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Diabetes Complications Discharge Information

What is diabetes?

Having diabetes means that there is too much sugar (glucose) in your blood. When you eat food, your body breaks down much of the food into glucose. Your blood carries the glucose to the cells of your body. An organ in your upper belly called the pancreas makes, and releases a hormone called insulin when it detects glucose. Your body uses insulin to help move the glucose from the bloodstream into the cells for energy. When your body does not make insulin (type 1 diabetes), or has trouble using insulin (type 2 diabetes), glucose cannot get into your cells. The glucose level in your blood goes up. Too much glucose in your blood (also called hyperglycemia or high blood sugar) can cause many problems. Diabetes complications can include:

  • Frequent infections
  • Slow healing wounds
  • Slow emptying of the stomach (gastroparesis)
  • Sexual problems
  • Nerve damage (neuropathy) that causes numbness or tingling in hands or feet
  • Heart disease
  • Stroke
  • Blindness
  • Amputations
  • Kidney failure
  • Coma or death

How can I take care of myself when I go home?

How long it takes to get better depends on how well you respond to treatment, your overall health, and the complications you have. Having diabetes can put you at a higher risk for complications, including heart disease and nerve damage. You are also more likely to get infections, such as a foot infection. Early treatment of complications is important in delaying or avoiding permanent damage to your organs and nerves. The complications of diabetes can be delayed or even prevented by taking care of yourself and maintaining good blood glucose control.

Management

  • Know when and how to test your blood glucose. Keep a log of your blood glucose measurements.
  • Ask your healthcare provider about the symptoms and causes of low blood glucose and what to do when you have low blood glucose. Carry some form of sugar at all times, so you can treat low blood glucose quickly.
  • Your provider will give you a list of your medicines when you leave the hospital.
    • Know your medicines. Know what they look like, how much you should take each time, how often you should take them, and why you take each one.
    • Take your medicines exactly as your provider recommends.
    • Carry a list of your medicines in your wallet or purse. Include any nonprescription medicines and supplements on the list.
    • Talk to your provider before you use any other medicines, including nonprescription medicines.
  • Your provider may prescribe medicines to:
    • Control your blood glucose
    • Treat other medical problems that may have been caused by or made worse by diabetes
    • Treat pain
    • Treat or prevent an infection
    • Treat or prevent side effects, such as nausea or constipation, from other treatments
  • Your provider may recommend other types of therapy to help relieve pain, other symptoms, or side effects of treatment.
  • You may need physical therapy treatments if you have an infection or have had surgery. Physical therapy may include exercises for weak muscles, and use of splints or special shoes.

Appointments

  • Follow your healthcare provider's recommendations for follow-up visits and routine tests.
  • Talk to your provider about the following tests and how often you need to have them:
    • Regular hemoglobin A1C testing to check your average blood glucose control over the past 3 months. This is the best way to see if you are keeping your diabetes under control. Hemoglobin A1C is also known as HbA1C and A1C.
    • Regular blood pressure and cholesterol screenings. Maintaining good control of your blood pressure and cholesterol may help prevent heart attacks and strokes.
    • An eye exam by an eye doctor. Your eye care provider may use eye drops to dilate your pupils. The eye drops open up the pupils so that the provider can see the back of your eye. Women with diabetes who become pregnant should have their eyes checked each trimester because diabetic eye problems can worsen quickly during pregnancy.
    • A foot exam by a healthcare provider to check for foot problems.
    • Urine and blood tests to check how well your kidneys are working.

Talk with your provider about any questions or concerns you have.

Diet, Physical Activity, and Other Lifestyle Changes

  • Follow the treatment plan your healthcare provider prescribes.
  • Learn about diabetes and its complications so you can make the correct decisions to control your blood glucose levels. Talk to your healthcare provider about how you can learn all you need to know. You can also check with the local American Diabetes Association chapter, hospital, or health department about classes in your area or diabetes educators who can help you.
  • You may need to make changes in some of the foods you eat. Ask your provider about the benefits of talking to a dietician to learn what you need in a healthy diet.
  • Ask your healthcare provider if there are foods or medicines you should avoid.
  • Drink enough fluids to keep your urine light yellow in color, unless you are told to limit fluids.
  • Limit the amount of alcohol you drink. It can cause low blood glucose as well as worsen nervous system problems caused by diabetes.
  • Lose weight if you need to and keep a healthy weight.
  • Do physical activity as your provider recommends.
  • When you increase your activity, check your blood glucose more often. If you take insulin, you may need to eat more or decrease the amount you are taking, according to your healthcare providers instructions. This will help prevent low blood glucose.
  • Follow activity restrictions, such as not driving or operating machinery, as recommended by your healthcare provider or pharmacist, especially if you are taking pain medicines.
  • Do not smoke. Smoking can cause poor blood circulation and reduce healing.
  • Be prepared for illness by knowing what to do when you get sick. Diabetes is harder to control when you are sick. Blood glucose can get very high during an illness and become a medical emergency. Your healthcare provider will work with you to develop a sick-day plan just for you.
  • It is important to try to prevent infection. People who have diabetes are at risk for infection. If you are diabetic and have an infection, your blood glucose often rises above your usual levels.
  • Learn how to do proper skin and foot care every day.
    • Check your feet and lower legs for red skin areas and open sores.
    • Wear comfortable, well-fitting shoes to help prevent foot injury.
    • Break in new shoes gradually.
    • Ask your provider about how to trim your toenails properly.
  • Carry an ID card or medical alert jewelry that says you have diabetes, in case of an emergency.
  • It's also good for your family to learn about diabetes. Make sure your family members know what to do if your blood glucose is too high or too low.
  • Find ways to make your life less stressful.
  • Having diabetes or complications of diabetes can be scary or depressing. You may wish to talk with a therapist about your feelings.

Call emergency medical services or 911 if you have new or worsening:

  • Fainting
  • Seizures
  • Very low or very high blood glucose that you cannot control with your usual treatments

If you have any of these symptoms, do not drive yourself.

Call your healthcare provider if you have new or worsening:

  • Increased urination or trouble emptying your bladder
  • Increased thirst and dry mouth
  • Increased appetite or loss of appetite
  • Fast or irregular heartbeat
  • Weight loss more than your healthcare provider recommends
  • Tiredness
  • Fruity odor to breath
  • Change in vision, such as double vision, blurred vision, or trouble seeing out of one or both eyes
  • Floaters, which are black spots or cobweb-like shapes in your vision
  • Numbness in your feet or hands
  • Infection that does not go away or frequent infections
  • Signs of infection around your surgical wound if you had surgery. These include:
    • The area around your wound is more red or painful
    • The wound area is very warm to touch
    • You have blood, pus, or other fluid coming from your wound area
    • You have a fever higher than 101.5° F (38.6° C)
    • You have chills or muscle aches
Developed by RelayHealth.
Acute Care Advisor 2016.4 published by RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2016-02-12
Last reviewed: 2016-02-12
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2016 RelayHealth, a division of McKesson Technologies Inc. All rights reserved.
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