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DESCRIPTION
The insulin is administered by subcutaneous injection (when it takes for mouth, the digestive system destroys the hormone before the body uses it). It is important that this simple procedure is done correctly:
- Release the lid of the needle. Drag the sucker up to the mark of the syringe that corresponds to the exact dose that you want.
- Hold the pipe of insulin mouth below with a hand, introduce the needle and push the sucker inwards of the pipe to empty the air syringe.
- Drag the sucker again backwards up to coming to the mark, making sure that has filled with liquid, not air.
- Extract all the air that could have entered the syringe until the liquid this one jousted in the mark of the dose and I extracted the needle of the bottle.
- Clean the area of the injection with cotton and alcohol or with water and soap.
- Hold the syringe as a pen in a hand. With another hand, cripple a pinch and puncture to approximately 45 grades.
- Push the needle inside the subcutaneous textile. Hold the syringe with another hand and with that free propulsion stays outside the sucker 3 ó 4 units.
- If it does not appear bleed in the syringe, push the sucker down completely and later extract the needle. Never inject if it appears bleed. In this case extract the needle, throw it and prepare another dose, injecting it into another place.
- After injecting the insulin, cover the prick with a cotton and alcohol and press gently a few seconds, but do not scrape it or press too much so this it can produce that the insulin is absorbed inside the too prompt blood flow.
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