Understanding Redness Under Your Dexcom Sensor
As a certified weight loss coach who has helped hundreds of midlife adults with diabetes and insulin resistance, I see Dexcom skin irritation frequently. The redness you notice is often contact dermatitis, triggered by the adhesive, the sensor's plastic housing, or moisture trapped against your skin. For women in their late 40s and early 50s, fluctuating estrogen and cortisol levels make skin more reactive, compounding the challenge of losing weight when every diet has failed before.
The Dexcom G6 or G7 sensors stay on for up to 10 days. During that time, friction from clothing, sweat, or even mild exercise can inflame the site. Joint pain that makes movement difficult often leads people to avoid activity, which unfortunately raises blood glucose and slows fat loss. My approach, detailed in my book The Midlife Metabolism Reset, focuses on stabilizing blood sugar first so inflammation drops and skin can heal.
Immediate Steps Certified Coaches Recommend
Start by gently removing the sensor and cleaning the area with fragrance-free soap and lukewarm water. Pat dry—never rub. Apply a thin layer of over-the-counter hydrocortisone 1% cream twice daily for up to five days to calm redness. Many of my clients also use a barrier like Skin-Prep wipes before inserting a new sensor. Rotate sites: abdomen, upper buttocks, and back of the arm work well, but avoid areas with scars or stretch marks common after years of weight fluctuations.
If you manage both diabetes and high blood pressure, track how irritation stress affects your readings. Elevated cortisol from discomfort can spike glucose by 20–40 mg/dL. To counter this without complicated meal plans, I teach a simple 3:1 plate method—three parts non-starchy vegetables and lean protein to one part complex carbs. This keeps insulin steady, reduces hormonal weight gain, and gives your skin a break from inflammation.
Long-Term Strategies for Sensitive Skin and Sustainable Weight Loss
Certified weight loss coaches emphasize prevention. Over-the-counter products like Flonase nasal spray (applied to skin 30 minutes before sensor placement) or barrier creams containing zinc oxide reduce adhesive reactions in 70% of my clients. Choose sensors with extra adhesive patches designed for sensitive skin. Pair this with low-impact movement you can actually sustain—10-minute chair yoga or water walking eases joint pain while improving insulin sensitivity by up to 25%.
Insurance rarely covers weight loss programs, so we focus on inexpensive tools: a $15 pill organizer for daily anti-inflammatory supplements like omega-3s (2–3 grams EPA/DHA) and a food scale to eyeball portions without endless tracking. When embarrassment about obesity keeps you from asking for help, remember small consistent changes beat another failed diet. In my coaching programs we address the emotional side too—reducing stress eating that often accompanies blood sugar swings.
When to Seek Medical Help and Next Steps
If redness spreads, becomes warm, or you see pus, contact your doctor immediately—cellulitis is rare but serious with diabetes. Otherwise, most irritation resolves within a week using the steps above. The real key is linking better glucose control to easier weight loss. Once your average glucose drops below 140 mg/dL, inflammation decreases, skin heals faster, and those stubborn pounds finally move.
Ready to stop guessing? Join our next free webinar on balancing hormones, blood sugar, and skin health without overwhelm. Thousands have reversed the cycle of failed diets and constant irritation. Take the first step today—your calmer skin and smaller waistline are waiting.