There are several different names for regular insulin, depending on the maker. The one constant is that all of them contain the letter "R" for "regular," in their name. For instance, one maker of insulin called all their insulins Novolin. The "regular" insulin is "Novolin R," their NPH is called "Novolin N," etc.
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Square and a rhombus * * * * * A rhombus is not a regular quadrilateral (unless it is a square) because being regular requires all sides AND all angles to be equal. So there is only one type of a regular quadrilateral - a square. It may have other names, certainly so in other languages.
Regular, Acute, and Equilateral * * * * * Regular and Equilateral are correct but not Acute. An acute triangle with angles of 50,60 70 degrees for example, is not regular. An equiangular triangle is the third possible name.
the names of them are semiregular polyhedron
A square, a rectangle, a parallelogram.
yes...because regular insulin and Isophane Insulin(NPH) is a human-made form of insulin. Insulin is a hormone produced naturally by pancreas
Regular Insulin (Humulin R)
Draw up the regular insulin first. You always want to go from clear to cloudy. Also, you do not want the NPH insulin mixing into the regular insulin, therefore the regular insulin should be drawn up before the NPH (long-acting) insulin.
Regular insulin is the only insulin that can be given by IV
Regular Insulin.
NPH is a long acting insulin that peaks 8 hours after administration. Regular insulin is fast acting that peaks 30 minutes after administration. Regular insulin should be taken before meals.
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.
reg insulin is clear
No
the peak time for Regular insulin is 4 hours and the peak time for NPH is 8 hours. I take both of them.
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.
no it isn't