What is hypoglycemia?
Hypoglycemia is the term used for when you have too little
sugar in your blood. Low blood sugar comes on quickly and
must be treated right away by your child, family, or
friends. If the low blood sugar continues too long, the
brain can be harmed. Because the brain grows very rapidly in
the first 4 years of life, it is particularly important to
prevent severe low blood sugar in young children. Early
treatment helps prevent a more severe reaction. It is very
important that the family and other people taking care of
your child know the signs and symptoms of hypoglycemia. Your
child has low blood sugar if the result of a blood sugar
test is 60 mg/dl or lower. A normal blood sugar is 70 to
120 mg/dl.
What causes low blood sugar?
Low blood sugar occurs when the body doesn't have enough
sugar to burn for energy and the level of sugar in the blood
falls too low. Frequent causes include:
- missing a snack or meal
- doing extra exercise that burns more sugar than usual
- taking too much insulin
- giving a shot into a muscle resulting in rapid absorption
of insulin
- giving the wrong amount of insulin
- taking a bath or shower or soaking in a hot tub soon
after taking a shot of insulin (blood vessels in the skin
dilate from the hot water and cause insulin to be rapidly
absorbed).
What are the symptoms?
It is important to recognize low blood sugar as early as
possible so that it does not progress to a severe reaction.
Symptoms of low blood sugar range from mild to severe.
Mild reaction
- hunger at an unusual time or an upset stomach (nausea)
- shaky feeling
- sweating more than usual (often a "cold" sweat)
- irritable mood.
Moderate reaction
- pale or red face
- weak or anxious feeling
- headache
- confusion (feeling or looking dazed)
- drowsiness (preschoolers often get sleepy)
- unusual behavior (your child may cry, act drunk or angry)
- double vision (your child may "see double" or the pupils
of the eyes may get bigger; the eyes may appear glassy).
Severe reaction
- loss of consciousness
- seizures or convulsions.
A loss of consciousness and convulsions occur late in the
reaction. They usually happen only if a reaction is not
treated quickly enough. Hunger, shakiness, sweats, and pale
or red color are caused by the release of a hormone called
adrenaline (also called epinephrine). The other symptoms
listed above are more related to the lack of sugar to the
brain. You may be able to help your child learn to
recognize the signs of low blood sugar. You may tell a young
child, for example "Remember how you felt shaky and you came
and told me? You did a good job! Remember to tell a grown up
if you feel that way again." You may be able to know when a
very young child has low blood sugar by the child's cry or
behavior.
Nighttime lows
Your child may wake up with symptoms (infants may just cry)
when low blood sugar occurs during the night. Your child
probably has low blood sugar if he wakes up alert, sweating,
with a headache, with a fast heart rate, or feeling
foggy-headed. If your child wakes up with any signs of low
blood sugar, test the blood sugar right away. Also think
about what was different the previous day (extra exercise,
extra insulin, less food, etc.). This will help you learn
how to prevent a similar occurrence in the future. Note
insulin reactions in your record book.
What is the treatment?
Insulin reactions come quickly and should be treated at once
by your child, parent, friend, or teacher. The general rule
is to give sugar in some form as fast as possible.
Mild reaction
If the reaction is mild, take a blood sugar test first.
- If the test result is below 60 mg/dl (3.2 mmol/L), give
your child a glass of milk or a small glass of juice (4
oz). Wait 10 minutes for the liquid sugar to be absorbed
and then give your child solid food (crackers, sandwich,
fresh fruit, etc.).
- If the blood sugar is above 60 mg/dl (3.2 mmol/L), just
give your child solid food such as fruit or crackers.
Sometimes your child will have a "false" reaction when
his blood sugar level takes a sudden drop, but does not
drop below 60 mg/dl.
Your child should rest at least 10 minutes after eating and
repeat the blood sugar test to make sure it is above 70
mg/dl before returning to normal activity.
Moderate Reaction
- Give Insta-Glucose or any source of simple sugar, such as
soda (nondiet) or juice. You can put one-half of the tube
of the Insta-Glucose between your child's cheeks and gums
and tell your child to swallow.
- Do a blood sugar level test as soon as it is possible.
Wait to give solid food until the blood sugar has risen
above 60 mg/dl (3.2 mmol/L).
Severe Reaction (loss of consciousness, seizure)
- Give your child a glucagon injection. You should always
have glucagon on hand in case of an emergency.
- Take a blood sugar test as soon as possible. If your
child does not improve after 10 minutes, give your child
a second dose. Call 911 if your child is not responding
to the glucagon or if your child is having trouble
breathing.
- Before giving the next insulin injection, call your
diabetes care provider to see if the insulin dose needs
to be changed.
Gradually, your child will become familiar with the types of
reactions that occur. You and your child will learn how
severe the reactions tend to be, when they are most likely
to occur, and how best to treat them.
Delayed hypoglycemia
Delayed hypoglycemia means your child has low blood sugar
several hours after exercising. It may occur 3 to 4 hours or
up to 12 hours after exercise. This can sometimes cause an
insulin reaction in the middle of the night.
To prevent delayed hypoglycemia:
- Lower the insulin dose, especially the long-acting
insulin, after heavy exercise even though the blood sugar
may be high.
- Eat extra carbohydrates at bedtime (even with high blood
sugar).
How can I help prevent low blood sugar?
You can help prevent hypoglycemia by following these
guidelines:
- Keep the blood sugar in the normal range. Check your
child's blood sugar level regularly and whenever your
child has any of the symptoms of hypoglycemia. Know when
to check your child's blood sugar and when to call for
help.
- Know what causes hypoglycemia.
- Your child should carry sugar to eat if the blood sugar
gets too low. Sugar packets kept in pockets of pants,
sewn into gym shorts, or kept in jogger wallets on your
child's shoe are good for emergencies.
- Ask a friend, coworker, school nurse, or family members
to know how to give an injection of glucagon.
- Do not let your child skip meals or eat partial meals.
- Have your child eat snacks before heavy physical exercise
and at the time of day when there have been previous
reactions.
- Check your child's blood sugar more often when your child
is exercising more or eating less, or when your child has
been sick.
- When your child is going to do all-day exercise such as
hiking or skiing, reduce the insulin dose, take extra
blood sugar tests, and have your child eat extra snacks.
- Be careful to give shots of insulin after a shower or
bath and not before.
- Recheck the blood sugar after 20 to 30 minutes to make
sure the blood sugar level goes back up when a low occurs
(especially at bedtime or during the night).
- Check with your health care provider if changing your
child's type of insulin may help. Using Lantus insulin
has helped keep many children from having bad lows during
the night.
When should I call my health care provider?
- If an occasional mild reaction occurs, talk to your
health care provider about it at clinic visits.
- If more than one mild insulin reaction occurs in a short
period of time, call the diabetes care provider to adjust
the dosage of insulin. It is usually possible to call
during office hours.
- If a severe reaction occurs, call your provider before
giving the next regularly scheduled insulin shot.
Abstracted from the book, "Understanding Diabetes," 10th Edition, by H. Peter Chase, MD (available by calling 1-800-695-2873).
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.