I just can't bring myself to leave my insulin out of the fridge for a whole month. Since starting on the pods, I'll leave my insulin out the night before a pod change, then put it back in the fridge. Am I doing more damage to the insulin by warming it up and cooling it off 10 times a month? Opinions?
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I do the same thing...and I have never had a problem with the insulin going bad. I think you are ok doing it.
Permalink Reply by Vince on February 19, 2012 at 2:12pm I do the same thing and have not had any problems and my BG has not varied. I think you are ok.
I keep mine out as I want to carry it with me in case I need to change a pod when I am away from home. When I am traveling, I take an extra vial with me so it is out of the fridge until I get back home. So far no problems.
Permalink Reply by Jacob's mom on February 19, 2012 at 5:31pm since podding, we always leave the insulin in the cupboard, no issues with that end of things!
Permalink Reply by mike on February 19, 2012 at 8:32pm just fill the syringe a couple hours before you change the pod...it will be room temp at that time
I'll bite. What happened when the PDM got too cold?
Permalink Reply by Herman on February 21, 2012 at 1:24am As we had cold weather two weeks ago in the Netherlands I had my PDM in the car when I was ice skating. Al went well and when I wanted to bolus for lunch the PDM bolus calculator refused to work indicating it was too cold. I was able to measure my BG but had to bolus manually. No problem but a bit strange.
Insulin I use is always at room temp. I take the next penfill (Novorapid) out of the fridge when I place a new pod and keep it out of the fridge till the next change. When I go out for more than two hours I take that penfill with a pod with me as spare. Works fine and I have always extra insulin at room temp.
Permalink Reply by Jaybear on February 22, 2012 at 9:21am According to all of the major insulin manufacturers and the FDA, you can definitely leave your insulin unrefrigerated for 28 days. If you still lack the confidence, take a look at the prescribing information (again, all reviewed and approved by the FDA) for some of the more common insulins.
Apidra: "Unopened vials/cartridge systems/SoloStar not stored in a refrigerator must be used within 28 days." http://products.sanofi.us/apidra/apidra.pdf
Novolog: "After initial use a vial may be kept at temperatures below 30°C (86°F) for up to 28 days, but should not be exposed to excessive heat or sunlight. Opened vials may be refrigerated." http://www.novo-pi.com/novolog.pdf
Humalog: "In-use HUMALOG vials, cartridges, pens, and HUMALOG KwikPen® should be stored at room temperature, below 86°F (30°C) and must be used within 28 days or be discarded, even if they still contain HUMALOG." http://pi.lilly.com/us/humalog-pen-pi.pdf
I always keep my insulin stockpile in the fridge, but I have no fear of an unrefrigerated bottle of insulin. Give it a whirl and surprise yourself, and save yourself the trouble of warming and recooling a bottle of insulin. This morning, I'm pumping insulin that hasn't been refrigerated in two weeks, and all is good.
Be brave!
Manny Hernandez(Co-Founder, Editor, has LADA)
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