Abstract
AbstractHypoglycaemia (blood glucose concentration below the normal range) has
been recognised as a complication of insulin treatment from the very first days of
the discovery of insulin, and remains a major concern for people with diabetes,
their families and healthcare professionals today. Acute hypoglycaemia stimulates a
stress response that acts to restore circulating glucose, but plasma glucose
concentrations can still fall too low to sustain normal brain function and cardiac
rhythm. There are long-term consequences of recurrent hypoglycaemia, which are still
not fully understood. This paper reviews our current understanding of the acute and
cumulative consequences of hypoglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetes.
Graphical abstract
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Cited by
97 articles.
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