nepenthe
Member Since 2010
My cat was tested at the vet's last week on her Alpha Trak and he was 19.2mmol. At home, a half hour later, he was at 15.2mmol on my Freestyle Lite. The vet told me that human meters aren't properly calibrated for feline blood, so I bought an Alpha Trak.
Since then, he has been testing higher than what I am used to.
I am concerened for two reasons - one, he might have been having gotten less lantus than he actually needed (for the past 2 yrs, he has always been between 7.5mmol - 16mmol; now he is reading 12.2-21mmol)
And two, what if the Alpha Trak is actually higher and I give him too much insulin as a result.
there is this document which talks about this sort of thing, and how it relates to proper Lantus protocol, but am afraid its miles over my head. Could anyone explain to me what they mean by this:
"NB. It is very important to note that blood glucoseconcentrations measured using a whole blood
glucose meter calibrated for human blood may measure 30-40% lower in the low end of the range than
glucose concentrations measured using a serum chemistry analyser or a plasma-equivalent meter calibrated
for feline use. Therefore, if using a meter calibrated for feline use (eg. AlphaTRAK, Abbott
Laboratories, CA, USA), or a serum chemistry analyzer, add approximately 30 mg/dL (1.7 mmol/L)
to the target glucose concentrations (see Table 3B). For example, a target > 50 mg/dL (2.8
mmol/L) becomes > 80 mg/dL (4.4 mmo/L) when using a meter calibrated for feline use. Instead of
aiming for 50-100mg/dL (2.8-5.6 mmol/L) , aim for 80-130 mg/dL (4.4-7.2 mmol/L [round numbers
4.5-7.0 mmol/L). Meters calibrated for feline use may read higher or lower than the actual value, in
contrast to consistently lower readings for meters validated for human blood. "
It seems that they are suggesting that not only could a feline meter (eg Alpha Trak) be higher, it could also give a lower reading as well?! Does anyone get what they are saying in the last sentence?
Since then, he has been testing higher than what I am used to.
I am concerened for two reasons - one, he might have been having gotten less lantus than he actually needed (for the past 2 yrs, he has always been between 7.5mmol - 16mmol; now he is reading 12.2-21mmol)
And two, what if the Alpha Trak is actually higher and I give him too much insulin as a result.
there is this document which talks about this sort of thing, and how it relates to proper Lantus protocol, but am afraid its miles over my head. Could anyone explain to me what they mean by this:
"NB. It is very important to note that blood glucoseconcentrations measured using a whole blood
glucose meter calibrated for human blood may measure 30-40% lower in the low end of the range than
glucose concentrations measured using a serum chemistry analyser or a plasma-equivalent meter calibrated
for feline use. Therefore, if using a meter calibrated for feline use (eg. AlphaTRAK, Abbott
Laboratories, CA, USA), or a serum chemistry analyzer, add approximately 30 mg/dL (1.7 mmol/L)
to the target glucose concentrations (see Table 3B). For example, a target > 50 mg/dL (2.8
mmol/L) becomes > 80 mg/dL (4.4 mmo/L) when using a meter calibrated for feline use. Instead of
aiming for 50-100mg/dL (2.8-5.6 mmol/L) , aim for 80-130 mg/dL (4.4-7.2 mmol/L [round numbers
4.5-7.0 mmol/L). Meters calibrated for feline use may read higher or lower than the actual value, in
contrast to consistently lower readings for meters validated for human blood. "
It seems that they are suggesting that not only could a feline meter (eg Alpha Trak) be higher, it could also give a lower reading as well?! Does anyone get what they are saying in the last sentence?