Insulin varies based on the onset, peak, and duration of activity. Each works in certain ways.
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Onset
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How quickly the insulin starts to work after it's injected
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Peak time
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The period of time when the insulin helps most to lower blood sugar levels
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Duration
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How long the insulin keeps working in the body
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Insulin may act differently when given to different people. So the times of onset, peak time, and duration may be different. There are four main types of insulin:
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Insulin type
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Onset (approximate)
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Peak time (approximate)
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Duration (approximate)
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Rapid-acting, lispro, aspart, glulisine insulin, inhaled
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15 minutes
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1 to 2 hours
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2 to 4 hours
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Short-acting, regular (R) insulin
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30 minutes
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2 to 3 hours
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3 to 6 hours
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Intermediate-acting, NPH (N) insulin
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2 to 4 hours
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4 to 12 hours
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12 to 18 hours
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Long-acting, glargine, detemir insulin, degludec
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several hours
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none
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24 hours
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Ultra long-acting, glargine U-300
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6 hours
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none
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36 hours or longer
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Source: American Diabetes Association
Some people with diabetes may need to take two different types of insulin to control their blood sugar levels. Some insulin can be bought already mixed together. This includes regular and NPH insulin. This lets you inject both types of insulin in one injection. Other types of insulin can't be mixed together. They need two separate injections.
Insulin is made at different strengths. U-100 insulin (100 units of insulin per milliliter of fluid) is the most common strength. The syringes for giving insulin are different for each different strength. This means a U-100 syringe can be used only with U-100 insulin.
Recently, an inhaled form of insulin has become available. This is a form of rapid-acting insulin. An ultra-long-acting insulin has also been developed. This insulin begins to work in 30 to 90 minutes, does not peak, and lasts for over 40 hours.
The type of insulin chosen may reflect your choice and how well you are able to follow any given treatment. Other factors include:
- If you have type 1 or type 2 diabetes.
- Your daily schedule of meals, work, and activity.
- How willing you are to check your blood sugar levels regularly.
- How much exercise you get each day.
- How well you understand diabetes.
- How stable your blood sugar levels are.
- Your diet.