Me neither.Hasn't happened to me yet
I think @tim2000s may be on to something. Because my blood glucose doesn't drop. It stays at around 6 (I've been testing A LOT) and then my scans go back up (I don't correct based on a scan)IS Fluid is about 5-10 minutes behind a blood reading.
5th day and you guessed it
Bring On The Drift Apart feature....... :¬( grrr
last few days its been spot on but last night is decided to go to 4.6 mmol and stay there
testing with Blood is 5.9
This tech is expensive and faulty and bad and im in a depressed mood :¬(
Im guessing (clutching at straws really) that after a few days the body has some defence/interference mechanism for the sensor
But who knows dam thing :¬(
I feel your frustration, madasmacus, but expect those would argued to be "in range". I sometimes wonder what's the point of being so diligent when I get different readings from different devices and find it frustrating that, even now, in 2015, there is no particularly accurate bg monitor. It doesn't help that I'm a bit OCD/perfectionist....
I don't know if there is something wrong with my blood (!) but I always get different readings - I once tested on 4 different BG metres at the same time and the readings were all over the place. It's hard to know what to trust. My current sensor (that Abbott is replacing) is reading (on average) 2-3 mmol higher than my metres but this morning after breakfast it went even crazier and was reading between 12 and 14 mmol when my finger pricks were showing 7-8 mol ....makes for some very depressing reading on the reader re: time "in range" and my average levels....
I understand your frustration but all the readings you've mentioned could be within the stated accuracies of the various devices.
Your blood test meters are only required to be accurate to +/- 20% . So in your last post, if the true value is say 6.0 then either of the blood meters could give readings between 4.8 and 7.2 and still be within tolerance. The Libre also falls in this range.
Blood tests are the best bench mark we have, but in truth are not very precise I'm afraid.
Please don't throw the sensor away - it may be a better one.
Otherwise ignore the actual readings & do some experiments.
e.g. when your readings are nice and steady (no insulin/exercise/other food) eat some fast acting carbohydrate e.g. 2 jelly babies. This equates to about 10gms of carbohydrate (Sainsburys version)
Make a note of how long it is before your bg starts to rise.
Make a note of when it stops rising - all other things being equal it should then be steady.
Make a note of how much it rose.
Do a similar experiment with say 1 unit of insulin - as long as you are not too low to start with.
Make a note of when it starts to fall & when it stops.
This is invaluable information for future reference whether you use a CGM or not.
You can change that in the Professional Options menu. It's easy to find the code if you google it.I really need to start logging food, exercise and insulin on my Libre so that everything is in one place rather than also having to spend time inputting data on to my iPhone app. What's really annoying though is that the Libre doesn't seem to allow 0.5 increments for insulin dosages?
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