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You are here: Home / Neuropathy / What Causes Neuropathy When Blood Sugar Is Normal?

June 25, 2026 by Dr. Michael Veselak, D.C. Leave a Comment

What Causes Neuropathy When Blood Sugar Is Normal?

Neuropathy Is Not Always Caused by Diabetes

One of the most common misconceptions about peripheral neuropathy is that it only occurs in individuals with diabetes.

While diabetes remains a leading cause of nerve damage, many people develop neuropathy despite having normal blood sugar levels.

Patients are often told that their glucose is normal and, therefore, their symptoms should not be related to nerve dysfunction. Yet they continue experiencing:

  • Burning feet
  • Tingling sensations
  • Numbness
  • Balance problems
  • Electric shock sensations
  • Sensitivity to touch
  • Leg weakness

The reality is that neuropathy can have dozens of potential causes.

What Is Peripheral Neuropathy?

Peripheral neuropathy refers to damage or dysfunction affecting the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord.

These nerves are responsible for:

  • Sensation
  • Balance feedback
  • Muscle control
  • Circulation regulation
  • Temperature perception
  • Autonomic nervous system function

When nerves become injured, symptoms can develop gradually or suddenly.

Common Causes of Neuropathy Beyond Diabetes

Vitamin Deficiencies

Certain nutrients are essential for nerve health.

Deficiencies may include:

  • Vitamin B12
  • Folate
  • Vitamin B1
  • Vitamin B6
  • Vitamin D

Even mild deficiencies can affect nerve function over time.

Autoimmune Conditions

The immune system may mistakenly attack nerve tissue.

Examples include:

  • Sjögren’s syndrome
  • Lupus
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Celiac disease
  • Chronic inflammatory neuropathies

In these cases, inflammation may contribute significantly to symptoms.

Prediabetes and Insulin Resistance

Many individuals have “normal” fasting glucose but still experience insulin resistance.

Elevated insulin levels, glucose variability, and metabolic dysfunction can affect small nerve fibers long before diabetes develops.

This is why a comprehensive metabolic evaluation often provides valuable information.

Chronic Inflammation

Inflammatory chemicals can damage nerve tissue and interfere with normal nerve signaling.

Potential contributors include:

  • Obesity
  • Chronic infections
  • Gut dysfunction
  • Autoimmune disease
  • Environmental toxins

Nutritional and Gastrointestinal Disorders

Poor digestion and absorption can contribute to nerve dysfunction.

Conditions frequently associated with neuropathy include:

  • Celiac disease
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO)
  • Chronic gastritis

Medication Side Effects

Several medications have been associated with neuropathy, including:

  • Certain chemotherapy drugs
  • Some antibiotics
  • Statins
  • Long-term acid-blocking medications

Patients should never stop prescribed medications without consulting their healthcare provider.

Mold, Toxins, and Environmental Exposures

Environmental factors are increasingly being investigated as contributors to chronic neurological symptoms.

Potential exposures include:

  • Mold toxins
  • Heavy metals
  • Solvents
  • Pesticides

These factors may increase oxidative stress and inflammation affecting nerve health.

Spinal Stenosis and Nerve Compression

Not all neuropathy originates within the nerves themselves.

Mechanical irritation can produce symptoms similar to peripheral neuropathy.

Examples include:

  • Lumbar spinal stenosis
  • Disc herniations
  • Entrapment neuropathies
  • Peripheral nerve compression

A thorough neurological and orthopedic examination is essential.

Why Balance Problems Often Occur

Many patients assume neuropathy only affects sensation.

However, sensory nerves play a critical role in balance and coordination.

As sensory feedback decreases, the brain receives less accurate information regarding body position.

This can result in:

  • Unsteadiness
  • Falls
  • Difficulty walking in the dark
  • Difficulty standing with eyes closed

Addressing balance dysfunction early is often an important component of treatment.

A Functional Medicine Approach to Neuropathy

Rather than focusing solely on symptom suppression, a functional approach seeks to identify potential contributors to nerve dysfunction.

This may include evaluating:

  • Blood sugar regulation
  • Nutrient deficiencies
  • Inflammatory markers
  • Autoimmune activity
  • Gut health
  • Environmental exposures
  • Hormonal factors
  • Circulatory health

Because neuropathy often develops from multiple factors, successful treatment frequently requires a comprehensive strategy.

Can Nerves Recover?

The answer depends on the underlying cause, severity, and duration of symptoms.

In many cases, improvement is possible when contributing factors are identified and addressed early.

