Low discomfort and pain associated with intensified insulin therapy in children and adolescents.

2008 
Abstract Objective Discomfort during insulin injection and self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) is a potential obstacle in diabetes therapy, but its prevalence and extent in relation to clinical variables is uncertain. Research design and methods We prospectively assessed treatment-associated discomfort and pain in an unselected cohort of patients (60 boys and 52 girls; mean age 14.6 ± 3.0 years, mean A1C 8.0 ± 1.4%) with type 1 diabetes and multiple daily self-injections of insulin, using visual analogue/verbal rating scales (range, 0–10) and a six-item questionnaire. Results Pain during insulin injection was absent to very low in 91.9% of patients, and its intensity was independent of age, gender, diabetes duration, current A1C, injection volume, or type of insulin. Injection was more unpleasant than SMBG in 64.2% of patients (mean difference of pain score, 1.0 ± 1.7, p Conclusions In young patients with access to optimized diabetes care, pain during insulin injection and SMBG is infrequent or mild, and not widely perceived as problematic, thus encouraging the use of multiple daily injection treatment.
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