....Does running around driving to the doctor's raise BG?
I think the protocol for comparing a lab test to your personal meter results is to get a reading from your personal meter at the same time as when you get the lab blood sample taken.
Going to the doctor could raise your stress level, which could raise your blood glucose level.
Also, is it possible the lab numbers are HbA1c results?
Might do. Depends how often you shouted at the idiot on the bike in front of you who didn't indicate and whether you got stressed because your doctor's electronic sign in system failed to recognise you (again).
Your meter is working as well as one can expect. A 0.6 variance is well within reasonable expectations given a couple of hours gap, and stable conditions i.e. no meals or marathons.
Whether it is accurate is another question.
You don't say whether the 7.3 was your latest A1C (no comparison), another prick test (who says their's is better than yours?), or vein sample in an analyzer.
The simple answer is probably not.
Different meters use slightly different methods to get a result. Those methods seem to suit some people better than others. I know a Trividia consistently gives me results 20% below anything else, but it is not the case with a colleague, for whom the errant one is my Tee2 at 20% above. We both sort of agree with a Contour Next or an Abbott Jazz (borrowed from my friendly chemist).
If your lab result was hb1ac it’s an average over approximately 3mths and can only really be compared to another hb1ac.
Your readings were at that one specific point in time. They probably don’t catch every high, any liver dumps or any dawn phenomenon that push an average up. Rigorously testing every day throughout the day and seeing what your meter gives as an average might be closer. Personally i look for a downward trend in my fingerpricks overall and also to test new foods.
If it was a finger prick instant test whose to say which meter is more accurate. Even if it was a fasting glucose test it’s still just a point in time so see above.
Ah. I see the confusion!My A1C was 6.1. It was a blood test with blood drawn from my arm.
I just find it odd that I self-tested at 5.4, had the lab test at 7.3, then self-tested an hour later at 4.8. I've been consistently in the 4-5 range for the past few weeks.
My last hb1ac was 44 which I think is about 6.2%.
I rarely see 4 and even 5 isn’t the most frequent. I’m still thinking you are missing some higher numbers which is why hb1ac and your daily readings don’t match up.
As for why your daily readings on the day of the lab test and their test seem at odds I’m a little lost other than natural variance. Timing of tests. Going up on the way to dr, fallen by the time you got home maybe.
Didn’t realise anywhere used mmol for glucose and % for hb1ac. Isn’t that like mixing imperial and metric ?
Ah. I see the confusion!
It all comes from banding around numbers interchangably and without explaining what they are. Particularly A1C results which are expressed in several different and unrelated ways!
An A1C response of 6.1% (or 43M/Mol) equates to an average blood sugar of about 7.2mol/l over the last 3 months.
Apart from the units (your meter also supplies its results in mol/l), this result has nothing to do with your instant readings on the day. They could be correct at the time.
Most meters have a function to see the average of the readings over the last 7/14/30/60/90 days. The last 90 days is the one you should check.
If that shows as 7.3ish then I'd suggest it is a pretty fair reflection.
If it is significantly different, either, you are regularly missing something, or the meter is being a bit optimistic and you need to mentally add a couple of points to the answers.
That all said as your hb1ac equates to an average of 7.2mmol and you’re only seeing 4’s and 5’s it’s either reading pretty low or you’re somehow missing the higher levels on your meter.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?