Medical Disclaimer: This site provides informational comparisons only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your physician or pharmacist before making medication decisions.
Compare GLIPIZIDE (Glipizide) and INSULIN LISPRO (ADMELOG) — clinical data, side effects, and patient experiences.
Glipizide, Glucotrol · Sulfonylurea
How it works
Mechanism of Action The primary mode of action of glipizide in experimental animals appears to be the stimulation of insulin secretion from the beta cells of pancreatic islet tissu...
Approved for
ADMELOG, Humalog, Admelog · Insulin
How it works
12.1 Mechanism of Action Regulation of glucose metabolism is the primary activity of insulins and insulin analogs, including insulin lispro products. Insulins lower blood glucose b...
Approved for
Estimated frequency (%) based on clinical trial data
Based on 23 Reddit discussions
GLIPIZIDE
40%
positive
15 threads
INSULIN LISPRO
0%
positive
8 threads
% of discussions mentioning each side effect
15 Reddit threads analysed for GLIPIZIDE
Overall Sentiment
Mixed
Comparison Threads
0
Avg Post Score
88 upvotes
Most discussed side effects in community
Just wanted to share some great news. My grandfather had diabetes and even had to have his leg amputated later in life. I watched growing up how restrictive his diet was. My father and brother were also diagnosed later. 2 years ago, after thinking I had restless leg syndrome, I got a blood test
My A1c results after four months of carb reduction, intermittent fasting, apple cider vinegar, cardio and a 60lbs weight loss... 5.4%! Plus Metformin, Glipizide and ~~Trulicity~~\*. Hoping to be able to decrease the meds and hopefully not have to start insulin. My a1c was previously > 11, thankf
For the first time since I started getting my A1C checked regularly, it is now in normal range! I got my recent labs back, and it was 5.7. It was as high as 11.7 as late as two years ago, and has regularly been in the 8+ range for several years. in July, it was 6.7. It has taken a combination of Met
6 months ago, after complaining of hypos in the middle of the night from Glipizide, my doctor took me off of it and put me on Mounjaro. I've been steadily increasing my dosage every few months and am up to 10mg now. He told me that I wouldn't need to check my glucose more than once a day which signi
1/ yes, I know, there's room for improvement. That's always going to be true. I'm okay with being a work in progress. :) 2/ I started off 14++ earlier this year and my PCP stressed the need for a gentle slope of reduction in sugars so complications wouldn't plague me as much. 3/ I started off with
January 31, I had an A1c of 12.4. My endo wanted to start me on insulin, but I decided I was going to try to take control of the factors that I knew I was not paying attention to. Revamped my diet, cut calories, slowly incorporated exercise, filled the nutritional gaps I needed with supplements, and
Back in October my a1c was 11.6 yesterday got my new results for my a1c and I'm at 8.4 I need to tell someone that understands me and that is you guys.i have just been taking all my medications i take metformin 1000 and glipizide 10 mg and I stopped eating late at night and stopped all the soft drin
EDIT: I realized that I put 5.7 in the title. It's actually 5.4. Just want to share my story because the last three months has been a roller coaster both physically and mentally. Hopefully this helps for those who needs guidance. I [29M] was diagnosed August of this year with an A1C of 11.5 with a f
Community discussions are sourced from public Reddit threads. Content reflects individual opinions and is not medical advice.
8 Reddit threads analysed for INSULIN LISPRO
Overall Sentiment
Mixed
Comparison Threads
0
Avg Post Score
57 upvotes
I see articles recently shared talking about people not taking their insulin or reducing it due to costs. There is help, here are the programs I use the most, please share with your patients. [Admelog (similar to Humalog) $99/month for up to 10 vials or 5 packs of pens, any other sanofi insulins (l
Basically title. I’m a clinical pharmacist at a hospital. We are trying to start a patient on standard sliding scale insulin lispro, but one of their allergies is listed as cat dander and the lispro is flagging as allergy cross reactivity. I cannot find ANYTHING online to support this. Does anyone
Know little to nothing about it, but one MD says he’s done it before. What exactly is the point? Package insert for lispro says when given intravenously, the clearance rate is similar to insulin regular.
Curious how other institutions handle insulin on the floor. Currently we let RN’s draw up regular and lispro using pt specific 3mL vials pulled from Omni cell, we draw up glargine in our IV room, and all the other flavors we dispense a pt specific vial from central and RN draws up on the floor. Wel
I've heard from multiple patients who switched from Humalog to Admelog that now their sugars are all over the place. people who have been on the therapy long term and have well controlled numbers that report once they switched to admelog they had to increase their dose. 2 of these patients switched
Hey guys I’m P4 student and I question regarding expiry dates. I had situation during my hospital rotation I was preparing an admelog prescription and when assigning the expiration date I wrote down April 28. Since the vial only last 28 days at room temperature. My preceptor told me the expirati
Community discussions are sourced from public Reddit threads. Content reflects individual opinions and is not medical advice.
GLIPIZIDE is a Sulfonylurea, while INSULIN LISPRO belongs to the Insulin class. This means they work through different pharmacological mechanisms, which may influence both efficacy and side effect profiles. GLIPIZIDE is administered via Oral, whereas INSULIN LISPRO uses Intravenous or Subcutaneous. Route of administration can affect onset of action and patient adherence.
GLIPIZIDE carries 4 FDA warnings. INSULIN LISPRO carries 4 FDA warnings. Patients should discuss all warnings and contraindications with their healthcare provider before starting or switching medications..
This comparison is for informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making medication decisions.