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Can you have symptoms of hypoglycemia and not be a diabetic?

14 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    Yes anyone's blood sugars can drop even if they are not Diabetic. My sugar drops sometimes and not even an asprin will help only a good meal will help.

  • 5 years ago

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    5 years ago

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  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    Patients do occasionally have episodes of hypoglycemia. A glucose tolerance test would tell you. The pancreas over reacts to a high carbohydrate meal and secretes too much insulin. A low carbohydrate diet works wonders after a diagnosis. I don't understand the answer to see a hematologist at all. An endocrinologist I could see.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    Absolutely. I think pretty much everyone has been hypoglycemic before. Basically, your brain needs glucose in order to function properly (glucose is brain fuel). If you haven't eaten in awhile, your blood sugar level drops. When your sugar level drops, your brain doesn't get enough glucose. The results are all the wonderful symptoms that we collectively call "hypoglycemia" (dizziness, etc).

  • emtd65
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    YES!! I am one of those people and have had this for many years. You do not have to be diabetic for this. My 14 year old daughter has the same problem. We both control it with diet and test our glucose levels. Too many people are convinced you have to have diabetes for this to be - not true. A diabetic can experience this when they have skipped a meal and are on insulin or their levels go a bit crazy when their body changes and need to adjust their dose of insulin.

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    5 years ago

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  • 1 decade ago

    Anybody will experience it if they don't eat and let their blood sugar fall. Low blood sugar is not a sign of diabetes...high blood sugar is. Because we have to use drugs to bring down a diabetics blood sugar, their blood sugars can be too low. If they don't eat, yet still have taken thier meds....if they have exercised more than usual....if the medication is too strong....this will cause hypoglycemic attacks for them.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    Hypoglycemia, LOW blood sugar, is the opposite of diabetes, which is hyperglycemia, or HIGH blood sugar. They may be associated, i.e. after insulin therapy, blood sugar may drop from too high to too low. Hypo- means 'low', hyper- = 'high'.

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