Index
High blood sugar levels are caused by type 2 diabetes or diabetes mellitus.
Hypoglycin uses
It is a medicine used to treat high levels of sugar in the blood, lowering them to transform the nutrients in food properly and converting them into the energy that the body needs to function.
One of the significant problems of this type of condition is that the insulin produced by the pancreas cannot introduce sugar into the body’s cells, where they work correctly.
Hypoglucin can be used with other antidiabetics or with insulin for best results.
Management
A specialist doctor should prescribe this drug after determining that the patient needs it to treat type 2 diabetes.
For the treatment to be as effective as possible, the dosage should be proportional to the food consumed by the patient and the daily exercise routine that the patient must perform.
Under no circumstances can the affected person change the diet, the dose, or the recommended exercises without previously notifying the treating doctor because this can affect the balance or balance of blood sugar levels.
Hypoglucin cannot be prescribed for insulin-dependent patients who have type 1 diabetes. Their condition will only improve or be controlled with insulin injection because their pancreas does not produce enough.
This medicine should be prescribed for obese diabetics of mature age or for young diabetics whose diet and exercise as an alternative to control blood sugar levels are not effective enough.
Hypoglucin treatment consists of ingesting the dose once a day, preferably with a nightly meal or as directed by the specialist doctor, at the same time every day.
This medicine should not be crushed, chopped, or chewed before use because part of its components may be lost in the process, which reduces the effectiveness of the treatment.
If the patient misses a dose, he should take it as soon as possible, avoiding ingesting it simultaneously with the next.
Hypoglucin side effects
This drug does not usually generate severe side effects. However, the patient may present the following symptoms at the time of starting treatment:
- Dizziness.
- Weightloss.
- Decreased appetite.
- Hair loss.
- Sickness.
- Upset stomach or diarrhea.
Hypoglucin can rarely cause severe allergic reactions. However, the patient should contact their doctor if they present the following symptoms:
- Inflammation of the face, lips, tongue, and throat.
- Redness of the cheekbones at the beginning.
- Skin rash or rash.
- Itching in the extremities of the body.
- Elevated body temperature
The patient should immediately contact the treating physician if the following symptoms occur:
- Sudden dizziness or disorientation.
- Excessive sweating
- Involuntary movements of the body limbs.
- Chronic anxiety
- Elevated body temperature
- Nausea and vomiting
- Cardiac arrhythmia.
- Headache.
- Upset stomach or diarrhea.
- Bleeding from the nose, mouth, urine, or stool.
- Fainting.
- Chronic drowsiness or tiredness.
Caution
Pregnant women should not ingest Hypoglucin unless strictly necessary and recommended by their doctor, as this could be detrimental to the normal development of the unborn.
It is unknown if this drug can pass into breast milk, so the patient should tell her doctor if she is breastfeeding to determine whether or not it is appropriate to use it.
It is essential that patients carefully monitor their blood sugar levels to evaluate the dosage. This drug can excessively lower the body’s sugar, which can also harm the patient’s health.
Seniors are more prone to side effects, so it is recommended that they keep track of this and all their medications.
Hypoglycin should not be mixed with alcoholic beverages, which could unbalance stable blood sugar levels.
Hypoglucin Storage
This medicine must be kept at room temperature; it cannot be kept in constant contact with sunlight, humidity, or heat. It is not necessary to keep it refrigerated.