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Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
Foundation 150 153rd Ave, Suite 300 Madeira Beach, FL 33708 |
Forearm Test Not Good for Checking Blood SugarPosted: Friday, March 11, 2005. In the first study, Dr. Shu Meguro and colleagues at Saiseikai Central Hospital in Tokyo, Japan, gave 10 healthy volunteers intravenous insulin injections to lower their blood sugar levels. Measurements were made using blood taken from the fingertip, the fleshy part of the palm, and the forearm, every five minutes for 70 minutes. The lowest blood sugar values recorded were 37 at the fingertip, 38 at the palm, and 50 at the forearm. "Blood measurement at the forearm should be avoided to prevent incorrect clinical decisions," Meguro's team advises. However, the palm is a suitable testing site "because it provides accurate measurements with less pain." The second team, led by Dr. Nadine Lucidarme at the Robert Debre Teaching Hospital in Paris tested whether children preferred the palm or the forearm over the fingertip for testing blood sugar levels. At the end of the study period, three quarters of the kids said they preferred the alternative testing site because of easier sampling and less pain. The testing produced similar a reading from the three sites, except during periods of low blood sugar, or hypoglycemia. When fingertip testing showed levels averaging 50, forearm testing was 11 points higher. Lucidarme's group suggests that "alternate sites can be recommended with the caveat that forearm sampling should not be used in children with symptoms of hypoglycemia or in specific conditions carrying a high risk of hypoglycemia." Source: Diabetes In Control.com: |
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