That would be a rare instance and only for your doctor to decide. There have been cases of a very mild Diabetes controlled by doing regular exercise but again this is very unusual. Not taking diabetes medication when needed is a serious hazard to your health.
Lets see your blood surgars drop and you lapse into a coma could die..
develops alteration of sugar metabolism and results hypoglycemia.
if your blood glucose was already low or normal, you can get hypoglycemic and have symptoms of it. its dangerous.
Your blood glucose level will go dangerously low, and you will be at risk for a diabetic coma or death
Your blood sugar drops. Assuming you are a diabetic, which would be the only reason you would take insulin, your blood sugar would go down. If you aren't a diabetic and you are taking insulin this could drop your blood sugar to dangerous levels. Causing you to pass out.
This condition is called hyperglycemia and its effect is variable form person to person considering a non diabetic individual.
Insulin
A diabetic pump, also known as an insulin pump, is used to regulate the amount of insulin used by a patient. It is an alternative to having multiple insulin injections a day.
The use of insulin is lowering the amount of sugar in the blood in diabetic patiens.
Regular Insulin (Humulin R)
You do not become diabetic by injecting yourself with insulin; your body naturally produces insulin. You become diabetic when your pancreas stops working well (or stops working at all.) However, you could lapse into a coma and die if there is too much insulin in your body. Do NOT inject insulin into yourself or anyone else unless told by a doctor to do so.
if you are diabetic it means your body can not break down the sugar you give it proparly. so diabetic people take insulin which breaks down the sugar for you. that is roughly right, my friend is diabetic. if you want further information talk to a diabetic nurse or look at wikipedia.
no
Insulin
one of the reason might be its price.Human insulin is costlier then sheep insulin.
It depends on the type of insulin and also the diabetic. It varies greatly on long acting insulin and short acting insulin. For short acting insulin you need to find out the insulin to carbohydrate ratio for a diabetic first. Using a sliding scale you need to determine the blood sugar of the diabetic and also how many carbohydrates they have ingested. Whether or not it is a Type 1 or Type 2 diabetic will also affect the outcome. For an average sized adult with type 1 diabetes, they would need to consume approximately 60-85 grams of carbohydrates, but again it depends on the individual greatly.