Untreated hypoglycemia can be dangerous. If you have been diagnosed with diabetes and are experiencing hypoglycemia, your treatment plan may need to be adjusted. If you have symptoms of hypoglycemia and have never been diagnosed with diabetes, your healthcare provider will need to find the cause.

This article covers how hypoglycemia is diagnosed and how you can check for hypoglycemia at home if you have diabetes. It also explains what tests healthcare providers order for people who have never received a diabetes diagnosis.

Self-Checks/At-Home Testing

If you’re a person with diabetes, especially when you’re newly diagnosed and beginning treatment, you will likely encounter episodes of hypoglycemia on occasion.

In fact, it’s not uncommon for people with diabetes to experience hypoglycemia once or twice per week. This may even happen when they are managing their blood sugar closely.

Check your blood sugar with a blood glucose meter if you begin to experience any of the following symptoms of hypoglycemia:

Shakiness Irritability Nausea Confusion Tachycardia (rapid heart rate) Polyphagia (intense hunger)

Labs and Tests

If you do not have diabetes, schedule a visit with your healthcare provider if you keep having symptoms of hypoglycemia. Your healthcare provider will do a physical exam, medical history, and ask you questions about your symptoms.

Blood Tests

Your healthcare provider will need to see if your blood glucose level is low when you’re having symptoms.

If you have symptoms of hypoglycemia after you eat, your healthcare provider may have you come back after a meal to check your blood glucose.

You may also need to have your blood drawn and sent to the lab to analyze your insulin levels and/or other substances in your blood.

If you do have hypoglycemia, the cause can be as simple as a medication you’re taking that can lead to low blood sugar. Medications that can cause hypoglycemia include:

The antibiotic Bactrim (sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim) Beta blockers Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) Haldol (haloperidol)

Hypoglycemia can sometimes occur after an alcohol binge, too. If it’s not due to medications or alcohol, your healthcare provider may do additional testing to find out what the underlying cause is. Other possible causes include a hormonal deficiency or an illness like kidney disease or hepatitis.

Differential Diagnoses

If you don’t have diabetes and you have symptoms of hypoglycemia yet your blood sugar levels are normal, there’s something else going on. In fact, there’s a long list of conditions that your symptoms could be attributed to.

The most common non-diabetes causes include:

Liver, kidney, or cardiac disease Malnutrition Hormonal deficiencies Medication side effects A metabolic disorder like hyperthyroidism A complication of bariatric surgery

Hypoglycemia in a non-diabetic person can occur as a result of an infection like pneumonia, or the body’s extreme immune response to infection (sepsis).

That said, having diabetes also increases your risk of developing infections and being hospitalized for them. If you have diabetes and are experiencing severe hypoglycemia, your healthcare provider may still evaluate you for infection or another underlying cause that needs to be treated.

Your healthcare provider may do additional testing to look for the cause of your symptoms depending on what they are and your family and medical history.

Hypoglycemia Unawareness

If you have diabetes and your blood glucose levels are too low, but you notice few or no symptoms, it is probably due to hypoglycemia unawareness.

When you have repeated episodes of hypoglycemia, you can stop showing symptoms. In this case, hypoglycemia commonly happens at night when you’re unaware that your glucose levels have dropped.

If you are diagnosed with diabetes, beginning a treatment plan soon after your diagnosis can be beneficial, depending on your needs and preferences. Your healthcare provider will work with you to form a plan, which may include:

Starting continuous glucose monitoring Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion And/or automated insulin delivery

A continuous glucose monitor can be helpful in detecting hypoglycemia, especially at night, because it alerts you when your levels get too high or too low.

Your healthcare provider will work with you to get your levels under control so this stops happening. Even two to three weeks of avoiding hypoglycemia can restore your body’s awareness.

Summary

Hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) is common in people with diabetes. If you have previously been diagnosed with diabetes and keep having hypoglycemia symptoms, your healthcare provider may need to adjust your treatment plan or evaluate you for another underlying cause.

If you have never been given a diabetes diagnosis and are having symptoms of hypoglycemia, you should still be evaluated. There is a chance your provider will find that you have diabetes, but other conditions like hyperthyroidism or even a medication you are taking could also be the cause.

A Word From Verywell

Blood sugar varies throughout the day due to a number of reasons, from what and when you eat to your physical activities and even stress. But if you feel that you are on a hypoglycemia rollercoaster or that you are frequently having hypoglycemia symptoms, then something needs to be done. Being newly diagnosed with diabetes can be frightening, but the sooner you are diagnosed, the sooner you can begin managing your glucose and get back to the things you enjoy.

Pre-diabetesStomach surgery complicationsA rare enzyme deficiencyMedication side effectExcess alcohol consumptionLiver, heart, or kidney diseaseHormone imbalanceTumors that produce insulin or similar hormones