High Insulin Dosages

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Hey everyone,

The other night I had patients who were ordered an outrageously high dosage of insulin for mealtimes plus sliding scale coverage. 100 units and 75 units of humalin R for each patient. Is this legitamite- has anyone ever given this much insulin before?

I ended up not giving the insulin. And on one of the patients, I got the md to dc the mealtime coverage.

But geez, even in a type 1 diabetic, I would think you'd kill the patient with that much insulin...

Specializes in Oncology.

Some patients are extremely insulin resistant and require high doses. Usually these patients are type 2 diabetics, not type 1 diabetics. Type 2 diabetes is a disease of insulin resistance.

Before just asking for the coverage to be d/c'd, did you check to see if the patient has been getting that much? Ask the patient what they took at home? Question the physician?

They don't make 100 unit syringes for nothin' ;)

We have two patients who come in and bring their home insulin (U500)...I swear I have like 5 people check and check and check again because it's a crazy amount of insulin--something like 35 units of U500 before meals.

No way would I hold that...maybe I'd double/triple check the order, ask the patient what they normally take, etc.

Well, I mean, I did question the physician and they dc'd it. Their blood sugars were running 150-200. Later, one of my patients blood sugar was in the 70s with only sliding scale coverage.

But thank you, I'll keep that in mind. I had never seen regular insulin ordered that highly and the other nurses I was with didn't know either! Just wanted to know that it wasn't a mistake and it wouldn't harm the patient if I gave it.

I've seen a few "outrageous" doses, but don't remember the exact numbers. I verify the orders and usually try to get them decreased, at least temporarily. People usually eat very differently while they're hospitalized.

Well, I mean, I did question the physician and they dc'd it. Their blood sugars were running 150-200.

perhaps they were much higher previously? hence the high doses. And even if this is their normal range because they're so insulin resistant, I still would've double checked a dose that high given the blood sugar readings you gave. I think you did the right thing in this case.

Specializes in Oncology.

Perhaps there eating quite differently in the hospital.

Specializes in Oncology.

We have two patients who come in and bring their home insulin (U500)...I swear I have like 5 people check and check and check again because it's a crazy amount of insulin--something like 35 units of U500 before meals.

To expand on this, I'm assuming they were getting to the 35 unit mark on a U-100 syringe worth of insulin in U-500 insulin, or 175 units. This is where insulin dosing can get confusing. A lot of newer U-200 and U-300 insulins are coming out and only in pen form to keep it simpler.

I have seen like 100u in two divided doses. I was also surprised about it because when I was a student in my country of origin. I have never seen more than 20u at once.

To expand on this, I'm assuming they were getting to the 35 unit mark on a U-100 syringe worth of insulin in U-500 insulin, or 175 units. This is where insulin dosing can get confusing. A lot of newer U-200 and U-300 insulins are coming out and only in pen form to keep it simpler.

Yes, 175 units. I hate the U500 and am glad we only rarely see it. I swear I have every nurse that's working check it and then have the patient check it as well (those patients probably think I am an idiot but I'd rather look like a moron than overdose someone with insulin).

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

It is named "insulin resistance" and a frequent symptom of DM type II, much more rarely of type I.

Pancreas makes about 50 units/24h, normally. In highly resistant patients,

that might be not enough for basal coverage, and if they are sick or take steroids, the requirements might get ridiculously high. I'd seen over 300 units/day and 100 units plus "super-high" coverage for meals. These super-resistant people are usually also morbidly obese, so standard ADA diets are not applicable to them. A patient weighting 500 lbs has to take 3000 kcal/24 hours just to stay alive. 4 carbs/meal diet means starvation for them.

There is no such thing as "legal dose of insulin". As with many other drugs, the correct dose is "just enough of it".

Specializes in Emergency.

I have one patient whose meal time sliding scale goes up to 50 units (novolog). That's on top of his twice-daily lantus. There are people with huge insulin use but I agree, when I see an amount like that I still do a double take and then triple check it.

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