Your doctor may need to adjust your anti-diabetic medication or diet.
People who are taking insulin or oral anti-diabetic medications may experience hypoglycemia at night that is accompanied by sweating.
This symptom is characteristically found in diabetics, often as one of the initial symptoms, and in those who fail to take their anti-diabetic medications or whose dosages have become inadequate.
When diabetes is the cause, physicians typically recommend an anti-diabetic medication as treatment.
Intentional weight loss and dose reductions of anti-diabetic medications - a retrospective cohort study.
Your anti-diabetic medication or diet may need to be adjusted.
There are several classes of anti-diabetic medications available.
Low blood sugar may occur if this drug is prescribed with other anti-diabetic medications (such as insulin or a sulfonylurea).
Pioglitazone is used either alone or in combination with other anti-diabetic medications (such as metformin or a sulfonylurea such as glyburide).
Low blood sugar may occur if this drug is prescribed with other anti-diabetic medications.