Sophie123lou
Newbie
- Messages
- 3
My doctor brought forward my 12 week hba1c blood test to 9 weeks postpartum
38 mmol/mol is at the top end of normal so my guess is that your doctor will want to do another test in due course.
This is a handy graph that shows the distribution of HbA1c scores in a non-diabetic Dutch population. You'll see that the majority of people cluster in the 38-42 region.
The US has history of shifting its definitions - they changed the definition of "obese" overnight in the 1970s IIRC and made it impossible to compare statistics over time.Thanks @KennyA, am beginning to see why the US claim that so many of their population are prediabetic. It looks like the average on that graph is just 38 mmol/mol , which puts @Sophie123lou squarely in the middle.
So the summary is that it’s not healthy to be near the extremities of a “healthy” range, nor is it comforting to be in a normal cohort when that cohort is an unhealthy one.Interesting study. I was surprised to see that a healthy range (as opposed to average described in the study ) is 21-37. Tallies with the US population where it seems on 12% of adults don't have some signs of insulin resistance!
In pregnancy there is a greater blood volume too though so this may mean the hba1c is 'diluted' and would be higher with normal blood volume or that's what my consultant told me when I was last pregnant 15 years ago.
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?