Potential supportive therapies may include:

  • Nutritional optimization
  • Exercise
  • Functional neurology
  • Balance rehabilitation
  • Neurofeedback
  • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy
  • Targeted supplementation
  • Lifestyle modification

The goal is not simply symptom management but creating an environment that supports nerve repair and function.

FAQ

Question: Can you have neuropathy without diabetes?

Answer: Yes. While diabetes is a leading cause of peripheral neuropathy, many people develop nerve symptoms with normal blood sugar. Vitamin deficiencies, autoimmune conditions, insulin resistance without diabetes, chronic inflammation, certain medications, environmental toxin exposure, and spinal nerve compression can all cause neuropathy independent of glucose levels.

Question: What vitamin deficiencies cause peripheral neuropathy?

Answer:  The most common are Vitamin B12, folate, Vitamin B1 (thiamine), Vitamin B6, and Vitamin D. Even mild deficiencies can affect nerve function over time. A comprehensive metabolic evaluation can identify nutrient gaps that standard blood work often misses.

Question: Can prediabetes cause neuropathy with normal fasting glucose?

Answer: Yes. Many individuals have normal fasting glucose but still experience insulin resistance, elevated insulin levels, and glucose variability that can damage small nerve fibers long before diabetes develops. This is one reason a functional medicine workup looks beyond fasting glucose alone.

Question: Can spinal stenosis cause symptoms that feel like peripheral neuropathy?

Answer:  Yes. Mechanical compression from lumbar spinal stenosis, disc herniations, and entrapment neuropathies can produce burning, numbness, tingling, and weakness that mimic peripheral neuropathy. A thorough neurological and orthopedic examination is essential to distinguish the source.

 Question:  Can damaged nerves recover?

Answer: Nerve recovery depends on the underlying cause, severity, and how long symptoms have been present. In many cases improvement is possible when contributing factors are identified and addressed early. Supportive therapies include nutritional optimization, functional neurology, balance rehabilitation, neurofeedback, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, and targeted supplementation.

Question:  Why does Neuropathy cause balance problems?

Answer:  Sensory nerves provide the brain with feedback about body position. As that feedback decreases, the brain receives less accurate information, leading to unsteadiness, falls, difficulty walking in the dark, and difficulty standing with eyes closed. Addressing balance dysfunction early is often an important part of treatment.

Final Thoughts

If you have neuropathy and your blood sugar is normal, do not assume there is no explanation for your symptoms.

Nerve dysfunction can arise from nutritional deficiencies, autoimmune conditions, inflammation, toxin exposure, spinal problems, metabolic dysfunction, and many other factors.

A thorough evaluation may uncover contributors that have been overlooked and provide opportunities for meaningful improvement. The key is to identify the root causes rather than focus solely on the symptoms.

A Comprehensive Evaluation in Camarillo, CA

At our Camarillo clinic, we evaluate peripheral neuropathy from a functional medicine and functional neurology perspective — looking at metabolic, nutritional, autoimmune, inflammatory, structural, and environmental contributors. If you’ve been told there’s no explanation for your symptoms, there often is one.

Schedule a Comprehensive Evaluation · Call (805) 482-0723 · Serving Camarillo, Oxnard, Ventura, Thousand Oaks, and all of Ventura County.

 

Filed Under: Neuropathy

About Dr. Michael Veselak, D.C.

Dr. Michael Veselak, D.C. has been practicing Chiropractic care in Camarillo, California for over 40 years. Throughout his experience, Dr. Veselak has recognized the importance of treating each patient based on their condition rather than their symptoms. In recent years, Dr. Michael Veselak has become a Certified Functional Medicine Practitioner and Board Certified in Integrative Medicine, allowing him to evaluate each patient neurologically and metabolically, as well as from a chiropractic standpoint. In doing so, Dr. Veselak has seen tremendous success in his patients suffering from chronic conditions such as Peripheral Neuropathy, Chronic Pain, Fibromyalgia, Spinal Stenosis, Degenerative Disc Problems, and Thyroid Disorders.

Using state-of-the-art technology, such a Cold Laser, Hako-Med, Spinal Decompression, Vibration Therapy and Brain-based exercises, Dr. Michael Veselak has witnessed profound effects with various chronic conditions. It is his mission to leave no stone unturned in getting to the root cause of your pain, rather than merely treating the symptoms with medications.

If you or someone you know is suffering from a chronic condition, please contact Dr. Michael Veselak at (805) 482-0723.

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