Glucagon Injection Kit with Diluent

Buy Glucagon Injection Kit with Diluent Online

Please note: a valid prescription is required for all prescription medication.

Canadian comparison $441 Save $91.01
Our Price $349.99 Price Match Promise Found a lower price? We'll match it.
x
Secure Encrypted Payments

Glucagon Injection Kit with Diluent is an emergency rescue medicine for severe low blood sugar when a person cannot safely take oral carbohydrates. It can be ordered online for US delivery from Canada, with current cost shown during checkout. Choose the listed dose or strength that matches the directions from your clinician and keep the kit accessible for trained caregivers.

This kit format contains glucagon powder and a sterile liquid diluent that are mixed immediately before injection. It is intended for urgent use in severe hypoglycemia, such as when someone with diabetes is unconscious, having a seizure, or unable to swallow safely.

Price, Strength, and Ordering Details

The Glucagon Injection Kit Price can vary by supplier, quantity, and market source. Current cash-pay cost appears during ordering, so you can evaluate the amount before completing checkout. Many people also compare the Glucagon Injection Kit Cost with nasal glucagon, auto-injector formats, or other rescue plans recommended by their care team.

The commonly known kit presentation is a vial of glucagon powder with a prefilled syringe of diluent for reconstitution before use. Some labels describe the reconstituted product as glucagon for injection 1 mg, but you should choose the strength shown during ordering and match it to the instructions given for the person who will use it.

US shipping from Canada may be useful for households planning ahead for home, school, work, or travel storage. BorderFreeHealth works with licensed pharmacies, and order details may be reviewed before pharmacy supply. Keep enough time for replacement before the kit expires, especially if severe lows have happened before.

What the Kit Treats

Glucagon is used for severe hypoglycemia, which means dangerously low blood sugar. Severe episodes can happen in people with diabetes who use insulin or certain medicines that increase insulin release. When a person cannot swallow, oral glucose tablets, juice, or food may be unsafe; glucagon can raise blood glucose by signaling the liver to release stored sugar.

This rescue medicine is not a daily diabetes treatment. It is kept for emergencies and should be part of a broader low-blood-sugar plan that includes glucose monitoring, fast carbohydrates for mild lows, caregiver training, and follow-up after a severe event. For general education about causes, symptoms, and prevention, see our hypoglycemia condition information.

Glucagon may also be used in certain diagnostic settings under professional direction because it can relax smooth muscle in the gastrointestinal tract. That use is different from home rescue treatment and depends on clinical setting, preparation, and monitoring.

What Comes in a Powder and Diluent Kit

A traditional glucagon rescue kit includes a vial containing glucagon powder and a syringe containing sterile diluent. The diluent is the liquid used to dissolve the powder immediately before injection. It should not be replaced with another liquid unless the official instructions specifically direct that use.

The amount of diluent depends on the kit label. Many 1 mg emergency kits are supplied with a syringe containing 1 mL of diluent, but the included instructions should be followed exactly for the product in hand. Do not pre-mix the kit for storage. Once mixed, it is meant for immediate use.

Quick tip: Store the kit with its instructions so caregivers can find both during an emergency.

How Glucagon Works in Severe Low Blood Sugar

Glucagon is a hormone that counteracts insulin. In a severe low, it stimulates the liver to break down glycogen, a stored form of sugar, into glucose. That glucose then enters the bloodstream and can help restore consciousness or the ability to swallow safely.

The medicine works best when the liver has enough stored glycogen. Prolonged fasting, heavy alcohol use, malnutrition, or repeated lows may reduce the response. Emergency medical evaluation is still important after a severe episode because blood sugar can fall again, vomiting can occur, or another cause may need attention.

Nausea and vomiting are common after glucagon. Vomiting can occur because glucagon affects the stomach and intestines, and severe hypoglycemia itself can also trigger stress responses in the body. Place the person on their side after giving the injection to reduce choking risk, especially if they are unconscious or very drowsy.

