Blood sugar is also called glucose. The body uses glucose as energy. Before birth, your baby relied on you for glucose. They didn't make their own. After birth, the umbilical cord is cut. Now your newborn baby depends on feedings for glucose. If the first feeding is delayed longer than 3 to 6 hours, a newborn may develop low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). This is a common problem in the first few days of life. It causes a hypoglycemic reaction.
Signs of a hypoglycemic reaction in newborns include:
- Being irritable, jittery, or shaking (tremors).
- A high-pitched cry.
- Feeding problems.
- Lack of energy (lethargy) or limpness.
- Skin that is blue in color.
- Seizures.
- Very fast breathing or heart rate.
- Low body temperature, and trouble staying at their body temperature.
Hypoglycemia can also be a sign of infection. Your baby may have tests to make sure they don't have an infection. Hypoglycemia occurs most often in babies born too early (prematurely) or at a low birth weight. It may also occur in babies born to women who have diabetes.
Hypoglycemia is diagnosed in newborns by testing blood. Low blood sugar must be carefully watched to prevent a serious problem. Babies who are premature or too ill to feed will be given nutrition by a tube to the stomach or into a vein. If hypoglycemia lasts, the doctor will test for other causes.