Archive for the ‘Checking Your Blood Glucose’ Category

DAVID MENDOSA: Meter Accuracy and Precision

Friday, March 21st, 2008

One of the most interesting and important professional journals will publish a head-to-head comparison of major blood glucose meters in its forthcoming April 2008 issue. The article in Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics compares Abbott Diabetes Care’s FreeStyle Flash, Roche’s Accu-Chek Advantage and Accu-Chek Compact Plus, and Bayer HealthCare’s Contour.

The article also includes BD Diabetes Care’s BD Logic meter, which the company no longer makes. But it fails to include perhaps the most accurate meter, the WaveSense KeyNote, made by AgaMatrix, one of the smaller companies in this business. Also omitted are any meters from one of the biggest meter companies, LifeScan.

Not since August 2005, when Consumer Reports reviewed 13 meters, have we had an objective guide to rating the most important yet most subtle distinction between the blood glucose meters that everyone who has diabetes relies on. I summarized the results of that review for Diabetes Health magazine in my November 2005 article, which is now online on my website.

The new Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics review, written by Linda E. Thomas, Pharm.D., of Batavia, New York’s, United Memorial Hospital, and five associates, finds “the Flash to have significantly greater accuracy than each of the other four meters.” All of the meters “demonstrated similar precision.”

The Consumer Reports review found the Compact and Contour to be a bit less accurate than the other meters it tested. But the magazine didn’t find much to distinguish the “consistency” — technically called precision — between two Accu-Chek meters, two FreeStyle meters, the Contour, and the Logic, as well as two from LifeScan.

Thanks to Ron Sebol, who I wrote about years ago for the old “Diabetes Watch” website, for discovering this paper and posting it at his DSM-L (Diabetes Self-Management) mailing list. I describe that list and provide a subscription link on my “Non-Web Resources” page at my website.

Article by: David Mendosa.

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Minorities, Poor Have Tougher Time Monitoring Diabetes

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Friday, Mar. 14, 2008; 4:18 PM
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

FRIDAY, March 14 (HealthDay News) — Minority and low-income Americans with insulin-treated diabetes are less likely to monitor their blood glucose than other diabetics, a new study shows.

The researchers examined data on 16,630 Hispanic, black and white adults aged 19 and older with insulin-treated diabetes to come to this conclusion.

At every income level, fewer Hispanics and blacks reported daily self-monitoring of blood glucose than whites. The study was to be presented Friday at the American Heart Association’s Annual Conference on Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology and Prevention, in Colorado Springs, Colo.

“Minority and financially vulnerable adults with insulin-treated diabetes appear to have lower reported rates of self-monitoring of blood glucose [SMBG] — a vital disease management component,” study author Dr. Deborah A. Levine, an assistant professor in general internal medicine at the Ohio State University College of Medicine, said in a prepared statement.

“Efforts to improve diabetes control, including the collection and use of SMBG data in Hispanic and black populations with diabetes [particularly those on insulin], are warranted given that Hispanics and blacks have a higher frequency of diabetes-related complications compared to whites. We need to better understand income’s role in racial and ethnic disparities in SMBG to offer effective programs and policies to improve SMBG by minorities,” Levine said.

The study found that among those with annual household incomes of $20,000 and higher, SMBG rates were 85 percent for whites, 78 percent for Hispanics, and 77 percent for blacks. Among those with household incomes of less than $20,000, SMBG rates were 85 percent for whites, 79 percent for blacks, and 65 percent for Hispanics.

The researchers also found that among those with household incomes of less than $20,000, 49 percent of Hispanics received diabetes education, compared with 62 percent of whites and 64 percent of blacks.

“Receipt of diabetes education varied significantly by race-ethnicity only in the less-than-$20,000 income group,” Levine said. “At incomes of $20,000 or more, both Hispanics and blacks had 40 percent lower odds of daily SMBG compared to whites. At incomes of less than $20,000, however, the odds of daily SMBG decreased by 70 percent for Hispanics compared to whites, but did not change for blacks.”

These racial and ethnic disparities in self-monitoring of blood glucose were not fully explained by demographic characteristics such as health insurance, health status, or diabetes-related measures such as diabetes education, disease duration or end-organ damage, Levine said.

The findings suggest that poverty significantly worsens self-monitoring of blood glucose and receipt of diabetes education among Hispanics. This means that income must be “explicitly considered when assessing SMBG performance and designing SMBG interventions for Hispanics with insulin-treated diabetes,” Levine said.

