Regular insulin is the only insulin that can be given by IV
ONLY REGULAR insulin can be given IV.Rapid-insulin analogs (insulin aspart, insulin lispro and insulin glulisine) may also be administered intravenously for glycemic control in selected clinical situations under appropriate medical supervision.
NPH is a suspension. Only solutions should be given intravenously.
Regular insulin is the type that can be added to an IV solution. It is the only type of insulin that can be given intravenously due to its rapid onset of action. Other types of insulin are not compatible for intravenous administration.
NPH is a suspension. Only solutions should be given intravenously.
The hormone taken by diabetics - is Insulin.
GlucosuriaType your answer here...
When given intravenously, lidocaine is also an antiarrythmic agent, capable of correcting some ventricular arrythmias of the heart
It is usually given intravenously. I believe it can be given by other routes e.g. intra-muscular.
That depends on how it's given (intramuscularly, sub-cutaneously, or intravenously?), the species it's given to (cat? dog? human?), and, of course, the patient's own metabolism. This is definitely a question you should ask your doctor.
Insulin is a hormone, and as such is therefore a protein. If we ate/drank it, upon reaching the stomach, it would be broken down by pepsin and also the tertiary structure would be denatured by the Hydrochloric Acid. Therefore we have to take it intravenously so it can travel directly through the blood stream, and reach its taken organ, usually the liver for glycogenesis.
No, ultralente should not be given IV, as it will block capillaries due to its particle size.
you will be given glucose you will be given glucose