Blood glucose, or blood sugar, levels refer to the amount of simple sugar moving through your body at any given time. Glucose is the main form of energy your body uses, and everything you eat ends up breaking down to glucose for your body to use.
Without a continuous supply of glucose in your blood, your body can't carry out basic functions. Too much glucose (hyperglycemia) or too little glucose (hypoglycemia) can both cause problems.
In this article, you will learn what glucose is, what it does in your body, and why it's essential to manage it.
Why It's Important to Monitor Glucose Levels
What It Is
Glucose is a simple sugar that every living organism uses for energy. Everything you consume contains some form of glucose, including:
- Fructose
- Lactose
- Sucrose
- Starch
Fats and proteins can also be broken down into glucose after they enter the body. This process is called gluconeogenesis. It's the body's way of breaking down whatever you eat into an energy source for the body to use.
Can You Have High Blood Sugar Without Diabetes?
How It Works
Regardless of how you consume glucose, it will enter the bloodstream once it's inside your body. Your blood will deliver glucose to all your tissues, storing any excess in specific areas like the liver and muscle tissue.
Your body needs a specific range of glucose in your blood at all times. Certain parts of the body—like the brain—are particularly sensitive to changes in your blood sugar levels. A drop in blood sugar can quickly impact how you act and think.
Hypoglycemia vs. Hyperglycemia
How Blood Glucose Is Regulated
While the food you choose to eat and how often you choose to eat impact your blood glucose level, two hormones produced in the pancreas—glucagon and insulin—balance blood sugar in your body.
Glucagon regulates blood sugar when your body is in a state of fasting. Without a steady food supply, glucagon helps release a reserved form of glucose, glycogen, stored in the liver and other tissues.
Insulin, on the other hand, helps regulate your real-time blood sugar. This hormone helps glucose enter your cells as an energy source. Without insulin, blood glucose would travel through your blood—possibly accumulating at excessive levels—without reaching the tissues needing it.
What Is the Normal Blood Glucose Range?
- The normal range for fasting blood glucose (blood glucose when you haven't eaten) should be between 70 mg/dL and 100 mg/dL (milligrams per deciliter).
- You are considered prediabetic if your fasting blood glucose is between 100 mg/dL and 125 mg/dL. At this point, you may be able to lower your blood sugar levels with diet and lifestyle changes.
- When your fasting blood sugar levels exceed 126 mg/dL on two or more separate tests, you will likely be diagnosed with diabetes. This may require oral or injected medications and lifestyle changes to keep your blood glucose levels within a healthy range.
Reading an A1c Chart to Monitor Diabetes
When Can Blood Glucose Be a Problem?
Too much or too little glucose in your blood can cause issues. These issues can be brief if you change your diet and activity or can result in a more chronic condition, like diabetes.
What Are Normal Non-Fasting Glucose Levels?
Hyperglycemia
If your body doesn't produce enough insulin, or your body does not respond to insulin (insulin resistance), you can develop hyperglycemia, or high blood sugar. Hyperglycemia can occur when you consume too much sugar at once, but it's more common in conditions affecting insulin regulation, like diabetes.
Some causes of hyperglycemia in people with or without diabetes include:
- Overeating carbohydrates or sugars
- Dehydration
- A sedentary lifestyle
- Certain medications, like steroids
- Some illnesses
- Stress
Hypoglycemia
Hypoglycemia, on the other hand, is a condition that can develop if your blood glucose levels get too low. This can be caused by:
- Not eating enough
- Drinking alcohol on an empty stomach
- Taking certain medications
- Getting more exercise or physical activity than usual
Diabetes
Several diseases or conditions can impact glucose regulation, but diabetes is the most common. More than 11% of Americans have some form of diabetes.
The two primary forms of diabetes are classified based on how they impact blood sugar regulation, as follows:
- Type 1 diabetes is often diagnosed at a young age and is considered an autoimmune disorder. With this kind of diabetes, your body doesn't produce enough insulin because your pancreas works improperly.
- Type 2 diabetes is a form of diabetes that usually develops later in life due to lifestyle and diet choices. Usually, this type of diabetes develops when insulin becomes less effective at moving glucose into your cells, causing it to accumulate in the bloodstream.
Regardless of why blood sugar accumulates in the bloodstream, hyperglycemia can cause dangerous symptoms and long-term complications. High sugar levels in your blood can damage your nerves, kidneys, and other organs. At the same time, glucose cannot enter the cells that need it and essentially starve tissues in your body.
Symptoms of Blood Sugar Imbalances
Symptoms of high blood sugar, or hyperglycemia, include:
- Increased thirst
- Increased urination
- Feeling tired
- Blurry vision
Symptoms of low blood sugar, or hypoglycemia, include:
- Shakiness
- Sweating
- Nervousness
- Anxiety
- Irritability
- Dizziness
- Confusion
Could You Have Undiagnosed Diabetes?
Summary
Blood glucose is the simple sugar that circulates in your blood, delivering energy and nutrition to all of the tissues in your body. Too much or too little blood glucose can cause immediate symptoms and chronic health problems.
A Guide to Carb Counting With Diabetes
A Word From Verywell
Your diet and lifestyle can impact your blood glucose levels, but so can conditions like diabetes. Talk to your healthcare provider about checking your blood glucose levels, especially if you've noticed symptoms of high or low blood sugar or if diabetes runs in your family.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal blood sugar level?
Normal blood sugar levels are between 70 and 100 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL). If you've been diagnosed with diabetes, your healthcare provider will talk to you about goal ranges for your blood sugar and how to maintain them.
Learn MoreWhat to Know About Blood Glucose Levels
How can you reduce your blood sugar levels immediately?
If you have diabetes, you may be prescribed medications like injectable insulin. This replaces or supplements your body's natural insulin to move glucose from your bloodstream into your cells. Watching what you eat and limiting your intake of sugars and carbohydrates can also help control your blood glucose levels.
Learn MoreHow to Prevent Blood Sugar Spikes
What causes low blood sugar in people without diabetes?
People without diabetes may experience low blood sugar if they've gone a long time without eating or if they dramatically increase their activity or exercise levels. Certain medications or alcohol can also lower your blood glucose.
Learn MoreCauses and Risk Factors of Hypoglycemia
9 Sources
Verywell Health uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Hantzidiamantis PJ, Lappin SL. Physiology, glucose. In:StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing; 2022.
Ritter S. Monitoring and maintenance of brain glucose supply: importance of hindbrain catecholamine neurons in this multifaceted task. In: Harris RBS, ed.Appetite and Food Intake: Central Control. 2nd ed. CRC Press/Taylor & Francis; 2017.
Röder PV, Wu B, Liu Y, et al. Pancreatic regulation of glucose homeostasis.Exp Mol Med. 2016;48(3):e219. doi:10.1038/emm.2016.6
American Diabetes Association. The big picture: Checking your blood glucose.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Methods for the national diabetes statistics report.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About type 1 diabetes.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Type 2 diabetes.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Diabetes complications.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Manage blood sugar.
By Rachael Zimlich, BSN, RN
Zimlich is a critical care nurse who has been writing about health care and clinical developments for over 10 years.
See Our Editorial Process
Meet Our Medical Expert Board
Was this page helpful?
Thanks for your feedback!
What is your feedback?