Suzanne & Darcy
Member Since 2020
Me too! No worries!Thank you just wasn't sure if the Semglee was a good brand to use.
I'm sorry for posting this again I was interrupted and thought it was lost, I'm a bit of a mess right now...
Me too! No worries!Thank you just wasn't sure if the Semglee was a good brand to use.
I'm sorry for posting this again I was interrupted and thought it was lost, I'm a bit of a mess right now...
I would not start with more that .5 units (half of a unit.). I would buy syringes with half unit markings on them. You will need them. Just make sure the syringes are the correct type for U-100 insulin. That’s very important. We had a bad overdose situation here this year where a cat was given Lantus insulin with the wrong size syringe (a U-40) and many of us here stayed up all day and all night helping to get the cat through that situation. I will never forget that!I'm a bit confused and have to get it straightened out, The doctor wrote for Glargine U-100 One bottle give one unit twicw daily so if the bottle is 100 units then it should be used up in 50days. Somehow I think that is wrong and I'm not going to give Silver that any way until I tell the docttor that his BG was 317 mg/dl yesterday, and 286mg/dl today. The doctor wrote based on a test that was done on Dec 7, so i'm a little reluctant to dose that. I will get it figured out though. From what I've read it is better to use syringe so you can increase or decrease by a half ml. But thank you it's good to know other people are using the Semglee also.
I would not start with more that .5 units (half of a unit.). I would buy syringes with half unit markings on them. You will need them. Just make sure the syringes are the correct type for U-100 insulin. That’s very important. We had a bad overdose situation here this year where a cat was given Lantus insulin with the wrong size syringe (a U-40) and many of us here stayed up all day and all night helping to get the cat through that situation. I will never forget that!
And this (sorry). These are all info “sticky notes” from the Lantus/Levemir/Biosimars Forum:
https://felinediabetes.com/FDMB/thr...-low-go-slow-slgs-tight-regulation-tr.210110/
Read this on syringes:
Using syringes with a pen, cartridge, or vial:
- U-100 3/10cc syringes with half unit markings are the best to use for drawing Lantus, Levemir, or the Biosimilars from vials, cartridges, and pens.
- BD Ultra-Fine, CarePoint Vet, Monoject, GNP, UltiCare Vet Rx, Sure Comfort, and ReliOn are just some of the brands available with half unit markings.
- Syringes come in ½ inch or 5/16 inch needle lengths. Needle gauges are 29, 30 or 31 (31 being the thinnest)
- Full and half-unit syringe scales:
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U-100 refers to the strength of the insulin, not the amount of insulin in the bottle.doctor wrote for Glargine U-100 One bottle give one unit twicw daily so if the bottle is 100 units then it should be used up in 50days.
U-100 refers to the strength of the insulin, not the amount of insulin in the bottle.
A U-100 insulin (such as Lantus or Levemir) has 100 units of insulin per ml.
The typical vial of Lantus contains 10 ml, which equates to 1000 units of insulin (100 units/ml x 10 ml = 1000 units). Using 2 units per day, that would theoretically last 500 days.
The typical Lantus cartridge/pen contains 3 ml of insulin, or 300 units. At 2 units per day, that would be 150 days worth.
A lot of us use the pens/cartridges because the smaller volume per pen often allows us to use the pen to the last drop. Sometimes the vials lose efficacy before empty given the low doses most cats require and the large volume of insulin in the vial. That’s just an FYI in case you’re wondering.
Most human insulins are U-100 strength, whereas most veterinary insulins are U-40 strength. As has already been mentioned, just make sure you get the correct syringes for your insulin (so, u-100 insulin syringes for a u-100 insulin such as Lantus). Furthermore, you’ll want 3/10 cc capacity syringes (so basically each syringe holds 1/3 ml) so you can more precisely measure doses. Larger capacity insulin syringes (such as 1/2 cc or 1cc) are also available but because they hold so much more insulin, it’s trickier to measure given cats need such small doses.
To summarize the syringe info, you’ll want 3/10 cc U-100 insulin syringes, preferably with 1/2 unit markings. The other number on the package (such as mm) references needle length and is more of a personal preference.
[I’m reiterating what @Suzanne & Darcy already advised re syringes because it really is that important; mistakes are easy to make when there are so many numbers being thrown around and even vets clinics can make errors].
Just keep the bottle in the refrigerator and you can continue to use it long after the stated 28 days. We all do and it’s not a problem.the box it say's discard after 28 days,