Some figured out how to hack their continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems to
send glucose readings to their cell phones.
The device, which attaches to the user's stomach, automatically
sends glucose readings to a DexCom receiver or a compatible smart device every five minutes.
Not exact matches
A California company called Dexcom connected a continuous
glucose monitor (a device that had been around for more than a decade) wirelessly to a smartphone (or smart watch), allowing the user to
read, plot, and share blood sugar levels with anyone, at five - minute intervals, all day long — and
sending an alert when patients were at risk.
When your daily meals have a lower glycemic index (
read: lower in the sugar and carbs that create dangerous spikes in your blood
glucose), your blood sugar remains stable, you don't «crash» after spikes, and your body doesn't
send your brain those pesky «we need sugar NOW!»
as i had impaired fasting blood
glucose.My medical synopsis
sent by AVIVA
reads my fasting blood
glucose as 80mg / dl which is very much normal.Again qoting the values I asked what value is considered normal by AVIVA.They replied again by cut and paste the same words they
sent earlier without stating specific values.