1)If you used a finger prick then you are actually using different blood. (venous v capilliary) There is a difference between glucose levels in these two 'types' of blood with venous blood having a lower concentration of glucose. The difference is not large at fasting but it is there . (There is a much larger difference after a meal)
2) All meters vary both in how consistent they are and how accurate they are. You get to know if a particular meter constantly throws up inconsistent readings (though I suspect that's not so easy to notice if you only test once a day) The legal requirements for meters actually allow for a very wide margin of error.http://www.diabetes.co.uk/blood-glucose-meters/blood-glucose-meter-accuracy.html, most of the well known makes actually do better than the legal requirements when tested
3) We are all human and the way we do the test can influence the results; so for example pressure (squeezing) can alter the blood sampled and therefore the result.
I went to this poor GP who I'm sure thought that I was totally crazy telling him I thought I had diabetes. I couldn't explain very well in French and I was 52 and (by then) very thin. He sent me away with a blood test form telling me to come back if the results were over 1.26g/l (ie 7mmol/l) . I don't think he expected to see me back. Within 2 hours of the test, the lab had faxed him , he called me in and sent me straight to hospital.@phoenix, I was diagnosed of the urine strips . It was so high, they didn't need an hba1c...
Squeezing local to the site introduces interstitial fluid into the blood on the strip test. This can be higher or lower than the blood level, depending on timing and the direction your glucose is moving.
Measuring glucose levels is not an exact science and although we like to think of it that way, we really shouldn't.
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