In 2005, 15.1 million U.S. adults (7.3 percent of the adult population) had diagnosed diabetes, according to the American Heart Association. Of those, 13.2 percent were non-Hispanic black females and 10.7 percent were non-Hispanic black males; 11 percent were Mexican-American males and 10.9 percent were Mexican-American females; and 6.7 percent were white males and 5.6 percent were white females.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases has more about diabetes control.

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DAVID MENDOSA: The Simple GlucoMON

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

All of us can use a little help in managing the complexities of our diabetes. The very young and the very old sometimes need a lot.

Do you need to make sure that your child or parent has his or her blood glucose under control? Short of hovering over them all the time, you can ask them to send their test results to you or their doctor.

Unless you have a GlucoMON, that wouldn’t be easy. But with the GlucoMON it is unbelievably simple.

I know how simple it is, because I finally got my hands on one after writing about it for years.

The GlucoMON has just become commercially available. In the meantime the company, Dallas-based Diabetech, focused its efforts on perfecting its behind-the-scenes software inside of carefully controlled clinical trials while also making sure they took the steps to comply with various Food and Drug Administration regulations. Their commercialization efforts also took time, as they recently upgraded their technology to run on the GSM/GPRS wireless networks, which run most of the world’s cell phones. This new device and their commercial offering are classified in the same category as Microsoft’s Health Vault platform and a forthcoming offer from Google.

The amazing thing to me is the fact that the software is indeed behind the scenes. I hate testing software, mostly because it takes so much time to install and then to learn. And then there are always bugs. And then you have to keep it updated.

But the GlucoMON software isn’t even on your computer. It works in a similar way to Google’s “cloud computing” applications like Gmail and Google Docs that I completely rely on nowadays.

GlucoMON even does Google one better. To use it you don’t need an Internet connection. Or even a computer. Or a phone line. And soon you won’t even need electricity for it.

Currently, the device relies on electricity from a standard electrical outlet for its power. But Diabetech is a finalizing an optional mobility kit that includes a car charger and a battery pack.

The GlucoMON is an automated, long-range wireless blood glucose data monitoring and transmittal system. “Think of us as a wireless phone company that just does diabetes,” Diabetech founder and CEO Kevin McMahon told me years ago. The key, he said, is not just that it is wireless, but especially that it is automatic. “It requires no training. There are no buttons to push or computers or Palm Pilots to attach.”

While the name GlucoMON obviously stands for glucose monitoring, it actually isn’t one. Currently it works with LifeScan’s OneTouch Ultra. Kevin tells me that his company is working out licensing deals with the other major meter manufacturers.

“The data are transferred over our network and are stored in the secure patient record in our GlucoDYNAMIX server software,” Kevin says. “The data include the patient profile, patient-specific rules, alerts, reminders, reports, and education.”

Since the GlucoMON is hardware, I dreaded the setup even more than if it were software. In the event I couldn’t have been more surprised.

I plugged it in to an electrical outlet, set up the little antenna on my desk, checked my blood glucose with the Ultra, and then plugged the Ultra into the GlucoMON. It must have taken at least 60 seconds.

By that time the service had sent me an email confirming the result. Normally, of course, that message would have gone to the parent of the young child or the child of the aged parent.

The GlucoMON has to be especially attractive to parents who have children with diabetes in school. Typically, a family will find a place at school that is convenient and which usually coincides with where the child checks his or her blood glucose before lunch, which generally is the most critical time during the school day because of insulin dosing then. Or the child may carry it in his or her backpack and just plug it in when need. Then, he or she might bring it home on weekends to support sleepovers or trips to Grandma’s. It weighs less than 7 ounces.

The GlucoMON can support shared users too, Kevin tells me. “I don’t know any other device that can support this model.”

The company offers discounts for second users of a shared GlucoMON in the same family. Another option is its school plan where three or more family can use a shared GlucoMON.

For my purposes, even more impressive is the automatic log sheet that the system generates and sends out daily. I have seen and used lots of different log sheets and in fact link some of them on my website. But none of them hold a candle to the GlucoMON’s report, which is not only automatic but also logs blood glucose results in hourly time-slots, highlights highs and lows, and makes trend analysis simple.
Article by: David Mendosa

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Test helps diabetics detect nerve trouble

Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
Friday, Feb. 29, 2008; 1:00 PM
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

FRIDAY, Feb. 29 (HealthDay News) — Fasting blood sugar levels are typically used to diagnose diabetes, however, a common complication of the disease that can lead to blindness begins at blood sugar levels below what is considered diabetic, Australian researchers report.

