A blood glucose of 32.6 mmol/L in a diabetic or normal person is an extremely high risk blood glucose phenomenon regardless of the cause.
Patients can experience a range of symptoms of hypoxia and ischemia in the brain and heart due to high blood glucose, such as dizziness, weakness, drowsiness, irritability, palpitations, chest tightness, and thirst. Patients will also have high-risk symptoms such as loss of appetite, nausea and vomiting, impaired consciousness and even coma shock.
If blood glucose of 32.6 is not effectively controlled, excessive heart and brain damage such as acute cerebral hemorrhage, acute cerebral infarction, acute myocardial infarction and other critical complications can occur in a short period of time due to high blood glucose concentration in the patient’s body, which may cause harm such as disability or death. In addition, severe coma and shock may occur due to diabetic ketoacidosis, which may also endanger the patient’s life. The high blood sugar will not only endanger the health and life safety of the patients themselves, but also the economic level and stability of the family because of the high cost of hospitalization and rescue of the patients.