Recently had my annual review and was asked to try shorter needles - the trend is to offer 4 and 5mm ones rather than the 12mm or the 8mm ones I had relatively good control with (the 12mm needles are no longer available from many sources.) During the trial I was getting scarily high readings and am concerned that these needles weren't penetrating deeply enough.
There seems to be a general fear of injecting into muscle with longer needles but, to my knowledge, this didn't happen under my old regime (ie insulin absorbed too rapidly). The higher gauge needles are also becoming more popular (paradoxically, the higher the gauge, the thinner the needle) and being more fragile, can bend in use increasing the potential for incorrect dosages. A risk that seems to have increased with the cheaper GlucoRx needles I'm currently prescribed (along with blockages so the incorrect dose is delivered).
Although trials are in favour of shorter needles, I'm not convinced. There is also the potential for insulin "backflow" with shorter needles.
Now I'm back on my 8mm needles and readings have improved.
Anyone else getting higher readings than expected after needle changes, or is it just me!
There seems to be a general fear of injecting into muscle with longer needles but, to my knowledge, this didn't happen under my old regime (ie insulin absorbed too rapidly). The higher gauge needles are also becoming more popular (paradoxically, the higher the gauge, the thinner the needle) and being more fragile, can bend in use increasing the potential for incorrect dosages. A risk that seems to have increased with the cheaper GlucoRx needles I'm currently prescribed (along with blockages so the incorrect dose is delivered).
Although trials are in favour of shorter needles, I'm not convinced. There is also the potential for insulin "backflow" with shorter needles.
Now I'm back on my 8mm needles and readings have improved.
Anyone else getting higher readings than expected after needle changes, or is it just me!