Retinopathy is a vascular condition where the small blood vessels in the eye become damaged; other complications of diabetes include heart, kidney and circulatory problems.

“Retinopathy, which is one of the complications traditionally associated with diabetes, occurs at fasting glucose levels below the threshold that is used to define diabetes,” said lead researcher Dr. Tien Y. Wong, chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Melbourne.

In the study, Wong’s team analyzed three studies that looked at retinopathy among 11,405 people. The report was published in the March 1 issue of The Lancet.

The researchers found that the overall prevalence of retinopathy ranged from 9.6 percent to 15.8 percent in the general population. In addition, they didn’t find evidence of a particular blood glucose level that would indicate the presence of retinopathy. In fact, 60 percent of retinopathy cases were missed by the current threshold for diabetes diagnosis, which is 7.0 mmol/L.

The finding suggests that eye damage happens much earlier and at lower blood sugar levels than what is currently used to pinpoint the presence of diabetes, Wong said. “This suggests that diagnostic threshold may have to be revised, so that we can pick up more people who are at risk of eye and other complications,” he noted.

In addition to retinopathy, signs of cardiovascular disease also appear to develop at glucose levels below those defined as diabetes, Wong said.

One expert agrees that fasting blood sugar levels may not be the best way of diagnosing diabetes and those at risk for diabetes.

“It is becoming more common that studies are showing that a fasting blood sugar value is not necessarily the best way to judge diabetes or diabetes control,” said Dr. Stuart Weiss, an endocrinologist at New York University Medical Center.

Weiss noted that right now there is no other marker for diabetes. However, many new studies point to the use of blood sugar levels after eating as being better markers for risk, he said.

“Fasting blood sugar is not all that helpful,” Weiss said. “The problem is that a lot of our thinking is based on fasting. That’s an issue we need to focus in on,” he said.

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Checking Your Blood Glucose

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

People with diabetes work to keep their blood sugar (glucose) as near to normal as possible. Keeping your blood glucose in your target range can help prevent or delay the start of diabetes complications such as nerve, eye, kidney, and blood vessel damage.

When you learned you had diabetes, you and your health care team worked out a diabetes care plan. The plan aims to balance the foods you eat with your exercise and, possibly, diabetes pills or insulin. You can do two types of checks to help keep track of how your plan is working. These are blood glucose checks and urine ketone checks.

Blood Glucose Monitoring Checks

Blood glucose monitoring is the main tool you have to check your diabetes control. This check tells you your blood glucose level at any one time. Keeping a log of your results is vital. When you bring this record to your health care provider, you have a good picture of your body’s response to your diabetes care plan. Blood glucose checks let you see what works and what doesn’t. This allows you and your doctor, dietitian, or nurse educator to make needed changes.

Here is a table that lists blood glucose ranges for adults with diabetes:

Glycemic control

Who Should Check?

Experts feel that anyone with diabetes can benefit from checking their blood glucose. The American Diabetes Association recommends blood glucose checks if you have diabetes and are:

  • taking insulin or diabetes pills
  • on intensive insulin therapy
  • pregnant
  • having a hard time controlling your blood glucose levels
  • having severe low blood glucose levels or ketones from high blood glucose levels
  • having low blood glucose levels without the usual warning signs

Urine Checks

Urine checks for glucose are not as accurate as blood glucose checks. Urine testing for glucose should not be done unless blood testing is impossible.

A urine check for ketones is another matter. This check is important when your diabetes is out of control or when you are sick. You can find moderate or large amounts of ketones in urine when your body is burning fat instead of glucose for fuel. This happens when there is too little insulin at work. Everyone with diabetes needs to know how to check their urine for ketones.

How Blood Checks Work

You stick your finger with a special needle, called a lancet, to get a drop of blood. With some meters, you can also use your forearm, thigh or fleshy part of your hand. There are spring-loaded lancing devices that make sticking yourself less painful. Before using the lancing device, wash your hands or site you chose with soap and water. If you use your fingertip, stick the side of your fingertip by your fingernail to avoid having sore spots on the frequently used part of your finger.

