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How does that work? Do you mean the blood drips down the strip and into the meter?Too many horizontal readings allows the blood to contaminate the port where the strip meets the meter
How does that work? Do you mean the blood drips down the strip and into the meter?
I use the Caresense Dual, and there is no way that could happen on my strips. What may have happened is in handling the strip before insertion, or re-inserting a used strip that had blood on the contacts. My strips do suck blood up, and it is visible in the window. Even a large drop of blood there does not fill the window and it seems to self limit the amount it needs to get from capillary action. I suspect any contamination of that port is coming from elsewhere. Maybe fishing around in the pot for a second strip to use for a repeat measurement gets sweat or blood onto the contact area.I think so. The strip sort of sucks the blood up and if the strip is horizontal instead of vertical the blood can contaminate the port. Or so I was told by the rep, who was most insistent that I keep the meter vertical while applying the drop. (And to be fair, if you actually bother to look at the visual quick start guide they have two images with a tick and a cross, the first showing the strip vertical as you touch your finger, the second horizontal.)
And given that this is the second meter I've done this to in 4 years, I am definitely guilty of meter abuse. (It's just that when you are testing your blood while hypo in the middle of the night it's easy to fall into bad habits.) But now I know without doubt that it eventually wrecks the meter.
I use the Caresense Dual, and there is no way that could happen on my strips. What may have happened is in handling the strip before insertion, or re-inserting a used strip that had blood on the contacts. My strips do suck blood up, and it is visible in the window. Even a large drop of blood there does not fill the window and it seems to self limit the amount it needs to get from capillary action. I suspect any contamination of that port is coming from elsewhere. Maybe fishing around in the pot for a second strip to use for a repeat measurement gets sweat or blood onto the contact area.
As an electonics engineer, it was not uncommon for people handling contact areas to transfer contaminants onto the contacts which lead to poor conductivity. We used to have signs around the workshop warning of this Nicht fingerpoken!
Certainly, my Dual will not draw blood when the strip is horizontally presented, and it does need a vertical approach, which is different from the other meters I use.
The other possibility I see could occur is that sometimes I get a misread when the strip is loose in the port. Maybe some fluff or debris has slipped in and is keeping the strips from being fully inserted? Try blowing into the port, or use the garage airline next time you check tyre presures (but clean your fingers first since oil is not a good conductor either) or a bicycle pump.
I am happy to confirm my strips are genuine Caresense Pro strips supplied on scrip from a pharmacy. I note that the strips in the pot are pointy-end down, so yes, a rummage to find a second strip would tend to involve human/machine contact at the connector end.Thanks, that actually makes more sense than the rep's explanation, because I do often take a second strip out of the tub and my fingers would contaminate the port end of the strip. I guess it still means that I'm mistreating my meter, just in a slightly different way. But the rep was really obsessed with me keeping the strip vertical, and honestly the capillary action seems to work fine when the strip is horizontal... Just wondering if we could have slightly different brands of caresens dual , though you'd think they'd change the name if the meter was different. You use caresens pro blood testing strips?
What was it that prompted you to adopt that procedure? Just curious.First thing I do after opening a pot of strips is tip them out and reverse them so the pointy bit is at the top. To get them out I tip the pot and slide one out rather than putting my fingers into the crowd of strips. I can't remember having a test fail.
To get the contacts away from my fingers was my first thought, but then I found that for some reason the strips seem to slide out in fewer numbers when point first rather than arriving all at once when stored blunt end first.What was it that prompted you to adopt that procedure? Just curious.
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