It is worth mentioning that very few insulin-dependent diabetics collapse with hypoglycaemia without warning.
Getting the balance wrong can lead to hypoglycaemia—a sudden reduction of blood sugar levels, which can affect brain and body co-ordination, sometimes quite badly.
The point is: what is the risk element of an attack of hypoglycaemia?
Seventy-two per cent had a birth weight of >2500 g, 66.7 % had a gestational age of >37 weeks, 30 % presented with respiratory diseases and/or hypoglycaemia.
Hypoglycaemia may be provoked by too high a dose in relation particularly to renal functions, if dietary intake is irregular or the drug is displaced from its carrier protein.
They can cause hypoglycaemia and weight gain.
Persistent insulin release leads to severe hypoglycaemia.
The principal goal of treatment is to prevent acute complications of diabetes, which can affect daily life such as hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia and in the long-term the prevention of complications.