Today, with the incidence of type 2 diabetes rising linearly, people are becoming more and more sensitive to high blood sugar concentrations. As everyone knows, when blood sugar is imbalanced, it is not only high blood sugar that brings harm to people, but also hypoglycemia. Hypoglycemia means that the blood glucose concentration in a person's blood is lower than 2.8mmol/L when fasting. There are many reasons for hypoglycemia. For example, some people may not eat breakfast for a long time, which may lead to hypoglycemia. Others may have irregular meals three times a day. Can cause hypoglycemia.
Due to the high incidence of diabetes, people don’t pay much attention to hypoglycemia. Sometimes they don’t even know anything about hypoglycemia when they already have it. Below are the different symptoms that will appear at different stages of the development of hypoglycemia, and I will share them with you one by one, hoping to attract your friends' attention.
Hazy early stage. The patient has no consciousness disorder and subjectively feels fatigue, sweating, hunger, palpitations, drowsiness, shortness of breath, and smooth hands; hazy stage. The patient's consciousness begins to blur to the stage of turbid consciousness, with slow reaction and slurred speech. He can execute simple commands, such as opening his mouth and sticking out his tongue. He may release his emotions, shout, cry and laugh, be excited and restless or lethargic, silent and move less, etc.; turbidity Expect. The patient's consciousness disorder deepens, the second signal system is suppressed, and he or she responds with a simple answer to various stimuli. Primitive movements such as lip licking, tongue extension, primitive reflexes, increased muscle tension, and facial muscles may appear. Convulsions and body clonus, but pain reflexes exist; coma period. The patient completely loses consciousness, disappears in pain response, has no response to the outside world, has loose muscles all over the body, has reflexes to light and cornea, breathes deeply and slowly, and may have pathological reflexes.
The symptoms of hypoglycemia generally begin to appear in the early stages, and it is also very harmful to human health, especially for the elderly, and is even more threatening than high blood sugar. Therefore, if you find symptoms of hypoglycemia, you must pay attention to the changes in symptoms during these four periods, and strive to provide timely treatment in the early stage of hazyness or even the hazy stage. If the patient enters the turbid stage or coma stage, it is too late to treat the patient, and even after treatment, obvious sequelae will be left.