The Libre sensor is an NFC device - it can store internally up to eight hours of readings - so must be polled at least every 8 hours
to show continuous readings.
So, lets say I wanted to carry out a basal test overnight with the Libre....
Will I get a different picture with the Libre than I would simply testing blood before bed and on waking?
Depends on how accurate you find libre also. I would trust dexcom implicitly (rarely more than 1mmol difference) but would need to see how accurate libre is for me personally.
But yes as long as before bed scan and waking scan are 8 hours or less apart you would get a continuous graph rater than two points which are never a straight line between them
But it the line between those points just made up?
No, the sensor does a reading either every minute or every 5 mins (I can't remember which), and that data is stored on the sensor, but it only has enough space for 8 hours worth of data so will start getting overwritten after that - and when it's scanned with the read or phone the reader/phone gets all that data from it.But it the line between those points just made up?
No, the sensor does a reading either every minute or every 5 mins (I can't remember which), and that data is stored on the sensor, but it only has enough space for 8 hours worth of data so will start getting overwritten after that - and when it's scanned with the read or phone the reader/phone gets all that data from it.
Edit: oops, every 15 mins
to access that data, you do a scan.....right?
I’m a little confused. Not by the technology but the availability.
If I wanted to scan with my phone would I just need to buy the sensor? And if so, where can I get them from?
Thank you
£35 in Superdrug, around £45 in Boots, Lloyds, Asda and Tesco pharmacies. You will need to order them as they are not usuallly kept in stock.
Great thank you.
If I use the app, is it just the sensor I will need to buy?
But it the line between those points just made up?
From https://www.nice.org.uk/advice/mib1...e-for-glucose-monitoring-pdf-2285963268047557:
The sensor is a few centimeters in diameter and is designed to stay in place for 14 days. It is applied to the skin, usually on the upper arm. A thin (0.4 mm), flexible and sterile fibre within the sensor is inserted in the skin to a depth of 5 mm; most people
have described this as being painless. The fibre draws interstitial fluid from the muscle into the sensor , where glucose
levels are automatically measured every minute and stored at 15-minute intervals for 8 hours. Glucose levels can be seen at
any time by scanning the reader over the sensor.
So if you choose to scan you will get an reading of that minute, but if you don't scan for 8 hours it will have a reading every 15 minutes stored on the reader. So nothing is made up.
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