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Diabetic emergencies

The following situations can become 911 medical emergencies and warrant an immediate visit to a hospital emergency department.


• The person with a severe diabetic complication may travel to the emergency department by car or ambulance.
• A companion should go along to speak for the person if the person is not able to speak for himself or herself with the emergency care provider.

• Bring a list of medical problems, medications, allergies to medications, and the blood sugar diary to the emergency department. This information will help the emergency care provider diagnose the problem and treat it appropriately.
The following are signs and symptoms of diabetic complications that warrant emergency care.

• Altered mental status: Lethargy, agitation, forgetfulness, or just strange behavior can be a sign of very low or very high blood sugar levels.

o If the person is a known diabetic, try giving him or her some fruit juice (about 6 ounces) if the person is awake enough to swallow normally without choking. Avoid giving things such as hard candy that can lodge in the throat. Your health care provider can prescribe glucose wafers that melt under the tongue.

o If the person does not wake up and behave normally within about 15 minutes, call 911.

o If the person is not a known diabetic, these symptoms can be signs of stroke, drug intoxication, alcohol intoxication, oxygen starvation, and other serious medical conditions. Call 911 immediately.

• Nausea or vomiting: If you are known to have diabetes and cannot keep food, medications, or fluids down at all, you may have diabetic ketoacidosis, hyperosmolar hyperglycemic nonketotic syndrome, or another complication of diabetes.

o If you have not already taken the latest insulin dose or oral diabetes medicine, do not take it without talking to a medical professional.
o If you already have low blood sugar levels, taking additional insulin or medication will drive your blood sugar level down even further, possibly to dangerous levels.

• Fever of more than 101.5°F: If your primary health care provider cannot see you right away, you should seek emergency care for a high fever if you are diabetic. Note any other symptoms such as cough, painful urination, and abdominal pain or chest pain.

• High blood sugar level: Your blood sugar level is more than 400 mg/dL, and your primary care provider cannot see you right away. Very high blood sugar levels can be a sign of diabetic ketoacidosis or hyperosmolar hyperglycemic nonketotic syndrome, depending on the type of diabetes you have. Both of these conditions can be fatal if not treated promptly.

• Large sores or ulcers on the feet or legs: If you have diabetes, a nonhealing sore larger than 1 inch in diameter can be a sign of a potentially limb-threatening infection.

o Other signs and symptoms that merit immediate care are exposed bone or deep tissue in the wound, large areas of surrounding redness and warmth, swelling, and severe pain in the foot or leg.
o If left untreated, such a sore may ultimately require amputation of the limb.

• Cuts or lacerations: Any cut penetrating all the layers of skin, especially on the legs, is a potential danger to a person with diabetes. Proper wound care, although important to anyone’s recovery, is especially important in diabetes to assure good wound healing.

• Chest pain: If you are diabetic, take very seriously any pain in your chest, particularly in the middle or on the left side, and seek medical attention immediately.

o People with diabetes are more likely than nondiabetic people to have a heart attack, with or without experiencing chest pain.
o Irregular heartbeats and unexplained shortness of breath may also be signs of heart attack.

• Severe abdominal pain: Depending on the location, this can be a sign of heart attack, abdominal aortic aneurysm (widening of the large artery in the abdomen), diabetic ketoacidosis, or interrupted blood flow to the bowels.

o All of these are more common in people with diabetes than in the general population and are potentially life threatening.
o Diabetics also get other common causes of severe abdominal pain such as appendicitis, perforated ulcer, inflammation and infection of the gallbladder, kidney stones, and bowel obstruction.
o Severe pain anywhere in the body is a signal for timely medical attention.

 

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