Diabetes Brand Generic Drug Match Quiz (Injectable)

Injectable Diabetes Drugs Match Quiz

Mnemonic to remember Injectable Diabetes Drugs

“HALT BLOOD SUGAR, NOW!”

(Helps recall major insulin and non-insulin injectables for diabetes.)
  • H – Humalog (Insulin lispro)
  • A – Apidra (Insulin glulisine)
  • L – Lantus (Insulin glargine), Levemir (Insulin detemir)
  • T – Tresiba (Insulin degludec)
  • B – Byetta (Exenatide)
  • L – Lixisenatide (Adlyxin, though not listed)
  • O – Ozempic (Semaglutide)
  • O – Novolog (Insulin aspart)
  • D – Dulaglutide (Trulicity)
  • S – Semaglutide (Ozempic again, also Wegovy for weight loss)
  • U – Humulin R/N/70:30 (Regular/NPH/Mixed insulins)
  • G – Glargine (Lantus/Basaglar)
  • A – Apidra (reiterated for fast-acting)
  • R – Rybelsus (oral semaglutide, though not injectable)

GLP-1 Agonists (Non-Insulin Injectables):

“VOT MB”

  • V – Victoza (Liraglutide)
  • O – Ozempic (Semaglutide)
  • T – Trulicity (Dulaglutide)
  • M – Mounjaro (Tirzepatide – dual GLP-1/GIP)
  • B – Byetta (Exenatide)

Drugs Categorization:

  • Rapid-acting insulins (Humalog, Novolog, Apidra)
  • Long-acting insulins (Lantus, Levemir, Tresiba)
  • Premixed insulins (Humalog/Novolog Mix, Humulin 70/30)
  • GLP-1 agonists (Victoza, Ozempic, Trulicity, Byetta, Mounjaro)

Insulin Types Comparison Table (Injectables)

  • R = Regular = Rapid-ish (short-acting, clear) e.g. Humulin R, Novolin R
  • N = NPH = Not fast (intermediate, cloudy) e.g. Humulin N, Novolin N
  • Long-acting (like Lantus, Levemir, Tresiba) = long, steady insulin with minimal peak
FeatureInsulin R (Regular)Insulin N (NPH)Intermediate-Acting Insulin
Long-Acting Insulin
Brand NamesHumulin R, Novolin RHumulin N, Novolin N
  • Humulin N
  • Novolin N (same as NPH)
  • Lantus
  • Basaglar
  • Toujeo
  • Levemir
  • Tresiba
Generic NameRegular insulinIsophane insulin (NPH)Isophane insulin (NPH)
Glargine, Detemir, Degludec
TypeShort-actingIntermediate-actingIntermediate-actingLong-acting
AppearanceClearCloudyCloudyClear
Onset of Action30–60 minutes1–2 hours1–2 hours1–4 hours
Peak Action2–4 hours4–12 hours4–12 hours
Minimal to no peak
Duration of Action6–8 hours12–18 hours12–18 hours20–42 hours
Dosing FrequencyUsually 2–3 times dailyOnce or twice dailyOnce or twice daily
Once daily (some may be every 2–3 days)
Mixable?Can mix with NPHCan mix with Regular insulinYes (with short/rapid-acting)
Not usually mixed
Use CaseMealtime control or sliding scaleBasal insulinBasal insulin
Basal insulin (24-hr+ control)