


Thanks, Diane. There may be no answer - I guess it just is what it is...however I wonder if I should have really tried to get a third test at +5 where he initially tested at 49 then 72 because just over an hour later he is still at 72 which is not much of a food bump...(i had fed him too big a snack at +5 right after I got the 49 as i was worried I wouldn't be able to get a second test and better safe than sorry - I did end up getting the second test 10 minutes after food but I can't imagine he would bump up from 52 to 72 in 10 minutes after eating 3%lc even though it was a lot - didn't mean to give him alot - he just ate quicker than expected)....anyway - I digress. But can I just say: what a relief it would be if we could actually trust the numbers on meters without all the back up tests!Hi Amy I hope Herman surfs safely today,sorry I can't help you out with your questions hopefully someone will come along![]()
Not a Contour Next, but I used a Contour Plus which was ultra reliable. Mine regularly allowed additional blood to be added and there were few wasted strips. But then bought one to sync results via Bluetooth, next gen up and it was AWFUL. Wasted so many test strips. Returned it.+5 was a nice "clean" test and I got 49 (I say "clean" because it was a nice drop of blood (not too big not too small) and a result on first try - I have learned that with a Contour Next meter anytime I need to "apply more blood" I just throw the strip out and start over as 90% of those tests read wrong). I routinely try to retest anything under 65ish so I retest 10 minutes later as he was getting grumpy and got 72. A few questions:
1. In those cases is the general consensus to take the higher number? He would not have tolerated a third test.
2. Is anyone else having issues with a contour next meter? PS I have 2 (one upstairs one downstairs), one is brand new as I threw out the oldest one but I get just as many bad tests with the brand new meter). As we get into tighter/flatter numbers it becomes more noticeable so maybe I have always had these crazy variances it just mattered less before.
\Not a Contour Next, but I used a Contour Plus which was ultra reliable. Mine regularly allowed additional blood to be added and there were few wasted strips. But then bought one to sync results via Bluetooth, next gen up and it was AWFUL. Wasted so many test strips. Returned it.
I'd say try the standard Contour Plus with nothing fancy added to it, the one I had worked like a bomb. Ultra reliable, small sample and saved me so many test strips which are hellishly expensive in South Africa.\
Thank you - you saved me some frustration - I have one of those "plus" ones new in box - I won't waste my time on it!


I can imagine. Many thanks - will look into it - last time I got a meter the only option in the contour brand was the bluetooth one - but I am sure they offer others it was probably just out of stock.I'd say try the standard Contour Plus with nothing fancy added to it, the one I had worked like a bomb. Ultra reliable, small sample and saved me so many test strips which are hellishly expensive in South Africa.
In the cases I had to retest, I usually picked the first one if the two numbers were not too far apart. My logic is the re-test likely elevates his stress level a little. But I will put a commend on the cell to note the retest number.
We have a Contour Next EZ although I rarely used it on Oreo since it requires more blood to test. But sometimes when I got a big blood drop (from Oreo or from human), I used two or three meters (ReliOn Classic, Alpha Trek2/FreeStyle lite, Contour Next) to test on the same blood sample and compare the numbers. I found the Contour Next is mostly consistent with numbers, has least fluctuation. Personally I think it is the most accurate one and its numbers always fall in between ReliOn's and FreeStyle's. I guess it's the bigger blood sample that helps the test outcome more accurate.

The variance I get is far beyond meter variance. Taking the average of multiple tests makes sense - I will start doing that!I've gotten different readings testing twice from the same drop of blood. It can happen with any meter. Sometimes the amount of blood makes a difference (i.e too little or too much blood). Meter manufacturers are also allowed a 20% variance. Whenever I get different tests like that, I just take an average. I only worry if one is really low. Then I'd get another test soon just to be safe.![]()
The variance I get is far beyond meter variance. Taking the average of multiple tests makes sense - I will start doing that!

“Nerd out” ….love it lolIf you have concerns about the performance of the meter; maybe try using a control solution on a test strip? You can buy em at a pharmacy. They are solutions with a certain amount of glucose in them that's listed on the bottle. So it can give you a decent idea of whether your meter is just screwed up. If the bottle says 100, and your meter says 60, then get a new meter.
Keep in mind that the FDA says a meter is accurate if it gives you values that are within 15% of the true blood sugar 95% of the time. So an "accurate" meter could give you anywhere from 85 to 115 if the true blood sugar is 100 (and it'll give you something in that range 95% of the time). That means an 'accurate' glucometer will give you a distribution like this
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So not super unexpected tbh. But you'd probably know the meter variance of your meter more than I would! I'm just nerding out a bit today.
“Nerd out” ….love it lol
It’s pretty interesting. The inaccurate readings I get when it asks for more blood (like I said, I never add more blood anymore, I just start over, I’ve found those tests to frequently be way way off) and when his BG is low (for instance today, which now I am wondering if it wasn’t that far off after all now learning how quickly stress can affect BG and the retest took 10 minutes with cat getting angrier by the second, and he ate). I need to do the math but I think they are very significantly more than acceptable meter variance.
I also read a study that pushing more blood out (as in milking the ear) can also result in inaccurate results, hmmm
Sorry about the possible fur shot I managed to do a possible fur shotI cant really count on that theory
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“Nerd out” ….love it lol
It’s pretty interesting. The inaccurate readings I get when it asks for more blood (like I said, I never add more blood anymore, I just start over, I’ve found those tests to frequently be way way off) and when his BG is low (for instance today, which now I am wondering if it wasn’t that far off after all now learning how quickly stress can affect BG and the retest took 10 minutes with cat getting angrier by the second, and he ate). I need to do the math but I think they are very significantly more than acceptable meter variance.
I also read a study that pushing more blood out (as in milking the ear) can also result in inaccurate results, hmmm
I also have the Contour Next One and agree- I always throw out the strip if I don’t get enough blood on the first try, b/c it gives low numbers if I don’t have enough blood. If it doesn’t immediately start counting down after it sucks up the blood from the ear, I just toss the strip.i use a Contour Next one and really like it except a couple of things, I don't trust the second chance feature that lets you add more blood it is not very accurate for whatever reason so I also just toss the strip and go again. Secondly a few times I have had it accept a test on what seems like not quite enough blood or barely enough and I get a weird low number, test again and it is completely different. I don't love that that happens but I know what to look for and when to double check.
i use a Contour Next one and really like it except a couple of things, I don't trust the second chance feature that lets you add more blood it is not very accurate for whatever reason so I also just toss the strip and go again. Secondly a few times I have had it accept a test on what seems like not quite enough blood or barely enough and I get a weird low number, test again and it is completely different. I don't love that that happens but I know what to look for and when to double check.
Exactly! So it’s It not just me, phew. I will continue to do as I’m doing. I wonder if this is common with all meters? I know we are told to retest low numbers from the get go when we start on this forum but I wonder if it should also be noted not to trust strips that you applied more blood to (“second chance”) or readings where the meter read but there didn’t seem to be enough blood … in my experience, similar to yours, those strips will be completely off and read way too low.I also have the Contour Next One and agree- I always throw out the strip if I don’t get enough blood on the first try, b/c it gives low numbers if I don’t have enough blood. If it doesn’t immediately start counting down after it sucks up the blood from the ear, I just toss the strip.