lizdeluz said:
Can someone explain the % figure and the mmol figure?
Your blood contains a huge number of haemoglobin molecules. You can think of each of these as a little bucket that carries a small bubble of oxygen around your body. Sometimes sugar "sticks" to these buckets. The more sugar in your blood, the more often this happens. The % figure counts what percentage of the buckets have a glucose molecule stuck to them. For instance if your HbA1c is 8%, that means 8% of the haemoglobin molecules in your blood have glucose attached to them. Since these buckets are recycled after about 3 months, your HbA1c tells you roughly how high your sugars have been, on average, over the last 3 months.
The "mmol/mol" figure is quite similar, it counts how many of the haemoglobin molecules (buckets) have glucose attached, per thousand haemoglobin molecules. (A 'mole' is a chemical unit that tells you how many molecules are in something.) However, new and improved testing standards are used to obtain the mmol/mol figure compared to the % figure, which is why the % figure is being phased out, and also why the conversion between % and mmol/mol is not a simple multiplication by 10.
lizdeluz said:
Also, what hb1ac should I be aiming for?
The advice on this varies. The first thing to note is that a non-diabetic's HbA1c will be roughly between 4% and 5.5% (or 20 mmol/mol and 37 mmol/mol), although sources vary. The higher your HbA1c, the greater your risk of diabetic complications.
However, type 1 diabetics face the danger of hypos, and intense diabetes management is stressful and impacts quality of life, so HbA1c values of 6.5% - 7.0% (47-53 mmol/mol) are generally recommended as a good balance between hypo risk, complication risk, and quality of life. If you find it relatively easy to achieve better control, have good hypo awareness, and get few hypos, you may want to aim for a lower HbA1c. If you are having a lot of trouble managing diabetes, or have problems with hypos, you may want to aim for a higher HbA1c.
There's no shame in having a high HbA1c; some people's diabetes is just a nightmare through no fault of their own. But if you want to improve your HbA1c, there's a lot you can learn here and elsewhere that may help! I went on a low-carb diet and took my HbA1c down from about 6.9% to about 5.7%.
