Hypoglycaemia

Overview

A low blood sugar, also called hypoglycaemia or a "hypo", is where the level of sugar (glucose) in your blood drops too low.

It mainly affects people with diabetes, especially if you take insulin.

A low blood sugar can be dangerous if it's not treated promptly, but you can usually treat it easily yourself.

Symptoms of low blood sugar

A low blood sugar causes different symptoms for everybody. You'll learn how it makes you feel if you keep getting it, although your symptoms may change over time.

Early signs of a low blood sugar include:

  • sweating
  • feeling tired
  • dizziness
  • feeling hungry
  • tingling lips
  • feeling shaky or trembling
  • a fast or pounding heartbeat (palpitations)
  • becoming easily irritated, tearful, stroppy or moody
  • turning pale

If a low blood sugar level not treated, you may then get other symptoms, such as:

  • weakness
  • blurred vision
  • difficulty concentrating
  • confusion
  • unusual behaviour, slurred speech or clumsiness (like being drunk)
  • feeling sleepy
  • fits (seizures)
  • collapsing or passing out

A low blood sugar level, a hypo, can also happen while sleeping. This may cause you to wake up during the night or cause headaches, tiredness or damp sheets (from sweat) in the morning.

How to treat low blood sugar yourself

Follow these steps if your blood sugar is less than 4mmol/L or you have hypo symptoms:

  1. Have a sugary drink or snack – like a small glass of fizzy drink (not a diet variety) or fruit juice, 4 to 5 jelly babies, 4 to 6 glucose tablets or 2 tubes of glucose gel.
  2. Test your blood sugar after 10 minutes – if it's improved and you feel better, move on to step 3. If there's little or no change, treat again with a sugary drink or snack and take another reading after 10 to 15 minutes.
  3. You may need to eat your main meal (containing a slow-release carbohydrate) if it's the right time to have it. Or, have a snack that contains a slow-release carbohydrate, such as a slice of bread or toast, a couple of biscuits, or a glass of cows' milk.

You do not usually need to get medical help once you're feeling better if you only have a few hypos. 

But tell your diabetes team if you keep having hypos or if you stop having symptoms when your blood sugar is low.

How to treat someone who's unconscious or very sleepy (drowsy)

Follow these steps:

  1. Put the person in the recovery position and do not put anything in their mouth – so they do not choke.
  2. Call 999 for an ambulance if an injection of glucagon is not available, you do not know how to use it, or the person had alcohol before their hypo.
  3. If an injection of glucagon is available and you know how to use it, give it to them immediately.
  4. If they wake up within 10 minutes of getting the injection and feel better, move on to step 5. If they do not improve within 10 minutes, call 999 for an ambulance.
  5. If they're fully awake and able to eat and drink safely, give them a carbohydrate snack.

They may need to go to hospital if they're being sick (vomiting), or their blood sugar levels drops again.

Tell your diabetes care team if you ever have a severe hypo that caused you to lose consciousness.

How to treat someone who is having a fit (seizure)

Follow these steps if someone has a fit caused by low blood sugar:

  1. Stay with them and stop them hurting themselves – lie them down on something soft and move them away from anything dangerous (like a road or hot radiator).
  2. If an injection of glucagon is available and you know how to use it, give it to them immediately. After they've recovered, give them a carbohydrate snack.
  3. Call 999 for an ambulance if a glucagon injection is not available or you do not know how to use it, if they have not recovered 10 minutes after giving a glucagon injection, or if they had alcohol before their hypo.

Tell your diabetes care team if you ever have a severe hypo that caused you to have a fit.

What causes a low blood sugar level

In people with diabetes, the main causes of low blood sugar are:

  • the effects of medicine – especially taking too much insulin, medicines called sulfonylureas (such as glibenclamide and gliclazide), medicines called glinides (such as repaglinide and nateglinide), or some antiviral medicines to treat hepatitis C
  • skipping or delaying a meal
  • not eating enough carbohydrate foods in your last meal, such as bread, cereals, pasta, potatoes and fruit
  • exercise, especially if it's intense or unplanned
  • drinking alcohol

Sometimes there's no obvious reason why low blood sugar happens.

Very occasionally, it can happen in people who do not have diabetes.

Preventing low blood sugar

If you have diabetes, these tips can help reduce your chances of getting low blood sugar:

  • Check your blood sugar level regularly and be aware of the symptoms of a low blood sugar level so you can treat it quickly.
  • Use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) or flash monitor to see how your blood sugar levels are changing. Ask your diabetes care team about getting a monitor if you do not already have one.
  • Always carry a sugary snack or drink with you, such as glucose tablets, a carton of fruit juice or some sweets. If you have a glucagon injection kit, always keep it with you.
  • Do not skip meals.
  • Be careful when drinking alcohol. Do not drink large amounts, check your blood sugar level regularly, and eat a carbohydrate snack afterwards.
  • Be careful when exercising; eating a carbohydrate snack before exercise can help to reduce the risk of a hypo. If you take some types of diabetes medicine, your doctor may recommend you take a lower dose before or after doing intense exercise.
  • Have a carbohydrate snack, such as toast, if your blood sugar level drops too low while you're asleep (nocturnal hypoglycaemia).

If you keep getting low blood sugar, talk to your diabetes care team about things you can do to help prevent it.

Low blood sugar without diabetes

Low blood sugar is uncommon in people who do not have diabetes.

Possible causes include:

  • your body releasing too much insulin after eating, (called reactive hypoglycaemia or postprandial hypoglycaemia)
  • not eating (fasting) or malnutrition
  • a complication of pregnancy
  • a gastric bypass (a type of weight loss surgery)
  • other medical conditions, such as problems with your hormone levels, pancreas, liver, kidneys, adrenal glands or heart
  • some medicines, including quinine (taken for malaria)

See a GP if you think you keep getting low blood sugar. They can arrange some simple tests to check if your blood sugar level is low and try to find out what's causing it.

A low blood sugar level and driving

You may still be allowed to drive if you have diabetes or you're at risk of a low blood sugar level for another reason, but you'll need to do things to reduce the chance of this happening while you're driving.

You also need to inform the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) and your car insurance company about your condition.

For more information, see:



The information on this page has been adapted by NHS Wales from original content supplied by NHS UK NHS website nhs.uk
Last Updated: 22/06/2023 15:09:11