SaltyPretzel
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Yep, stress, weather, illness, fear, drugs, carbs, protein, bad night sleep, time of day, exercise, ... all affect blood sugar readings. They do not stay exactly the same just because you eat no carbs.I know blood pressure can go up with stress, but I don’t believe glucose would. This was within 15-20 mins, between the draw of the finger and the vein blood draw.
Hi everyone,
I know blood pressure can go up with stress, but I don’t believe glucose would. This was within 15-20 mins, between the draw of the finger and the vein blood draw.
Either it’s a statistical variance within my meter or it’s stress.
I also have super sweaty hands that sweat even when drying them, so I don’t know how much that will impact readings. I always try to dry them as much as humanly possible.
Help! Do I see an endocrinologist? Am I at risk for prediabetes?
You've had a single mildly elevated fasting finger prick test of 123 mg/dl (6.8 mmol/l).Help! Do I see an endocrinologist? Am I at risk for prediabetes?
That's not that much of a difference, I can get this difference if I retest right away on a different finger.what is the error rate for lab readings? 107 was the lab, 97 was my meter.
I know blood pressure can go up with stress, but I don’t believe glucose would. This was within 15-20 mins, between the draw of the finger and the vein blood draw.
You've had a single mildly elevated fasting finger prick test of 123 mg/dl (6.8 mmol/l).
With all your other numbers, both fingerpricks and hba1c being normal over months, I'd expect that single 123 figure was a test error like a dodgy test strip or something on your finger. Or perhaps you had something brewing that day, a cold or such, which can elevate blood glucose.
If you're worried about it, yes, please speak with your doctor about your worries though!
Seeing an endocrinologist for prediabetes or even full blown T2 with a very high hba1c and fasting numbers in the 200's is very unusual.
In the UK there is absolutely no GP who would give you a referral based on your numbers.
Based on what you've shared here I'd guess you're in the "grey zone" where some clinicians would call you prediabetic based on indications of some impaired fasting glucose (the 2 lab tests btw 100 & 125) and others wouldn't (with fine A1C results). What would it change for you if you were diagnosed with prediabetes? Are these things that would be good for you anyway? You don't say anything about your lifestyle, but if you could use a little more exercise or a little more veg/less simple carbs, like many folks these days, it wouldn't hurt to try those things out. Might even help your impaired fasting glucose numbers.
Remember your meter only needs to be +/- 15% accurate.
So a reading of 100mg/dl could actually be 85 or 115.
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