size of the 1cc). They are STILL marked properly for U100 insulin even though they are smaller in size. Hope that this helps!!clkfrau1@aol.com
Checking blood sugar levels with strips and doing insulin injections with needles could be a real hassle for diabetics. A Diabetes pump is a versatile gadget that continuously monitors glucose levels and provides the necessary amounts of insulin shots automatically.
Because most people don't know the units/ml. It's much easier for them to simply draw the dose in units. Could also lead to med errors/patient harm if people withdrew and administered 15 ml instead of 15 units.
Her intent was to get good grades so she could get twenty dollars.
No, Intent is a noun. An adjective form of the verb (to intend) could be intended.
No, it could not, because the poison was specifically designed to kill rats, and was developed as a rat poison/killer, not a human poison/killer. It would still be considered rat poison, even if the human died from the rat poison.
If taking insulin there could be a way for you to get off of them. You will have to get healthier.
Insulin is an endocrine hormone secreted by the pancreas. You could call it endocrine or pancreatic secretion.
insulin is a hormone that controls your blood sugar levels. without insulin, your blood sugar levels could be too high or too low.
if the pioneers could not get the poison out or aR.S bite, that person usually died because the poison had traveled around the body of the victim
A self regulating form of insulin that, if it were to make it to market, could effectively "cure" type 1 diabetes.
They could become hypoglycemic, go into insulin shock, coma, and even death.