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Continuous Glucose Monitoring :: Diabetes Self-Management
Diabetes Self-Management provides up-to-date, practical, how-to information on nutrition, exercise, new diabetes drugs and ... Blood ... Blog Entry. Seven-Day ...www.diabetesselfmanagement.com/articles/Blood_Glucose_Monito...Blood Glucose Monitoring :: Diabetes Self-Management
Diabetes Self-Management provides up-to-date, practical, how-to information on nutrition, ... Blog Entry. Seven-Day Continuous Glucose Monitor Approved ...www.diabetesselfmanagement.com/articles/Blood_Glucose_Monito...Harris Teeter - Dr Russ Blog - Glucosamine and Blood Glucose
Dr. Russ’ blog is a place you can come to each week to share your experience ... yourwellness > Dr Russ > Dr Russ Blog > Glucosamine and Blood Glucose ...www.harristeeter.com/blog/default.aspx?action=detail&id=...Diabetes Technology Blog: Using the KeyNote blood glucose meter
Diabetes Technology Blog. Friday, May 18, 2007. Using the KeyNote blood glucose meter ... insulin pump and a Dexcom SEVEN CGM to track my blood glucose levels. ...www.bernardfarrell.com/blog/2007/05/using-keynote-blood-gluc...Average blood glucose instead of HbA1c - The Diabetes Blog
... diabetes association, AmericanDiabetesAssociation, Average blood glucose ... maintained(found on my Blog Site) that glucose values in real-time portray ...www.thediabetesblog.com/2007/07/06/average-blood-glucose-ins...For: Blood Sugar / Axle Grinder

Blood sugar concentration, or glucose level, refers to the amount of glucose present in a mammal's blood. In birds and reptiles the processing of sugars is done differently, the pancreas is slightly more well developed in birds than in mammals, perhaps as a partial compensation for the lack of saliva and chewing. It produces carbohydrate, fat and protein digesting enzymes which are secreted into the small intestine. The liver has two distinct lobes each with its own duct leading into the small intestine. The liver, as in mammals, houses the bile, which in birds however is acidic and not alkaline as it is in mammals. Many birds do not have a gall bladder to hold the bile, and it is secreted directly into the pancreatic ducts. Normally, in mammals the blood glucose level is maintained at a reference range between about 4 and 6 mM (mmol/l). It is tightly regulated in the human body as a part of metabolic homeostasis. Other sugars (eg, fructose) do not participate in the control mechanisms and are, thus, largely irrelevant to metabolic control.
Normal blood glucose levels are about 90mg/100ml, equivalent to 5mM (mmol/l) (since the molecular weight of glucose, C6H12O6, is about 180 g/mol daltons). The total amount of glucose normally in circulating human blood is therefore about 3.3 to 7g (assuming an ordinary adult blood volume of 5 litres, plausible for an average adult male). Glucose levels rise after meals for an hour or two by a few grams and are usually lowest in the morning, before the first meal of the day. Transported via the bloodstream from the intestines or liver to body cells, Glucose is the primary source of energy for body's cells, fats and oils (ie, lipids) being primarily a compact energy store.
Failure to maintain blood glucose in the normal range leads to conditions of persistently high (hyperglycemia) or low (hypoglycemia) blood sugar. Diabetes mellitus, characterized by persistent hyperglycemia from any of several causes, is the most prominent disease related to failure of blood sugar regulation.
Normal values
Despite widely variable intervals between meals or the occasional consumption of meals with a substantial carbohydrate load, human blood glucose levels normally remain within a remarkably narrow range. In most humans this varies from about 80 mg/dl to perhaps 110 mg/dl (4 to 6 mmol/litre) except shortly after eating when the blood glucose level rises temporarily up to maybe 140 mg/dl (7-8 mmol/litre) or a bit more in non-diabetics.
It is usually a surprise to realize how little glucose is actually maintained in the blood and body fluids. The control mechanism works on very small quantities. In a healthy adult male of 75 kg (165 lb) with a blood volume of 5 litres (1.3 gal), a blood glucose level of 100 mg/dl or 5.5 mmol/l corresponds to about 5 g (0.2 oz or 0.002 gal, 1/500 of the total) of glucose in the blood and approximately 45 g (1½ ounces) in the total body water (which obviously includes more than merely blood and will be usually about 60% of the total body weight in men). A more familiar comparison may help – 5 grams of glucose is about equivalent to a commercial sugar packet (as provided in many restaurants with coffee or tea).

























