Publication | Open Access
Impact of home blood glucose monitoring on childhood diabetes.
25
Citations
12
References
1982
Year
Metabolic SyndromeSleepDiabetes ManagementBlood Glucose ProfilesInsulin ManagementDiabetesPediatricsBlood Glucose MonitoringChildhood DiabetesDiabetes MellitusHyperglycemiaMedicineNinety Diabetic ChildrenUrine Control
Ninety diabetic children each provided at least one 24-hour blood glucose profile at home using an impregnated filter paper strip. The mean 24-hour blood glucose level correlated significantly with urine control, height velocity, and Hb A1. The correlation coefficient for individual blood glucose values (r = 0.61) and for mean 24-hour blood glucose values (r = 0.73) repeated within 14 days showed an acceptable degree of reproducibility for the blood glucose profiles. Mean 24-hour blood glucose values fell significantly overall (11.4 to 9.8 mmol/l; 205 to 176 mg/100 ml) in 47 children who had repeated profiles more than 2 weeks apart. Unrecognised nocturnal hypoglycaemia (less than 3.0 mmol/l; 54 mg/100 ml) was found in 19% of children on twice-daily Semitard insulin. The study shows that children over age 7 years manage home blood glucose monitoring without difficulty. It shows that the results are reproducible and correlate with other indices of control, and that it provides a practical basis for the improvement of diabetic control.
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