Basic Use Steps for Caregivers

Caregivers should practice the steps before an emergency, using training materials or demonstration kits when available. During a severe low, call emergency services according to the person’s care plan and local guidance. If the person cannot swallow safely, prepare the kit as directed rather than trying to give food or drink by mouth.

  1. Remove the cap from the vial and clean the stopper if instructed.
  2. Insert the needle into the vial and push the diluent into the powder.
  3. Gently swirl the vial until the powder dissolves. Do not shake forcefully.
  4. Draw the mixed solution back into the syringe as directed.
  5. Inject into the recommended site, such as the outer thigh, upper arm, or buttock, if those routes are included in the kit instructions.
  6. Turn the person onto their side and monitor breathing, alertness, and blood glucose when possible.
  7. Once the person can swallow, give fast carbohydrates followed by longer-acting food as directed in the emergency plan.

Label instructions differ by age, weight, and product format. A Glucagon Emergency Kit 1 mg may not be used the same way in every person, especially for children or smaller individuals. Training ahead of time is one of the most important parts of safe rescue use.

Storage, Travel, and Replacement

Store the kit at room temperature unless the package instructions say otherwise. Keep it away from excess heat, moisture, and direct light. Do not freeze the kit, leave it in a hot car, or store it loose without the carton and instructions.

Check the expiration date regularly. Many households place a reminder on a phone or calendar so the kit is replaced before it is needed. If the powder, syringe, packaging, or seal looks damaged, ask a pharmacist or clinician what to do before relying on it.

For travel, carry the kit in a personal bag rather than checked luggage. Original packaging may help security screening and makes instructions easier to find. If the person attends school, camp, or work, caregivers and responsible staff should know where the rescue kit is kept and how to respond.

Side Effects, Warnings, and Monitoring

Glucagon can be lifesaving, but it still requires careful use. Common side effects include nausea, vomiting, headache, dizziness, fast heartbeat, and injection-site discomfort. These effects may be more noticeable after the person wakes because severe hypoglycemia itself can leave someone weak, shaky, confused, or exhausted.

  • Call emergency services if the person does not wake or improve promptly.
  • Keep the person on their side if vomiting is possible.
  • Do not give food or drink while the person is unconscious.
  • Check blood glucose if equipment and training are available.
  • Report the event to the diabetes care team afterward.

People with pheochromocytoma generally should not use glucagon because it may trigger a dangerous blood pressure increase. People with insulinoma may have an initial rise in blood sugar followed by another fall. Anyone with a known allergy to glucagon or kit components should avoid that product and have an alternative emergency plan.

Drug interactions can matter. Beta blockers may intensify pulse or blood pressure effects. Indomethacin may reduce glucagon’s ability to raise blood sugar. Warfarin effects may be increased. Alcohol use, fasting, adrenal problems, or low glycogen stores can also change the response. Discuss these factors before relying on a rescue plan.

When to Use Oral Carbohydrates Instead

Glucagon is reserved for severe lows or situations where swallowing is unsafe. If the person is awake, alert, and able to swallow, fast-acting carbohydrates are usually the first step in many diabetes plans. Examples may include glucose tablets, glucose gel, juice, or regular soda, depending on the individual plan.

After symptoms improve, longer-acting carbohydrates or a meal may help keep glucose from falling again. The care team may also review insulin timing, meal patterns, activity, alcohol intake, or glucose-monitoring alerts after a severe episode. Broader supplies and adjacent products can be found in our diabetes care category.

Vial-Syringe Kit Compared With Other Rescue Options

A Glucagon Powder and Diluent Kit is a traditional rescue format. It requires mixing before injection, so caregiver training is essential. Some families prefer it because the vial and syringe steps are familiar from diabetes education or clinical training.

Nasal glucagon and prefilled or auto-injector products may reduce preparation steps, but they have different instructions, age considerations, storage needs, and costs. A clinician can help decide whether a vial-syringe kit, nasal powder, or another injectable format fits the person’s age, caregiver comfort, and history of severe lows.

