For educational use only. MedTime is not medical advice. Consult a licensed clinician or pharmacist before making medication decisions.

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Diabetes
SubQ

Insulin Lispro

Rapid-acting insulin

Also sold as Humalog

Onset of effect
10 min – 15 min
Felt/clinical effect
Tmax (peak blood level)
30 min – 1.5 hr
Pharmacokinetic peak
Duration of effect
3 hr – 5 hr
Per single dose

Effect timeline

Approximate single-dose timeline. Onset shows when effects are felt; Tmax shows when blood levels peak.

1 hr2 hr3 hr4 hr
Onset of effectTmax (peak blood level)Wears off

Notes

Inject just before meals.

What this is

Insulin Lispro is a rapid-acting insulin given by the subq route. It's typically used in the diabetes category.

What the numbers mean

After one subq dose you'd typically start noticing the effect in 10 min – 15 min. The drug reaches its highest blood level in about 30 min – 1.5 hr, and a single dose usually keeps working for around 3 hr – 5 hr.

Practical tips

Short-acting — don't re-dose sooner than the label allows.

Important

Don't combine with other products in the same drug class without checking with a pharmacist. Stop and seek medical advice if you have an unexpected reaction, severe side effect, or symptoms that don't improve.

All timings are approximate population ranges for a typical adult dose. Individual response varies with age, genetics, formulation, food, and other medications.

Typical dosing

Source: OpenFDA drug label · adult dosing unless noted

Doses vary by age, weight, kidney/liver function, and indication. Don't change your dose without talking to your prescriber.

Verify on the exact label used:DailyMed search·OpenFDA record

Side effects & warnings

Source: OpenFDA drug label

Verify on the exact label used:DailyMed search·OpenFDA record

Educational information only — not medical advice. Times vary by person, dose, and formulation. Always consult a doctor or pharmacist for personal guidance.