Diabetes: How to Give Glucagon
Topic Overview
This information is for people who may need to give a person with diabetes an injection of glucagon during a low blood sugar emergency.
Giving a glucagon injection is similar to giving insulin. If possible, practice giving your partner or child an insulin injection at least once a month so you will be more ready if you need to give someone glucagon in an emergency.
Glucagon has to be given immediately after it is prepared-it cannot be prepared ahead of time. Always check the expiration date on the kit.
Keep information on how to give glucagon with the glucagon medicine, and review these steps often.
Giving a glucagon injection
- Glucagon is given just like an injection of insulin and can be given in the buttock, upper arm, or thigh.
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Follow these steps to give the injection:
- Follow the instructions on the glucagon kit to mix the powder and the liquid.
- Choose a clean site for the shot on the buttock, upper arm, or thigh. If you have an alcohol swab, use it to clean the skin where you will give the shot.
- Hold the syringe like a pencil close to the site, keeping your fingers off the plunger.
- Quickly push the needle all the way into the site.
- Push the plunger of the syringe all the way in so that the medicine goes into the tissue. Give the amount of glucagon that the person's doctor has recommended. Remove the needle from the skin slowly and at the same angle that you inserted it. Press the alcohol swab, if you used one, against the injection site.
- Turn the person's head to the side, to prevent choking if he or she vomits.
- After you give the glucagon shot, immediately call 911 or other emergency services. If emergency services have not arrived within 15 minutes and the person is still unconscious, give another glucagon shot.
- Give some glucose or sucrose tablets or quick-sugar food when the person is alert and able to swallow. Also give the person some long-acting source of carbohydrate such as crackers and cheese or a meat sandwich. Stay with the person until emergency help arrives.
Any time a person who has diabetes gets glucagon, he or she should talk to a doctor to try to find out what caused the low blood sugar episode. Possible causes include too much insulin, a missed meal, insulin injected into a blood vessel, an illness other than diabetes, liver or kidney damage, a new medicine, or exercise.
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ByHealthwise Staff
Primary Medical Reviewer E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine
Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
Adam Husney, MD - Family Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer David C. W. Lau, MD, PhD, FRCPC - Endocrinology
Current as ofDecember 7, 2017
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Current as of: December 7, 2017