The best rescue option is the one that trained helpers can use quickly and correctly. If several caregivers share responsibility, such as family members, school staff, coaches, or coworkers, choose a format they can learn and practice with confidence.

Who May Need a Rescue Kit

A rescue kit is often considered for people with diabetes who use insulin, have had severe lows, experience reduced awareness of low blood sugar, or have unpredictable eating and activity patterns. It may also be useful when overnight lows, exercise-related lows, or illness-related lows have created safety concerns.

Children, older adults, and people living alone may need extra planning. Caregivers should know early symptoms, severe-warning signs, injection steps, emergency contacts, and follow-up instructions. A written low-blood-sugar plan can reduce hesitation during a crisis.

Glucagon is not a substitute for routine prevention. It works alongside glucose monitoring, appropriate medicine use, meal planning, and education. Repeated use or repeated severe lows should prompt timely medical review.

Cost Planning and Cash-Pay Considerations

People often look for Glucagon Injection Kit Canadian pricing, cash price, or out-of-pocket cost when replacing an expired kit or keeping more than one location stocked. The displayed cost can help you decide whether one kit, multiple kits, or a different rescue format better fits your plan.

Do not delay emergency preparedness until a kit is expired or missing. Consider where severe lows are most likely to happen: home, school, workplace, vehicle travel, sports, or overnight stays. If more than one location needs coverage, ask your care team how many rescue products should be kept available.

Country-of-origin information may appear with product attributes when relevant. For Canadian-sourced items, you may see our Canada origin attribute associated with the medication record.

Questions to Ask Before Keeping the Kit at Home

Clear instructions matter more than storage alone. Before relying on a kit, ask a clinician or diabetes educator who should be trained, when glucagon should be used, and when emergency services should be called. Confirm whether the person’s age, weight, medicines, and medical history affect the rescue plan.

  • Which symptoms mean this kit should be used immediately?
  • Which caregivers should practice reconstitution and injection?
  • What blood glucose level or symptoms require emergency help?
  • What should be given once the person can swallow?
  • How should a severe event be documented afterward?
  • Would a nasal or auto-injector option be easier for the household?

Why it matters: A kit only helps if the right person can find, mix, and give it during a stressful event.

Authoritative Sources

For full preparation steps, contraindications, interactions, and labeled use, consult the instructions supplied with the kit and professional medical guidance. The following sources provide additional clinical context about glucagon injection and severe hypoglycemia:

This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.

Research & Education Tool

Blood Glucose Unit Converter

Convert glucose readings between mg/dL and mmol/L without changing the clinical value.

mg/dL - US reporting unit
mmol/L - International reporting unit

These calculations are for education only and do not replace clinical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always confirm medical decisions with a qualified healthcare professional.

Express Shipping - from $29.99

Shipping with this method takes 3-5 days

Prices:
  • Dry-Packed Products $29.99
  • Cold-Packed Products $39.99
Shipping Countries:
  • United States (all contiguous states**)
  • Worldwide (excludes some countries***)

Standard Shipping - $19.99

Shipping with this method takes 5-10 days

Prices:
  • Dry-Packed Products $19.99
  • Not available for Cold-Packed products
Shipping Countries:
  • United States (all contiguous states**)
  • Worldwide (excludes some countries***)

Rewards Program

Earn points on birthdays, product orders, reviews, friend referrals, and more! Enjoy your medication at unparalleled discounts while reaping rewards for every step you take with us.

You can read more about rewards here.

POINT VALUE

100 points
1 USD

How to earn points

  • 1Register and/or Login
    Create an account and start earning.
  • 2Earn Rewards
    Earn points every time you shop or perform certain actions.
  • 3Redeem
    Redeem points for exclusive discounts.

You Might Also Like

Novolin ge NPH Vial

$71.24

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $110.76
Our Price $71.24
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Jardiance

$54.06

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $75 CA $133
Our Price $54.06
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Forxiga

$55.14

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $657 CA $72
Our Price $55.14
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Humalog Mix KwikPens

$103.54

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $242
Our Price $103.54
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page