
Living with diabetes means constantly watching your blood sugar, food, and lifestyle. However, one hidden factor that often goes unnoticed is stress. Whether it’s emotional stress from work and relationships or physical stress from illness and lack of rest, it can throw your blood sugar off balance and make diabetes management harder.
So, we took the matter into our own hands and reached out to our expert, Dr Pooja Pillai,Consultant– Physician at Aster CMI Hospital, Bengaluru, who explained to us how stress directly affects diabetes and provided tips to manage it. Here is everything she shared with us.
How Stress Impacts Blood Sugar
When we’re stressed, our body enters fight-or-flight mode. This triggers the release of hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, which raise blood sugar levels to provide quick energy. For someone with diabetes, this natural response becomes problematic because of the following reasons:
- Insulin resistance increases, making it harder for cells to absorb glucose.
- Blood sugar spikes unexpectedly, even without food triggers.
- It affects both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, making management more challenging.
Also Read: What Happens When You Start Your Day With An Orange Juice? Here’s What Expert Says
Impact of Emotional Stress and Physical Stress on Diabetics
Both emotions and physical stress affect diabetes differently. Here is how Dr Pillai explained it:
1. Emotional stress
Work pressure, financial worries, conflicts, or anxiety can cause prolonged cortisol secretion. This keeps blood sugar elevated longer and may lead to increased cravings, emotional eating, or skipped routines.
2. Physical stress
Illness, injury, lack of sleep, or surgery can also spike blood sugar. Your body releases stress hormones to cope, reducing insulin sensitivity.
The Cycle of Stress and Diabetes
Additionally, Dr Pillai noted that stress doesn’t just raise blood sugar, it also:
- Disrupts healthy eating habits, leading to overeating or poor food choices.
- Reduces motivation to exercise, affecting insulin sensitivity.
- Impacts sleep, which further increases insulin resistance.
- Triggers anxiety or depression, which worsen diabetes control.
“Unmanaged stress may also lead to hypertension, weight gain, and inflammation, increasing the risk of diabetic complications like neuropathy, kidney disease, and heart problems,” she added.
Also Read: Are Potatoes Really Bad for Type 2 Diabetes? Here’s What You Need To Know
Tips to Reduce Stress and Improve Blood Sugar Control
Here are science-backed, expert-approved ways to manage both stress and diabetes better:
1. Move Your Body Regularly
Physical activity helps reduce cortisol and improves insulin sensitivity. You don’t need intense workouts, even 20 to 30 minutes of walking, yoga, or stretching daily can calm your mind and stabilize glucose.
2. Practice Deep Breathing and Mindfulness
Slow breathing, guided meditation, or simply taking a few minutes to pause can lower stress hormones and improve mood.
3. Stick to a Healthy Sleep Routine
Aim for seven to eight hours of quality sleep. Poor sleep increases cortisol and makes blood sugar harder to control.
4. Eat at Regular Intervals
Skipping meals or eating irregularly increases stress on the body and triggers glucose spikes. Include high-fiber foods, lean protein, whole grains, and healthy fats.
5. Talk It Out
Sharing how you feel with a friend, support group, or counselor can reduce emotional burden and improve coping skills.
Bottomline
If stress is consistently affecting your blood sugar despite lifestyle changes, talk to your doctor or a mental health expert. They may recommend therapy, stress management programs, or medical support.
FAQ
1. Can stress cause high blood sugar even if I eat well?
Yes. Stress triggers hormones like cortisol that increase blood glucose, regardless of your diet.2. Does stress affect both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes?
Absolutely. Stress can impact insulin sensitivity and glucose control in both types.3. How quickly can stress raise blood sugar?
It can happen within minutes during acute stress, and prolonged stress can lead to consistently elevated levels.
How we keep this article up to date:
We work with experts and keep a close eye on the latest in health and wellness. Whenever there is a new research or helpful information, we update our articles with accurate and useful advice.
Current Version
Oct 13, 2025 15:56 IST
Published By : Tanya Srivastava