Low Blood Sugar: Causes, Symptoms, and What You Can Do

When your low blood sugar, a condition where glucose levels in the blood drop below what your body needs to function. Also known as hypoglycemia, it’s not just a diabetic problem—it can happen to anyone, especially if you skip meals, overdo exercise, or take certain medications. It’s not a one-time glitch. Repeated episodes can mess with your focus, energy, and even your heart.

People with diabetes, a chronic condition where the body struggles to manage blood sugar are most at risk, especially if they use insulin, a hormone therapy that lowers blood glucose or other drugs like sulfonylureas. But even if you don’t have diabetes, things like excessive alcohol, certain stomach surgeries, or rare hormone disorders can trigger it. The body reacts fast—sweating, trembling, hunger, dizziness. If ignored, it can lead to confusion, seizures, or loss of consciousness.

What you eat, when you eat it, and what meds you’re on all play a role. Some medications linked to low blood sugar are used for heart conditions, infections, or even mental health. It’s not always obvious until symptoms hit. That’s why recognizing the early signs matters—eating a quick source of sugar can stop it before it gets worse. But if it keeps happening, you need to figure out why. Is it your diet? Your meds? Something else?

This collection of articles doesn’t just explain low blood sugar. It shows you how it connects to real treatments, side effects, and health conditions you might not expect. You’ll find posts on how drugs like ranolazine, canagliflozin, and furosemide can influence glucose levels. You’ll see how thyroid issues, adrenal disorders, and even kidney function tie into your blood sugar balance. There’s no fluff—just clear, practical info from people who’ve been there, or are treating those who have.

Olly Steele 29 October 2025

Managing Hypoglycemia from Diabetes Medications: A Practical Step-by-Step Plan

Learn how to prevent and treat low blood sugar caused by diabetes medications like insulin and sulfonylureas. Get practical steps, emergency tips, and tech tools to stay safe.