Checking With a Blood Glucose Meter

Blood glucose meters are small computerized machines that “read” your blood glucose. In all types of meters, your blood glucose level shows up as a number on a screen (like that on your pocket calculator). Be sure your doctor or nurse educator shows you the correct way to use your meter. With all the advances in blood glucose meters, use of a meter is better than visual checking.

How to Pick a Meter

There are many meters to choose from. Some meters are made for those with poor eyesight. Others come with memory so you can store your results in the meter itself. The American Diabetes Association does not endorse any products or recommend one meter over another. If you plan to buy a meter, here are some questions to think about:

  • What meter does your doctor or diabetes educator suggest? They may have meters that they use often and know best.
  • What will it cost? Some insurance companies will only pay for a certain meter. Call your insurance company before you purchase a meter and ask how to get a meter and supplies. If your insurance company does not pay for blood glucose checking supplies, rebates are often available toward the purchase of your meter. You still have to consider the cost of the matching strips and lancets. Shop around.
  • How easy is the meter to use? Methods vary. Some have fewer steps than others.
  • How simple is the meter to maintain? Is it easy to clean? How is the meter calibrated (set correctly for the batch of strips you are using)?

Are meters accurate?

Experts testing meters in the lab setting found them accurate and precise. That’s the good news. The bad: meter mistakes most often come from the person doing the blood checks. For good results you need to do each step correctly. Here are other things that can cause your meter to give a poor reading:

  • a dirty meter
  • a meter or strip that’s not at room temperature
  • an outdated test strip
  • a meter not calibrated (set up for) the current box of test strips
  • a blood drop that is too small

Ask your health care team to check your skills at least once a year. Error can creep in over time.

Logging Your Results

When you finish the blood glucose check, write down your results and use them to see how food, activity and stress affect your blood glucose. Take a close look at your blood glucose record to see if your level is too high or too low several days in a row at about the same time. If the same thing keeps happening, it might be time to change your plan. Work with your doctor or diabetes educator to learn what your results mean for you. This takes time. Ask your doctor or nurse if you should report results out of a certain range at once by phone.

Keep in mind that blood glucose results often trigger strong feelings. Blood glucose numbers can leave you upset, confused, frustrated, angry, or down. It’s easy to use the numbers to judge yourself. Remind yourself that your blood glucose level is a way to track how well your diabetes care plan is working. It is not a judgment of you as a person. The results may show you need a change in your diabetes plan.

Checking for Ketones

You may need to check your urine for ketones once in a while. Ketones in the urine is a sign that your body is using fat for energy instead of using glucose because not enough insulin is available to use glucose for energy. Ketones in the urine is more common in type 1 diabetes.

Urine tests are simple, but to get good results, you have to follow directions carefully. Check to be sure that the strip is not outdated. Read the insert that comes with your strips. Go over the correct way to check with your doctor or nurse.

Here’s how most urine tests go:

  • Get a sample of your urine in a clean container.
  • Place the strip in the sample (you can also pass the strip through the urine stream).
  • Gently shake excess urine off the strip.
  • Wait for the strip pad to change color. The directions will tell you how long to wait.
  • Compare the strip pad to the color chart on the strip bottle. This gives you a range of the amount of ketones in your urine.
  • Record your results.

What do your results mean? Small or trace amounts of ketones may mean that ketone buildup is starting. You should test again in a few hours. Moderate or large amounts are a danger sign. They upset the chemical balance of your blood and can poison the body. Never exercise when your urine checks show moderate or large amounts of ketones and your blood glucoser is high. These are signs that your diabetes is out of control. Talk to your doctor at once if your urine results show moderate or large amounts of ketones.

Keeping track of your results and related events is important. Your log gives you the data you and your doctor and diabetes educator need to adjust your diabetes care plan.

When to Test

Ask your doctor or nurse when to check for ketones. You may be advised to check for ketones when:

  • your blood glucose is more than 300 mg/dl
  • you feel nauseated, are vomiting, or have abdominal pain
  • you are sick (for example, with a cold or flu)
  • you feel tired all the time
  • you are thirsty or have a very dry mouth
  • your skin is flushed
  • you have a hard time breathing your breath smells “fruity”
  • you feel confused or “in a fog”

These can be signs of high ketone levels that need your doctor’s help.

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